Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, 93106, USA.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2011 Aug;86(3):733-58. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-185X.2011.00176.x. Epub 2011 Mar 21.
High-crowned (hypsodont) teeth are widely found among both extant and extinct mammalian herbivores. Extant grazing ungulates (hoofed mammals) have hypsodont teeth (a derived condition), and so extinct hypsodont forms have usually been presumed to have been grazers. Thus, hypsodonty among ungulates has, over the past 150 years, formed the basis of widespread palaeoecological interpretations, and has figured prominently in the evolutionary study of the spread of grasslands in the mid Cenozoic. However, perceived inconsistencies between levels of hypsodonty and dental wear patterns in both extant and extinct ungulates have caused some workers to reject hypsodonty as a useful predictive tool in palaeobiology, a view that we consider both misguided and premature. Despite the acknowledged association between grazing and hypsodonty, the quantitative relationship of hypsodonty to the known ecology of living ungulate species, critical in making interpretations of the fossil record, was little studied until the past two decades. Also, much of the literature on ungulate ecology relevant to understanding hypsodonty has yet to be fully incorporated into the perspectives of palaeontologists. Here we review the history and current state of our knowledge of the relationship between hypsodonty and ungulate ecology, and reassert the value of hypsodonty for our understanding of ungulate feeding behaviour. We also show how soil consumption, rather than the consumption of grass plants per se, may be the missing piece of the puzzle in understanding the observed correlation between diets, habitats, and hypsodonty in ungulates. Additionally, we show how hypsodonty may impact life-history strategies, and resolve some controversies regarding the relevance of hypsodonty to the prediction of the diets of extinct species. This in turn strengthens the utility of hypsodonty in the determination of past environmental conditions, and we provide a revised view of a traditional example of evolutionary trends in palaeobiology, that of the evolution of hypsodonty in horses and its correlation with the Miocene spread of grasslands in North America.
高冠(高齿冠)牙齿在现存和已灭绝的哺乳动物食草动物中都广泛存在。现存的食草有蹄类动物(有蹄哺乳动物)具有高齿冠牙齿(衍生特征),因此已灭绝的高齿冠形态通常被认为是食草动物。因此,在过去的 150 年中,有蹄类动物的高齿冠成为了广泛的古生态学解释的基础,并在中生代中期草原扩散的进化研究中占据了重要地位。然而,在现存和已灭绝的有蹄类动物中,高齿冠的程度和牙齿磨损模式之间的不一致性,导致一些研究人员拒绝将高齿冠作为古生物学中有用的预测工具,我们认为这种观点是有误导性的和不成熟的。尽管人们普遍认为食草与高齿冠有关,但高齿冠与现存有蹄类动物已知生态的定量关系对于解释化石记录至关重要,直到过去二十年才对此进行了大量研究。此外,与理解高齿冠相关的有蹄类动物生态学的大部分文献尚未完全纳入古生物学家的观点。在这里,我们回顾了高齿冠与有蹄类动物生态学之间关系的历史和现状,并重新强调了高齿冠对我们理解有蹄类动物进食行为的价值。我们还展示了如何通过土壤消耗,而不是草类植物的消耗本身,来理解有蹄类动物饮食、栖息地和高齿冠之间观察到的相关性。此外,我们还展示了高齿冠如何影响生活史策略,并解决了一些关于高齿冠与预测已灭绝物种饮食的相关性的争议。这反过来又增强了高齿冠在确定过去环境条件方面的实用性,我们提供了对古生物学中传统进化趋势的一个例子的修正观点,即马的高齿冠进化及其与北美中新世草原扩散的相关性。
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