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野生环尾狐猴(Lemur catta)的严重磨损和牙齿脱落:摄食生态学、牙齿结构和个体生活史的作用

Severe wear and tooth loss in wild ring-tailed lemurs (Lemur catta): a function of feeding ecology, dental structure, and individual life history.

作者信息

Cuozzo Frank P, Sauther Michelle L

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, University of North Dakota, Box 8374, Grand Forks, ND 58202-8374, USA.

出版信息

J Hum Evol. 2006 Nov;51(5):490-505. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2006.07.001. Epub 2006 Jul 14.

Abstract

The ring-tailed lemurs at Beza Mahafaly Special Reserve, Madagascar, exhibit a high frequency of severe wear and antemortem tooth loss. As part of a long-term study, we collected dental data on 83 living adult ring-tailed lemurs during 2003 and 2004. Among these individuals, 192 teeth were scored as absent. The most frequently missing tooth position is M1 (24%). As M1 is the first tooth to erupt, its high frequency of absence (primarily a result of wear) is not remarkable. However, the remaining pattern of tooth loss does not correlate with the sequence of eruption. We suggest that this pattern is a function of 1) feeding ecology, as hard, tough tamarind fruit is a key fallback food of ring-tailed lemurs living in gallery forests; 2) food processing, as tamarind fruit is primarily processed in the P3-M1 region of the mouth; and 3) tooth structure, as ring-tailed lemurs possess thin dental enamel. The incongruity between thin enamel and use of a hard, tough fallback food suggests that ring-tailed lemurs living in riverine gallery forests may rely on resources not used in the past. When comparing dental health in the same individuals (n=50) between 2003 and 2004, we found that individual tooth loss can show a rapid increase over the span of one year, increasing by as much as 20%. Despite this rapid loss, individuals are able to survive, sometimes benefiting from unintentional assistance from conspecifics, from which partially processed tamarind fruit is obtained. Although less frequent in this population, these longitudinal data also illustrate that ring-tailed lemurs lose teeth due to damage and disease, similar to other nonhuman primates. The relationship between tooth loss, feeding ecology, dental structure, and individual life history in this population has implications for interpreting behavior based on tooth loss in the hominid fossil record.

摘要

马达加斯加贝扎马哈法利特别保护区的环尾狐猴出现严重磨损和生前牙齿脱落的频率很高。作为一项长期研究的一部分,我们在2003年至2004年期间收集了83只成年环尾狐猴的牙齿数据。在这些个体中,有192颗牙齿被记录为缺失。最常缺失的牙齿位置是M1(24%)。由于M1是第一颗萌出的牙齿,其高缺失频率(主要是磨损所致)并不罕见。然而,其余的牙齿缺失模式与萌出顺序无关。我们认为这种模式是以下因素的作用:1)觅食生态,因为坚硬、坚韧的罗望子果实是生活在长廊林的环尾狐猴的关键替代食物;2)食物加工,因为罗望子果实主要在口腔的P3 - M1区域进行加工;3)牙齿结构,因为环尾狐猴的牙釉质很薄。牙釉质薄与使用坚硬、坚韧的替代食物之间的不协调表明,生活在河边长廊林的环尾狐猴可能依赖过去未使用过的资源。当比较2003年至2004年同一批个体(n = 50)的牙齿健康状况时,我们发现个体牙齿脱落可能在一年时间内迅速增加,增幅高达20%。尽管牙齿脱落迅速,但个体仍能存活,有时还能受益于同种个体的无意帮助,从而获得部分加工过的罗望子果实。虽然在这个种群中这种情况不太常见,但这些纵向数据也表明,环尾狐猴会因损伤和疾病而掉牙,这与其他非人类灵长类动物类似。这个种群中牙齿脱落、觅食生态、牙齿结构和个体生活史之间的关系,对于根据人类化石记录中的牙齿脱落情况来解释行为具有启示意义。

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