Schwartz G T
Department of Anthropology, The George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2000 Feb;111(2):221-44. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-8644(200002)111:2<221::AID-AJPA8>3.0.CO;2-G.
One of the few uncontested viewpoints in studies of enamel thickness is that the molars of the African apes, Pan and Gorilla, possess "thin" enamel, while Pongo and modern humans possess varying degrees of "thick" enamel, even when interspecific differences in overall body or tooth size are taken into account. Such studies focus primarily on estimates of the total volume of enamel relative to tooth size (i.e., "relative" enamel thickness), as this is thought to bear directly on questions concerning dietary proclivities and phylogenetic relationships. Only recently have studies shifted focus to examining differences in the distribution of enamel across the tooth crown, i.e., the patterning of enamel thickness, as this may contribute to more refined models of tooth function and dietary adaptations in extant hominoids. Additionally, this feature has been suggested to be a reliable indicator of taxonomic affinity in early hominins, though no study has specifically addressed whether species-specific patterns exist among known phena. The aims of this paper were to test more explicitly whether enamel thickness patterning provides valuable taxonomic, functional, and/or phylogenetic information for maxillary molars of large-bodied extant hominoids. A series of seven linear enamel thickness measurements was recorded in the plane of the mesial cusps in cross sections of a total of 62 maxillary molars of P. troglodytes, G. gorilla, P. pygmaeus, and H. sapiens to estimate the patterning of enamel thickness distribution. Results from a discriminant function analysis reveal that, overall, this trait reclassifies extant hominoid maxillary molars with 90% accuracy: 100% of extant Homo, 75. 0% of Pongo, 83.3% of Pan, and 66.7% of Gorilla are reclassified correctly, indicating that this feature possesses a strong taxonomic signal. Furthermore, differences in the structure of the enamel cap are evident among hominoids: modern humans differ from Pongo in possessing proportionally thicker enamel in areas of the crown associated with shearing activity; Pan molars are better designed than those of Gorilla for generating a greater component of crushing/grinding loads. Thus, African ape molars are structurally dissimilar, even though they are both considered to belong to a morphologically homogeneous "thin-enameled" group. Simple developmental mechanisms can be invoked to explain the sometimes subtle differences in the achievement of adult morphology. For instance, human and orangutan molar cusps possess a similar degree of enamel thickness, but the possibility exists that despite similarities in morphology, each species follows a different sequence of secretory activity of enamel to achieve the final, albeit similar, degree of enamel thickness. Such a finding would suggest that the shared possession of "thick" or "thin" enamel among species may be phylogenetically uninformative, as it would not represent a developmental synapomorphy.
在牙釉质厚度研究中,少数几个没有争议的观点之一是,非洲猿类(黑猩猩属和大猩猩属)的臼齿拥有“薄”牙釉质,而猩猩属和现代人类则拥有不同程度的“厚”牙釉质,即使考虑到整体身体或牙齿大小的种间差异也是如此。此类研究主要集中于相对于牙齿大小的牙釉质总体积估计(即“相对”牙釉质厚度),因为这被认为与饮食倾向和系统发育关系问题直接相关。直到最近,研究才将重点转向检查牙釉质在整个牙冠上的分布差异,即牙釉质厚度的模式,因为这可能有助于建立更精细的现存类人猿牙齿功能和饮食适应性模型。此外,有人认为这一特征是早期人类分类学亲缘关系的可靠指标,不过尚无研究专门探讨已知类群中是否存在物种特异性模式。本文的目的是更明确地测试牙釉质厚度模式是否能为现存大型类人猿的上颌臼齿提供有价值的分类学、功能和/或系统发育信息。在共62颗黑猩猩、大猩猩、倭黑猩猩和智人的上颌臼齿横截面上,在近中尖平面记录了一系列七个线性牙釉质厚度测量值,以估计牙釉质厚度分布模式。判别函数分析结果显示,总体而言,这一特征对现存类人猿上颌臼齿的重新分类准确率为90%:现存人类的100%、猩猩属的75.0%、黑猩猩属的83.3%和大猩猩属的66.7%被正确重新分类,表明这一特征具有很强的分类学信号。此外,类人猿之间牙釉质帽结构的差异很明显:现代人类与猩猩属的不同之处在于,在与剪切活动相关的牙冠区域拥有比例上更厚的牙釉质;黑猩猩的臼齿在产生更大比例的挤压/研磨负荷方面比大猩猩的设计更好。因此,非洲猿类的臼齿在结构上是不同的,尽管它们都被认为属于形态上同质的“薄牙釉质”群体。可以调用简单的发育机制来解释成年形态形成中有时细微的差异。例如,人类和猩猩的臼齿尖具有相似程度的牙釉质厚度,但尽管形态相似,每个物种可能遵循不同的牙釉质分泌活动顺序来达到最终相似的牙釉质厚度程度。这样的发现可能表明,物种之间“厚”或“薄”牙釉质的共同拥有在系统发育上可能没有信息价值,因为它不代表发育同源特征。