Department of Biological Sciences, Florida Gulf Coast University, Fort Myers, Florida, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2010 Jun;72(6):481-91. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20797.
The African apes possess thinner enamel than do other hominoids, and a certain amount of dentin exposure may be advantageous in the processing of tough diets eaten by Gorilla. Dental wear (attrition plus abrasion) that erodes the enamel exposes the underlying dentin and creates additional cutting edges at the dentin-enamel junction. Hypothetically, efficiency of food processing increases with junction formation until an optimal amount is reached, but excessive wear hinders efficient food processing and may lead to sickness, reduced fecundity, and death. Occlusal surfaces of molars and incisors in three populations each of Gorilla and Pan were videotaped and digitized. The quantity of incisal and molar occlusal dental wear and the lengths of dentin-enamel junctions were measured in 220 adult and 31 juvenile gorilla and chimpanzee skulls. Rates of dental wear were calculated in juveniles by scoring the degree of wear between adjacent molars M1 and M2. Differences were compared by principal (major) axis analysis. ANOVAs compared means of wear amounts. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated to compare the relationship between molar wear and incidence of dental disease. Results indicate that quantities of wear are significantly greater in permanent incisors and molars and juvenile molars of gorillas compared to chimpanzees. The lengths of dentin-enamel junctions were predominantly suboptimal. Western lowland gorillas have the highest quantities of wear and the most molars with suboptimal wear. The highest rates of wear are seen in Pan paniscus and Pan t. troglodytes, and the lowest rates are found in P.t. schweinfurthii and G. g. graueri. Among gorillas, G. b. beringei have the highest rates but low amounts of wear. Coefficients between wear and dental disease were low, but significant when all teeth were combined. Gorilla teeth are durable, and wear does not lead to mechanical senescence in this sample.
非洲猿类的牙釉质比其他原人科动物薄,而一定程度的牙本质暴露在处理大猩猩所吃的坚韧食物时可能是有利的。牙齿磨损(磨耗加磨损)侵蚀牙釉质,暴露出下面的牙本质,并在牙本质-釉质交界处形成额外的切割边缘。从理论上讲,随着交界处的形成,食物处理的效率会提高,直到达到最佳数量,但过度磨损会阻碍食物的有效处理,并可能导致疾病、繁殖力下降和死亡。对三个大猩猩和三个黑猩猩种群的每个个体的磨牙和切牙的咬合面进行了录像和数字化处理。在 220 个成年和 31 个幼年大猩猩和黑猩猩的头骨上测量了切牙和磨牙咬合面的牙磨损量和牙本质-釉质交界处的长度。在幼年个体中,通过对相邻磨牙 M1 和 M2 之间的磨损程度进行评分来计算牙磨损率。通过主(主要)轴分析比较差异。方差分析比较了磨损量的平均值。计算皮尔逊相关系数来比较磨牙磨损与牙齿疾病发生率之间的关系。结果表明,与黑猩猩相比,大猩猩的永久性切牙和磨牙以及幼年磨牙的磨损量显著更大。牙本质-釉质交界处的长度主要是次优的。西部低地大猩猩的磨损量最高,有最多的磨牙处于次优磨损状态。在 Pan paniscus 和 Pan t. troglodytes 中观察到最高的磨损率,在 P.t. schweinfurthii 和 G. g. graueri 中观察到最低的磨损率。在大猩猩中,G. b. beringei 的磨损率最高,但磨损量最低。磨损与牙齿疾病之间的系数较低,但当所有牙齿结合在一起时,系数是显著的。大猩猩的牙齿很耐用,在这个样本中,磨损不会导致机械衰老。