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灵长类动物前臼齿中的饮食信号。

Dietary signals in the premolar dentition of primates.

机构信息

Department of Medical Anatomical Sciences, College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific, Western University of Health Sciences, Pomona, CA 91766, USA; Department of Anthropology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901, USA.

Department of Anthropology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901, USA; Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901, USA.

出版信息

J Hum Evol. 2018 Aug;121:221-234. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2018.04.006. Epub 2018 May 21.

Abstract

Dietary adaptations specific to the premolar row remain largely undocumented across primates. This study examines how relative premolar size varies among broad dietary groups (i.e., folivores, frugivores, insectivores, hard-object feeders) using a phylogenetically and ecologically diverse sample of species. We quantified relative premolar size with shape ratios computed using mandibular length, body mass, palate area, and M area to evaluate hypotheses that link variation in relative premolar size to differences in tooth loading, energy requirements, the probability of tooth-food-tooth contact during mastication, and shifts in preferred bite point. Our results revealed the following dietary signals. First, primate folivores have large premolar rows relative to palate area in comparison to frugivores and insectivores. This contrast is consistent with the hypothesis that folivores require large postcanine teeth relative to the size of the oral cavity to increase the probability of particle fracture during mastication. Second, hard-object feeders are distinct from other groups in having Ps that are large relative to their Ms. This morphology is not associated with an increase in the size of the premolar row relative to mandibular length. This combination challenges the idea that hard-object feeders have large premolars as an adaptive response to resisting the loads incurred when processing mechanically challenging foods. We therefore interpret the large P/M ratios of hard-object feeders as indicating greater functional integration across the premolar-molar boundary owing to a mesial shift in preferred bite point. Finally, in a restricted subset of anthropoids, we found that, relative to mandibular length, premolar area increases with dietary elastic modulus (E) and toughness (R), indicating that relative premolar size is evolutionarily sensitive to food mechanical properties. Thus, our results show that relative premolar size is correlated with diet, highlighting the importance of this region for understanding the evolutionary history of primate dietary adaptations.

摘要

灵长类动物中,前臼齿列特化的饮食适应在很大程度上仍未被记录。本研究使用广泛的饮食类群(即食叶动物、食果动物、食虫动物、硬食物食者)的系统发育和生态多样性样本,检查了相对前臼齿大小如何变化。我们使用下颌长度、体重、腭面积和 M 区计算的形状比来量化相对前臼齿大小,以评估将相对前臼齿大小的变化与牙齿负荷、能量需求、咀嚼过程中牙齿-食物-牙齿接触的可能性以及首选咬点的变化联系起来的假设。我们的结果揭示了以下饮食信号。首先,与食果动物和食虫动物相比,灵长类食叶动物的前臼齿列相对腭面积较大。这种对比与食叶动物需要相对较大的后犬齿来增加咀嚼过程中颗粒破碎的可能性的假设一致。其次,硬食物食者与其他群体的区别在于,其 P 值相对于 Ms 值较大。这种形态与前臼齿列相对于下颌长度的增大无关。这种组合挑战了硬食物食者拥有大的前臼齿作为处理机械挑战性食物时抵抗负荷的适应反应的观点。因此,我们将硬食物食者较大的 P/M 比值解释为由于首选咬点向近中移动,导致前臼齿-臼齿边界的功能整合更大。最后,在一部分类人猿中,我们发现,相对于下颌长度,前臼齿面积随着饮食弹性模量(E)和韧性(R)的增加而增加,这表明相对前臼齿大小对食物机械性能的进化是敏感的。因此,我们的结果表明相对前臼齿大小与饮食有关,突出了这一区域对于理解灵长类动物饮食适应的进化历史的重要性。

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