Max Planck Weizmann Center for Integrative Archaeology and Anthropology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research, Klosterneuburg, Austria.
PLoS One. 2021 May 10;16(5):e0251309. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251309. eCollection 2021.
Dental wear analyses have been widely used to interpret the dietary ecology in primates. However, it remains unclear to what extent a combination of wear analyses acting at distinct temporal scales can be beneficial in interpreting the tooth use of primates with a high variation in their intraspecific dietary ecology. Here, we combine macroscopic tooth wear (occlusal fingerprint analysis, long-term signals) with microscopic 3D surface textures (short-term signals) exploring the tooth use of a historical western chimpanzee population from northeastern Liberia with no detailed dietary records. We compare our results to previously published tooth wear and feeding data of the extant and continually monitored chimpanzees of Taї National Park in Ivory Coast. Macroscopic tooth wear results from molar wear facets of the Liberian population indicate only slightly less wear when compared to the Taї population. This suggests similar long-term feeding behavior between both populations. In contrast, 3D surface texture results show that Liberian chimpanzees have many and small microscopic wear facet features that group them with those Taї chimpanzees that knowingly died during dry periods. This coincides with historical accounts, which indicate that local tribes poached and butchered the Liberian specimens during dust-rich dry periods. In addition, Liberian females and males differ somewhat in their 3D surface textures, with females having more microscopic peaks, smaller hill and dale areas and slightly rougher wear facet surfaces than males. This suggests a higher consumption of insects in Liberian females compared to males, based on similar 3D surface texture patterns previously reported for Taї chimpanzees. Our study opens new options for uncovering details of feeding behaviors of chimpanzees and other living and fossil primates, with macroscopic tooth wear tracing the long-term dietary and environmental history of a single population and microscopic tooth wear addressing short-term changes (e.g. seasonality).
牙齿磨损分析被广泛应用于解释灵长类动物的饮食生态。然而,对于不同时间尺度的磨损分析在多大程度上有助于解释具有高度种内饮食生态差异的灵长类动物的牙齿使用情况,目前仍不清楚。在这里,我们将宏观牙齿磨损(咬合指纹分析,长期信号)与微观 3D 表面纹理(短期信号)相结合,探索来自利比里亚东北部没有详细饮食记录的历史上的西部黑猩猩种群的牙齿使用情况。我们将我们的结果与之前发表的象牙海岸泰伊国家公园现生和持续监测的黑猩猩的牙齿磨损和喂养数据进行了比较。来自利比里亚种群的磨牙磨损面的宏观牙齿磨损结果表明,与泰伊种群相比,磨损程度略低。这表明两个种群具有相似的长期喂养行为。相比之下,3D 表面纹理结果表明,利比里亚黑猩猩有许多小的微观磨损面特征,这些特征将它们与那些在干旱时期有意识地死亡的泰伊黑猩猩归为一组。这与历史记录相符,历史记录表明,在尘土飞扬的干旱时期,当地部落捕杀并屠宰了利比里亚的标本。此外,利比里亚的雌性和雄性在 3D 表面纹理上有些不同,雌性的微观峰更多,山和谷区域更小,磨损面更粗糙。这表明,与之前报道的泰伊黑猩猩的类似 3D 表面纹理模式相比,利比里亚雌性的昆虫摄入量高于雄性。我们的研究为揭示黑猩猩和其他现生和化石灵长类动物的喂养行为细节提供了新的选择,宏观牙齿磨损追踪了单个种群的长期饮食和环境历史,而微观牙齿磨损则解决了短期变化(例如季节性)。