Coronodon 摄食行为的新证据和神秘鲸类(哺乳纲:鲸目)滤食行为的起源再探讨

Diversity Pub Date : 2024-09-05 DOI:10.3390/d16090549
Jonathan H. Geisler, Brian L. Beatty, Robert W. Boessenecker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Coronodon包括基底齿类的一些物种,这些物种最初被解释为从事猛禽取食和牙齿过滤。在此,我们根据最近描述的标本和物种重新审视了这一已灭绝属种的进食情况。我们测试了牙齿位置和牙齿磨损类型之间的关联,并使用 14 个头颅齿特征的评分来列出进食行为的证据,每个特征都映射到五个备选的系统发育假说上。单个特征状态被解释为支持、中性或与猛禽摄食、抽吸摄食、鲸须过滤或牙齿过滤相矛盾的证据。研究发现,Coronodon 的磨损明显集中在中齿、中尖齿、高尖齿和上齿。上齿的中尖牙磨损程度也高于远尖牙,这与牙齿过滤假说的预测不一致。凹槽的磨损与邻近尖牙的磨损相关,侧面磨损集中在咬合面,这表明两者都是由猛禽取食造成的。这些观察结果提出了一种可能性,即猛禽取食是冠齿兽的主要,甚至可能是唯一的取食方式。冠突伪齿兽的重建祖先的摄食评分通常显示出猛禽摄食的逐步减少、须鳍滤食的逐步增加,以及偶尔出现的中间但支持力较弱的齿滤食阶段。对于大多数有齿类来说,支持或反对吸食的证据都很少。我们开发的研究须鲸起源的方法可以扩展,并允许对多种假说进行检验,而不必过分强调任何特定的类群或一组特征。
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New Evidence of the Feeding Behaviors of Coronodon and the Origin of Filter Feeding in Mysticetes (Mammalia: Cetacea) Revisited
Coronodon includes species of basal toothed mysticetes that were initially interpreted as engaging in raptorial feeding and dental filtration. Here, the feeding of this extinct genus is revisited based on recently described specimens and species. Associations between tooth position and types of dental wear were tested, and evidence for feeding behaviors was tabulated using scores from 14 craniodental characters, each mapped onto five alternate phylogenetic hypotheses. Individual character states were interpreted as being supportive, neutral, or contradictory evidence to raptorial feeding, suction feeding, baleen filtration, or dental filtration. Wear in Coronodon was found to be significantly more concentrated on mesial teeth, mesial cusps, higher cusps, and upper teeth. Upper teeth also had mesial cusps more worn than distal cusps, inconsistent with predictions of the dental filtration hypothesis. Wear in notches was correlated with wear on neighboring cusps, and side wear was concentrated on occlusal sides, suggesting both were caused by raptorial feeding. These observations raise the possibility that raptorial feeding was the primary, and maybe even the only, mode of feeding for Coronodon. The feeding scores of reconstructed ancestors leading to crown mysticetes typically display a stepwise decrease in raptorial feeding, a stepwise increase in baleen filtration, and, occasionally, an intermediate but weakly supported stage of dental filtration. For most toothed mysticetes, there is little evidence for or against suction feeding. The method we have developed for studying the origin of baleen can be expanded and allows for multiple hypotheses to be tested without undue emphasis on any particular taxon or set of characters.
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