通过牙齿地形分析,展示了红猿猴(Cercopithecoidea,疣鼻猴科)穿戴系列中的牙齿雕刻和补偿性剪切嵴。

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American Journal of Biological Anthropology Pub Date : 2024-05-15 DOI:10.1002/ajpa.24953
James D. Pampush, Paul E. Morse, Richard F. Kay
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:维持有效和高效的咬合形态对哺乳动物的适应性提出了挑战,特别是因为咀嚼会产生与食物和其他材料的相互作用,通过宏观磨损和/或灾难性破坏(即 "崩裂")改变咬合面的几何形状。改变后的咬合面形态通常对咀嚼特定食物中的材料不那么有效--但并不总是这样--有些物种表现出牙齿雕刻,这意味着它们的牙齿可以利用宏观磨损将咬合面磨成更有效的形态(即次要形态)。在这里,我们展示了婆罗洲食叶的Presbytis rubicunda的牙齿雕刻:方法:对表现出不同阶段宏观磨损的 31 颗未损坏的下第二臼齿进行显微 CT 扫描,并将其处理为数字表面。对这些表面进行了凸狄利克特法能(vDNE,衡量表面锐度的指标)和表面磨损程度的测量。回归分析比较了表面锐利度和几种磨损度量,以检验是否存在牙齿雕刻及其程度:结果:磨损代用指标与 vDNE 之间的正相关性表明,鲁比孔雀的磨损方式是通过暴露咬合面上的珐琅质-牙质连接点,然后将这些连接点磨成锋利的边缘,从而使咀嚼面变得更锋利、更有效。另一种灵长类食叶动物(即 Alouatta palliata)的表面锐利度随着宏观磨损的增加而增加,与这种动物相比,磨损的表面同样锐利,但牙齿的雕刻过程似乎有所不同:讨论:本文介绍的结果表明,不仅一些灵长类动物表现出牙齿雕刻和随之而来的次生形态,而且似乎有多种不同的形态配置可以实现这一结果。与A. palliata相比,P. rubicunda的珐琅质更厚,磨损模式更刻板,但两者的咬合面锐利度(vDNE)都与各种磨损代用指标呈正相关。这些发现揭示了灵长类动物维持有效和高效咬合面的不同方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Dental sculpting and compensatory shearing crests demonstrated in a WEAR series of Presbytis rubicunda (Cercopithecoidea, Colobidae) with dental topography analysis

Objectives

Maintaining effective and efficient occlusal morphology presents adaptive challenges for mammals, particularly because mastication produces interactions with foods and other materials that alters the geometry of occlusal surfaces through macrowear and/or catastrophic failure (i.e. “chipping”). Altered occlusal morphologies are often less effective for masticating materials of given diet—but not always—some species exhibit dental sculpting, meaning their dentitions are set up to harness macrowear to hone their occlusal surfaces into more effective morphologies (i.e. secondary morphologies). Here we show that dental sculpting is present in the folivorous Presbytis rubicunda of Borneo.

Methods

Thirty-one undamaged lower second molars of P. rubicunda exhibiting various stages of macroscopic wear were micro-CT scanned and processed into digital surfaces. The surfaces were measured for convex Dirichlet normal energy (vDNE, a measure of surface sharpness), and degree of surface wear. Regression analyses compared surface sharpness with several measures of wear to test for the presence and magnitude of dental sculpting.

Results

Positive correlations between the wear proxies and vDNE reveal that P. rubicunda wear in such a way as to become sharper, and therefore more effective chewing surfaces by exposing enamel-dentine junctions on their occlusal surfaces and then honing these junctions into sharpened edges. Compared to another primate folivore in which increasing surface sharpness with macrowear has been demonstrated (i.e., Alouatta palliata), the worn surfaces are similarly sharp, but the dental sculpting process appears to be different.

Discussion

The results presented here suggest that not only do some primates exhibit dental sculpting and the attendant secondary morphology, but that there appear to be multiple different morphological configurations that can achieve this result. P. rubicunda has thicker enamel and a more stereotyped wear pattern than A. palliata, although both show positive correlations of occlusal surface sharpness (vDNE) with various wear proxies. These findings shed light on the varied approaches for the maintenance of effective and efficient occlusal surfaces in primates.

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