Teaford Mark F, Ross Callum F, Ungar Peter S, Vinyard Christopher J, Laird Myra F
Department of Basic Science, Touro University, Vallejo, California.
Department of Organismal Biology & Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol. 2021 Dec 1;583. doi: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2021.110644. Epub 2021 Sep 20.
Dental microwear analysis has been employed in studies of a wide range of modern and fossil animals, yielding insights into the biology/ecology of those taxa. Some researchers have suggested that dental microwear patterns ultimately relate back to the material properties of the foods being consumed, whereas others have suggested that, because exogenous grit is harder than organic materials in food, grit should have an overwhelming impact on dental microwear patterns. To shed light on this issue, laboratory-based feeding experiments were conducted on tufted capuchin monkeys [] with dental impressions taken before and after consumption of different artificial foods. The foods were (1) brittle custom-made biscuits laced with either of two differently-sized aluminum silicate abrasives, and (2) ductile custom-made "gummies" laced with either of the two same abrasives. In both cases, animals were allowed to feed on the foods for 36 hours before follow-up dental impressions were taken. Resultant casts were analyzed using a scanning electron microscope. We asked five questions: (1) would the animals consume different amounts of each food item, (2) what types of dental microwear would be formed, (3) would rates of dental microwear differ between the consumption of biscuits (i.e., brittle) versus gummies (i.e., ductile), (4) would rates of dental microwear differ between foods including larger- versus smaller-grained abrasives, and (5) would rates of dental microwear differ between molar shearing and crushing facets in the animals in these experiments? Results indicated that (1) fewer biscuits were consumed when laced with larger-grained abrasives (as opposed to smaller-grained abrasives), but no such difference was observed in the consumption of gummies, (2) in all cases, a variety of dental microwear features was formed, (3) rates of dental microwear were higher when biscuits versus gummies were consumed, (4) biscuits laced with larger-grained abrasives caused a higher percentage of new features per item consumed, and (5) the only difference between facets occurred with the processing of biscuits, where crushing facets showed a faster rate of wear than shearing facets. These findings suggest that the impact of exogenous grit on dental microwear is the result of a dynamic, complex interaction between (at the very least) grit size, food material properties, and time spent feeding - which is further evidence of the multifactorial nature of dental microwear formation.
牙齿微磨损分析已被应用于对各种现代和化石动物的研究中,从而深入了解这些分类群的生物学/生态学特征。一些研究人员认为,牙齿微磨损模式最终与所食用食物的材料特性有关,而另一些人则认为,由于外源性沙砾比食物中的有机物质更硬,沙砾应该对牙齿微磨损模式产生压倒性的影响。为了阐明这个问题,我们对簇绒卷尾猴进行了基于实验室的喂食实验[],在食用不同人工食物前后采集牙齿印模。这些食物包括:(1)脆性的定制饼干,其中掺入两种不同尺寸的硅酸铝磨料中的一种;(2)韧性的定制“软糖”,也掺入相同的两种磨料中的一种。在这两种情况下,在采集后续牙齿印模之前,让动物食用这些食物36小时。使用扫描电子显微镜对所得的铸模进行分析。我们提出了五个问题:(1)动物对每种食物的摄入量是否会有所不同?(2)会形成哪些类型的牙齿微磨损?(3)食用饼干(即脆性食物)与软糖(即韧性食物)时,牙齿微磨损的速率是否会有所不同?(4)包含较大颗粒磨料与较小颗粒磨料的食物之间,牙齿微磨损的速率是否会有所不同?(5)在这些实验中,动物的臼齿剪切面和压碎面的牙齿微磨损速率是否会有所不同?结果表明:(1)掺入较大颗粒磨料的饼干摄入量较少(与掺入较小颗粒磨料的饼干相比),但在软糖的摄入量上未观察到此类差异;(2)在所有情况下,都形成了各种牙齿微磨损特征;(3)食用饼干时的牙齿微磨损速率高于食用软糖时;(4)掺入较大颗粒磨料的饼干每消耗一个产生新特征的百分比更高;(5)各面之间的唯一差异出现在饼干的加工过程中,其中压碎面的磨损速率比剪切面更快。这些发现表明,外源性沙砾对牙齿微磨损的影响是(至少)沙砾大小、食物材料特性和进食时间之间动态、复杂相互作用的结果——这进一步证明了牙齿微磨损形成的多因素性质。