Thiery Ghislain, Guy Franck, Lazzari Vincent
iPHEP: Institut de Paléoprimatologie, Paléontologie Humaine, Evolution et Paléoenvironnements, UMR CNRS 7262 INEE, Université de Poitiers, Poitiers, France.
Am J Primatol. 2017 Jun;79(6). doi: 10.1002/ajp.22640. Epub 2017 Feb 2.
Although conveying an indisputable morphological and behavioral signal, traditional dietary categories such as frugivorous or folivorous tend to group a wide range of food mechanical properties together. Because food/tooth interactions are mostly mechanical, it seems relevant to investigate the dental morphology of primates based on mechanical categories. However, existing mechanical categories classify food by its properties but cannot be used as factors to classify primate dietary habits. This comes from the fact that one primate species might be adapted to a wide range of food mechanical properties. To tackle this issue, what follows is an original framework based on action-related categories. The proposal here is to classify extant primates based on the range of food mechanical properties they can process through one given action. The resulting categories can be used as factors to investigate the dental tools available to primates. Furthermore, cracking, grinding, and shearing categories assigned depending on the hardness and the toughness of food are shown to be supported by morphological data (3D relative enamel thickness) and topographic data (relief index, occlusal complexity, and Dirichlet normal energy). Inferring food mechanical properties from dental morphology is especially relevant for the study of extinct primates, which are mainly documented by dental remains. Hence, we use action-related categories to investigate the molar morphology of an extinct colobine monkey Mesopithecus pentelicus from the Miocene of Pikermi, Greece. Action-related categories show contrasting results compared with classical categories and give us new insights into the dietary adaptations of this extinct primate. Finally, we provide some possible directions for future research aiming to test action-related categories. In particular, we suggest acquiring more data on mechanically challenging fallback foods and advocate the use of other food mechanical properties such as abrasiveness. The development of new action-related dental metrics is also crucial for primate dental studies.
尽管传统的饮食类别(如食果性或食叶性)传达了一种无可争议的形态和行为信号,但它们往往将广泛的食物机械特性归为一类。由于食物与牙齿的相互作用大多是机械性的,基于机械类别来研究灵长类动物的牙齿形态似乎是合理的。然而,现有的机械类别是根据食物的特性对其进行分类,却不能用作分类灵长类动物饮食习惯的因素。这是因为一个灵长类物种可能适应广泛的食物机械特性。为了解决这个问题,接下来是一个基于与动作相关类别的原创框架。这里的提议是根据现存灵长类动物通过一种特定动作所能处理的食物机械特性范围对它们进行分类。由此产生的类别可以用作研究灵长类动物可用牙齿工具的因素。此外,根据食物的硬度和韧性划分的咬碎、研磨和剪切类别,被证明得到了形态学数据(3D相对釉质厚度)和地形数据(起伏指数、咬合复杂性和狄利克雷法向量能量)的支持。从牙齿形态推断食物机械特性对于研究已灭绝的灵长类动物尤为重要,因为它们主要是通过牙齿遗迹记录下来的。因此,我们使用与动作相关的类别来研究来自希腊皮克米中新世的已灭绝疣猴中猴的臼齿形态。与经典类别相比,与动作相关的类别显示出截然不同的结果,并为这种已灭绝灵长类动物的饮食适应性提供了新的见解。最后,我们为旨在测试与动作相关类别的未来研究提供了一些可能的方向。特别是,我们建议获取更多关于机械挑战性应急食物的数据,并提倡使用其他食物机械特性,如磨蚀性。开发新的与动作相关的牙齿测量指标对于灵长类动物牙齿研究也至关重要。