Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2012 Mar;147(3):417-26. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.22009. Epub 2012 Jan 23.
Dental enamel thickness has received considerable attention in ecological models of the adaptive significance of primate morphology. Several authors have theorized that the degree of enamel thickness may reflect selective pressures related to the consumption of fallback foods (dietary items that may require complex processing and/or have low nutritional value) during times of preferred food scarcity. Others have speculated that enamel thickness reflects selection during mastication of foods with particular material properties (i.e., toughness and hardness). Orangutans prefer ripe fruit when available, but show interspecific and sex differences in the consumption of fallback foods (bark, leaves, and figs) and other preferred foods (certain seeds). Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) have also been reported to masticate more mechanically demanding foods than Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii). To test these ecological models, we assessed two-dimensional enamel thickness in orangutan full dentitions using established histological and virtual quantification methods. No significant differences in average enamel thickness (AET) were found between species. We found significant differences in the components of enamel thickness indices between sexes, with males showing greater enamel-dentine junction lengths and dentine core areas, and thus relatively thinner enamel than females. Comparisons of individuals of known sex and species revealed a dentition-wide trend for Bornean females to show greater AET than Sumatran females. Differences between small samples of males were less evident. These data provide only limited support for ecological explanations of enamel thickness patterns within great ape genera. Future studies of dietary ecology and enamel thickness should consider sex differences more systematically.
牙釉质厚度在灵长类形态适应意义的生态模型中受到了相当多的关注。一些作者推测,牙釉质厚度的程度可能反映了与在偏好食物稀缺时消耗 fallback 食物(可能需要复杂处理和/或营养价值低的饮食项目)相关的选择压力。其他人推测,牙釉质厚度反映了对具有特殊物质特性(即韧性和硬度)的食物进行咀嚼的选择。当有成熟果实时,猩猩更喜欢吃成熟的果实,但在 fallback 食物(树皮、树叶和无花果)和其他偏好食物(某些种子)的消耗方面存在种间和性别差异。据报道,婆罗洲猩猩(Pongo pygmaeus)比苏门答腊猩猩(Pongo abelii)咀嚼更具机械挑战性的食物。为了检验这些生态模型,我们使用既定的组织学和虚拟定量方法评估了猩猩的全牙列的二维牙釉质厚度。在物种之间未发现平均牙釉质厚度(AET)的显著差异。我们发现性别之间的牙釉质厚度指数成分存在显著差异,雄性表现出更大的牙本质-釉质交界处长度和牙本质核心区域,因此相对较薄的牙釉质比雌性。对已知性别和物种的个体进行比较,发现婆罗洲雌性的 AET 普遍大于苏门答腊雌性。雄性个体的小样本之间的差异则不太明显。这些数据仅为牙釉质厚度模式在大猿属内的生态解释提供了有限的支持。未来的饮食生态学和牙釉质厚度研究应更系统地考虑性别差异。