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生活中和已灭绝的树栖灵长类动物的龋齿与饮食的关系。

Dental caries in living and extinct strepsirrhines with insights into diet.

机构信息

Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.

University of Warsaw, Faculty of Biology, Biological and Chemical Research Centre, Institute of Evolutionary Biology, Warsaw, Poland.

出版信息

Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2024 Jun;307(6):1995-2006. doi: 10.1002/ar.25420. Epub 2024 Mar 11.

Abstract

Dental caries is one of the most common diseases afflicting modern humans and occurs in both living and extinct non-human primates, as well as other mammalian species. Compared to other primates, less is known about the etiology or frequency of caries among the Strepsirrhini. Given the link between caries and diet, caries frequency may be informative about the dietary ecology of a given animal. Understanding rates of caries in wild populations is also critical to assessing dental health in captive populations. Here, we examine caries frequency in a sample of 36 extant strepsirrhine species (n = 316 individuals) using odontological collections of wild-, non-captive animals housed at the American Museum of Natural History by counting the number of specimens characterized by the disease. Additionally, in the context of studying caries lesions in strepsirrhines, case studies were also conducted to test if similar lesions were found in their fossil relatives. In particular, two fossil strepsirrhine species were analyzed: the earliest Late Eocene Karanisia clarki, and the subfossil lemur Megaladapis madagascariensis. Our results suggest that caries affects 13.92% of the extant individuals we examined. The frugivorous and folivorous taxa were characterized by the highest overall frequency of caries, whereas the insectivores, gummivores, and omnivores had much lower caries frequencies. Our results suggest that caries may be common among wild populations of strepsirrhines, and in fact is more prevalent than in many catarrhines and platyrrhines. These findings have important implications for understanding caries, diet, and health in living and fossil taxa.

摘要

龋齿是现代人类最常见的疾病之一,不仅发生在现存的和已灭绝的非人类灵长类动物中,也发生在其他哺乳动物中。与其他灵长类动物相比,关于食虫目动物龋齿的病因或发病率知之甚少。鉴于龋齿与饮食之间的联系,龋齿的发病率可能有助于了解特定动物的饮食生态。了解野生种群中龋齿的发病率对于评估圈养种群的牙齿健康也至关重要。在这里,我们通过对美国自然历史博物馆收藏的野生、非圈养动物的牙齿标本进行计数,检查了 36 种现存的食虫目物种(n=316 个个体)的龋齿发病率。此外,在研究食虫目动物的龋齿病变时,还进行了病例研究,以测试是否在它们的化石近亲中发现了类似的病变。特别是,分析了两种化石食虫目物种:最早的晚始新世的 Karanisia clarki 和亚化石狐猴 Megaladapis madagascariensis。我们的研究结果表明,龋齿影响了我们检查的 13.92%的现存个体。以水果和叶子为食的类群的总体龋齿发病率最高,而食虫目动物、以树胶为食的动物和杂食动物的龋齿发病率则低得多。我们的研究结果表明,龋齿可能在食虫目动物的野生种群中很常见,事实上比许多猫科动物和阔鼻猴科动物中的龋齿更为普遍。这些发现对理解龋齿、饮食和生活及化石类群的健康具有重要意义。

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