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将牙齿形状与蟒蛇的打击力学联系起来。

Linking Tooth Shape to Strike Mechanics in the Boa constrictor.

机构信息

Department of Biology, Saint Anselm College, 100 Saint Anselm Drive, Manchester, NH 03102, USA.

出版信息

Integr Comp Biol. 2021 Sep 8;61(2):759-771. doi: 10.1093/icb/icab009.

Abstract

Snakes, with the obvious exception of the fangs, are considered to lack the regional specialization of tooth shape and function which are exemplified by mammals. Recent work in fishes has suggested that the definition of homodont and heterodont are incomplete without a full understanding of the morphology, mechanics, and behavior of feeding. We investigated this idea further by examining changes in tooth shape along the jaw of Boa constrictor and integrating these data with the strike kinematics of boas feeding on rodent prey. We analyzed the shape of every tooth in the skull, from a combination of anesthetized individuals and CT scanned museum specimens. For strike kinematics, we filmed eight adult boas striking at previously killed rats. We determined the regions of the jaws that made first contact with the prey, and extrapolated the relative positions of those teeth at that moment. We further determined the roles of all the teeth throughout the prey capture process, from the initiation of the strike until constriction began. We found that the teeth in the anterior third of the mandible are the most upright, and that teeth become progressively more curved posteriorly. Teeth on the maxilla are more curved than on the mandible, and the anterior teeth are more linear or recurved than the posterior teeth. In a majority of strikes, boas primarily made contact with the anterior third of the mandible first. The momentum from the strike caused the upper jaws and skull to rotate over the rat. The more curved teeth of the upper jaw slid over the rat unimpeded until the snake began to close its jaws. In the remaining strikes, boas made contact with the posterior third of both jaws simultaneously, driving through the prey and quickly retracting, ensnaring the prey on the curved posterior teeth of both jaws. The curved teeth of the palatine and pterygoid bones assist in the process of swallowing.

摘要

蛇类,除了明显的毒牙之外,被认为缺乏牙齿形状和功能的区域特化,而这些特化在哺乳动物中得到了体现。最近在鱼类中的研究表明,如果不充分了解进食的形态、力学和行为,那么对同源牙和异形牙的定义就是不完整的。我们通过检查网纹蟒下颚牙齿形状的变化,并将这些数据与网纹蟒捕食啮齿类动物的攻击运动学相结合,进一步研究了这一观点。我们分析了来自麻醉个体和 CT 扫描的博物馆标本的头骨上每颗牙齿的形状。对于攻击运动学,我们拍摄了 8 条成年网纹蟒捕食事先杀死的老鼠的过程。我们确定了下颚与猎物首先接触的区域,并推断出那一刻的牙齿相对位置。我们进一步确定了在整个猎物捕获过程中所有牙齿的作用,从攻击的开始到开始收缩。我们发现下颌前三分之一的牙齿最直立,而牙齿向后逐渐变得更弯曲。上颌的牙齿比下颌的牙齿更弯曲,并且上颌的前牙比后牙更直线或后弯。在大多数攻击中,网纹蟒首先主要与下颌的前三分之一接触。攻击产生的动量导致上颚和头骨在老鼠上方旋转。上颚更弯曲的牙齿在不受阻碍地滑过老鼠,直到蛇开始闭合下颚。在其余的攻击中,网纹蟒同时与上下颚的后三分之一接触,穿过猎物并迅速缩回,将猎物困在上下颚弯曲的后牙上。腭骨和翼骨的弯曲牙齿有助于吞咽过程。

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