Teaford M F, Walker A
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1984 Jun;64(2):191-200. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330640213.
Studies of dental microwear have been used to relate tooth form to function in a variety of recent and extinct mammals. Probably the most important aspect of microwear analysis is the possibility of using it to deduce the diet of extinct animals. Such deductions must be based on comparative studies of modern species with known diets, but to date, only qualitative studies have been attempted and all have been based on small samples. Here we report quantitative differences in dental microwear between primate species that are known to have different diets. Occlusal facets with different functions have previously been shown to exhibit different microwear patterns. However, the differences between facets of one species are shown to be far less than those between homologous facets of different species. Study of seven species of extant primates shows that enamel microwear can be used to distinguish between those with a mainly frugivorous diet and those with a mainly folivorous one. Microwear can also distinguish hard-object feeders from soft-fruit eaters. The microwear of Miocene Sivapithecus indicus cannot be distinguished statistically from that of the chimpanzee, but it is different from that of the other species. On this evidence S. indicus was not a hard-object feeder and the adaptive significance of its thick molar enamel is at present unknown.
牙齿微磨损的研究已被用于在各种现代和已灭绝的哺乳动物中,将牙齿形态与功能联系起来。微磨损分析最重要的方面可能是利用它来推断已灭绝动物饮食的可能性。此类推断必须基于对已知饮食的现代物种的比较研究,但迄今为止,仅尝试过定性研究,且所有研究均基于小样本。在此,我们报告了已知具有不同饮食的灵长类物种之间牙齿微磨损的定量差异。先前已表明,具有不同功能的咬合面会呈现出不同的微磨损模式。然而,一个物种不同面之间的差异远小于不同物种同源面之间的差异。对七种现存灵长类动物的研究表明,牙釉质微磨损可用于区分主要以果实为食的动物和主要以树叶为食的动物。微磨损还能区分硬食物进食者和软水果进食者。中新世的印度西瓦古猿的微磨损在统计学上与黑猩猩的微磨损无法区分,但与其他物种的微磨损不同。基于此证据,印度西瓦古猿不是硬食物进食者,其厚臼齿牙釉质的适应意义目前尚不清楚。