Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, United States.
School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, United States.
Elife. 2019 Sep 24;8:e48628. doi: 10.7554/eLife.48628.
Exceptionally high rates of tooth fracture in large Pleistocene carnivorans imply intensified interspecific competition, given that tooth fracture rises with increased bone consumption, a behavior that likely occurs when prey are difficult to acquire. To assess the link between prey availability and dental attrition, we documented dental fracture rates over decades among three well-studied populations of extant gray wolves that differed in prey:predator ratio and levels of carcass utilization. When prey:predator ratios declined, kills were more fully consumed, and rates of tooth fracture more than doubled. This supports tooth fracture frequency as a relative measure of the difficulty of acquiring prey, and reveals a rapid response to diminished food levels in large carnivores despite risks of infection and reduced fitness due to dental injuries. More broadly, large carnivore tooth fracture frequency likely reflects energetic stress, an aspect of predator success that is challenging to quantify in wild populations.
极高的牙齿断裂率在大型更新世食肉动物中意味着加剧了种间竞争,因为牙齿断裂随着骨量消耗的增加而增加,这种行为可能发生在难以获得猎物时。为了评估猎物丰度与牙齿磨损之间的联系,我们记录了三个研究充分的现存灰狼种群中数十年的牙齿断裂率,这些种群的猎物与捕食者的比例和尸体利用水平不同。当猎物与捕食者的比例下降时,猎物被更充分地消耗,牙齿断裂的速度增加了一倍以上。这支持了牙齿断裂频率作为获取猎物难度的相对衡量标准,并揭示了大型食肉动物对食物水平下降的快速反应,尽管由于牙齿受伤而存在感染和适应度降低的风险。更广泛地说,大型食肉动物的牙齿断裂频率可能反映了能量压力,这是野生动物种群中难以量化的捕食者成功的一个方面。