Suppr超能文献

已知年龄、老年环尾狐猴(Lemur catta)的牙齿磨损和牙齿缺失的变化:野生和圈养个体之间的比较。

Variation in dental wear and tooth loss among known-aged, older ring-tailed lemurs (Lemur catta): a comparison between wild and captive individuals.

机构信息

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

出版信息

Am J Primatol. 2010 Nov;72(11):1026-37. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20846.

Abstract

Tooth wear is generally an age-related phenomenon, often assumed to occur at similar rates within populations of primates and other mammals, and has been suggested as a correlate of reduced offspring survival among wild lemurs. Few long-term wild studies have combined detailed study of primate behavior and ecology with dental analyses. Here, we present data on dental wear and tooth loss in older (>10 years old) wild and captive ring-tailed lemurs (Lemur catta). Among older ring-tailed lemurs at the Beza Mahafaly Special Reserve (BMSR), Madagascar (n=6), the percentage of severe dental wear and tooth loss ranges from 6 to 50%. Among these six individuals, the oldest (19 years old) exhibits the second lowest frequency of tooth loss (14%). The majority of captive lemurs at the Indianapolis Zoo (n=7) are older than the oldest BMSR lemur, yet display significantly less overall tooth wear for 19 of 36 tooth positions, with only two individuals exhibiting antemortem tooth loss. Among the captive lemurs, only one lemur (a nearly 29 year old male) has lost more than one tooth. This individual is only missing anterior teeth, in contrast to lemurs at BMSR, where the majority of lost teeth are postcanine teeth associated with processing specific fallback foods. Postcanine teeth also show significantly more overall wear at BMSR than in the captive sample. At BMSR, degree of severe wear and tooth loss varies in same aged, older individuals, likely reflecting differences in microhabitat, and thus the availability and use of different foods. This pattern becomes apparent before "old age," as seen in individuals as young as 7 years. Among the four "older" female lemurs at BMSR, severe wear and/or tooth loss do not predict offspring survival.

摘要

牙齿磨损通常是一种与年龄相关的现象,人们通常认为灵长类动物和其他哺乳动物的牙齿磨损率相似,并认为这与野生狐猴后代存活率的降低有关。很少有长期的野外研究将灵长类动物行为和生态学的详细研究与牙齿分析结合起来。在这里,我们提供了关于老年(> 10 岁)野生和圈养环尾狐猴(Lemur catta)的牙齿磨损和牙齿缺失的数据。在马达加斯加贝扎马法利特别保护区(BMSR)的老年环尾狐猴(n=6)中,严重的牙齿磨损和牙齿缺失的百分比范围为 6%至 50%。在这六个人中,最年长的(19 岁)表现出第二低的牙齿缺失频率(14%)。印第安纳波利斯动物园(n=7)的大多数圈养狐猴都比 BMSR 中最年长的狐猴年长,但在 36 个牙齿位置中,有 19 个位置的总牙齿磨损明显较少,只有两名个体表现出生前牙齿缺失。在圈养的狐猴中,只有一只狐猴(一只近 29 岁的雄性)失去了一颗以上的牙齿。与 BMSR 的狐猴不同,这只狐猴只缺失了前牙,而 BMSR 的狐猴中,大多数缺失的牙齿是与处理特定回补食物相关的后牙。与圈养样本相比,BMSR 的后牙也显示出更严重的总磨损。在 BMSR,相同年龄和年龄较大的个体中,严重磨损和牙齿缺失的程度不同,这可能反映了微生境的差异,以及不同食物的可获得性和使用情况。这种模式在个体只有 7 岁时就已经很明显。在 BMSR 的四只“年长”雌性狐猴中,严重磨损和/或牙齿缺失并不能预测后代的存活率。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验