《解剖记录》在一个新的特刊中将剑齿虎的牙齿沉入剑齿虎的世界。

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY
Jeffrey T. Laitman, Heather F. Smith
{"title":"《解剖记录》在一个新的特刊中将剑齿虎的牙齿沉入剑齿虎的世界。","authors":"Jeffrey T. Laitman,&nbsp;Heather F. Smith","doi":"10.1002/ar.70052","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Next to paying taxes, having in-laws move next door, or, for academics, getting a call saying “the Dean wants to see you,” having to go to the dentist is up there with most hated activities. Many of us can still hear in our mind's ear the buzzing sounds of those horrid drills for days after our painful visits to those chairs of pain. No matter how many tanks with cute angel fish, pictures of Greek beaches, or attempts at soothing music, nothing makes a dentist visit, and their (seemingly gleeful) assault on our teeth, bearable. These encounters are for many of us the modern equivalent of the medieval torture of being put on the rack. With apologies to dentists, most of the world really hates teeth!</p><p>With the possible exception, that is, of paleontologists and evolutionary biologists. Many of that ilk are as inseparably glued to teeth as accountants are to tax time. For them, every nook and cranny, every related feature of bite force, the nature of masticatory biomechanics and muscle function, or the influence of tooth shape on skull shape, and how all this fits into the evolutionary cosmos, is their perpetual candy store of insatiable delicatibles. While it is hard to pinpoint when the systematic study of teeth began—our ancestors probably first gained interest when one was hit in the mouth with a rock in the Pliocene of Africa and noticed things falling out—much can be traced to the work by the great Richard Owen in <i>Odontography: or, A Treatise on the Comparative Anatomy of the Teeth</i> (<span>1840</span>–1845; see also Turp, Brace, and Alt, <span>1997</span>). Ever since, it has been an ongoing smorgasbord for any and all fascinated by those enamel-wrapped packages lodged in the mouth (for a glimpse into this world, particularly as it realtes to mammalian and human diet and evolution, see the overview by Ungar (<span>2017</span>)—a brilliant anthropologist from New York City who gave up biting into Pastrami sandwiches for the delicacies of Arkansas!)</p><p>While toothophiles find any shard of enamel from our past a possible story, there are some animals that set their collective mouths watering. Indeed, what could be more fascinating to them than examing one of the most curious, complicated, and extraordinary groups to ever show their toothy grins: sabertooths? This group can be seen as the “Holy Grail” for those who seek to explore many facets of the comparative biology of teeth, from internal structure, to masticatory forces and effects on the skull, to societal communication among and between groups, to how this morphology appeared and re-appeared evolutionarily. And this leads us to this month's special, Special Issue: “Long in the Tooth: New Insights into the Functional Morphology of Sabertooths.” The Special Issue has been Guest edited by three most interesting, and accomplished, comparative anatomists: Adam Hartstone-Rose of the Department of Biological Sciences of North Carolina State University in Raleigh, North Carolina; Tahlia I. Pollock of the Paleobiology Research Group at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom; and Lars Werdelin from the Department of Paleobiology of the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm, Sweden (Hartstone-Rose et al., <span>2025</span>, Figures 1 and 2).</p><p>As is our custom, a few words of thanks for this dynamic trio who have worked hard to bring depth and breadth to examining the remarkable sabertoothed taxa. First, we offer a hearty welcome to the newcomers to our journal, Tahlia Pollock (Pollock &amp; Anderson, <span>2025</span>) and Lars Werdelin (Werdelin, <span>2025</span>). Dr. Pollock, the junior member of the trio, is a relatively recent graduate from the world “down-under” coming from the noted Monash University in beautiful Melbourne, Australia. While each of the group has published occasionally on teeth, Dr. Pollock's focus is the most centered on dentition and related biomechanics. And even early in her career, she has explored the dental world of groups as diverse as whales and a host of carnivores, including Tasmanian devils. “Good on ya,” as they say in her old neck of the woods, and welcome to <i>The Anatomical Record</i>. Joining Dr. Pollock is a scientist who needs little introduction to those of us in the field of comparative and evolutionary anatomy, Professor Lars Werdelin. Professor Werdelin is arguably the most influential carnivore paleontologist of the last several decades, both for his own prodigious science, and all he did to advance his field as a co-Editor-in-Chief of another esteemed journal, the <i>Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology</i>. Indeed, and as most fitting for this special issue, Professor Werdelin has had a sabertooth felid (<i>Dinofelis werdelini</i>) and extinct hyaenid genus (<i>Werdelinus</i>) named in his honor. As they say in JL's home town of Brooklyn, “he ain't chopped liver”! We are honored to have him as part of our <i>Anatomical Record</i> family.</p><p>That leaves us to say our thanks to Professor Hartstone-Rose—Adam, as we are much too familiar for formal titles. Adam is a central member of <i>The Anatomical Record</i> family, being among our most productive Associate Editors and prolific contributors. His science overarches many areas, but essentially investigates the intersection of structure and function in muscles and the bone muscle interface. Adam's target populations are largely primates—covering a range of strepsirrhines and platyrrhines—but his comparative net extends throughout mammals and often includes carnivorans and bats. As noted, the output from his laboratory and students (he is a dedicated mentor and no surprise how many students have flocked to his bench) is prodigious, with work appearing in many journals, including the <i>American Journal of Biological Anthropology</i>, <i>PLoS One</i>, <i>FASEB Journal</i>, among others. His group has published frequently with us, including research on teeth, bite force, masticatory muscles, muscle architecture of dietary muscle (e.g., Perry et al., <span>2011</span>, <span>2013</span>; Hartstone-Rose et al., <span>2012</span>; Burrows et al., <span>2018</span>; Fabre et al., <span>2018</span>; Hartstone-Rose &amp; Santana, <span>2018</span>; Deutsch et al., <span>2019</span>, <span>2025</span>; Dickinson, Basham, et al., <span>2019a</span>; Dickinson, Kolli, et al., <span>2019b</span>; Hartsone-Rose et al., <span>2018</span>, <span>2019</span>; Leonard et al., <span>2019</span>; Dickinson et al., <span>2024</span>; Dickinson &amp; Hartstone-Rose, <span>2025</span>; Faillace et al., <span>2025</span>; Moretti et al., <span>2025</span>); studies on muscle fiber or on post-cranial muscles (e.g., Boettcher et al., <span>2019</span>; Dickinson &amp; Hartstone-Rose, <span>2025</span>; Leischner et al., <span>2018</span>); and even an interesting foray investigating the ecomorphological correlates of inner and middle ear anatomy within phyllostomid bats (Dickinson et al., <span>2023</span>). In addition to all the above, Adam has Guest Edited two outstanding <i>Anatomical Record</i> Special Issues that explored the behavioral correlates of muscle functional morphology, one on cranial muscles (Hartstone-Rose &amp; Santana, <span>2018</span>; Laitman, <span>2018a</span>; Laitman &amp; Albertine, <span>2018a</span>); the second on post-cranial muscles (Laitman, <span>2018b</span>; Laitman &amp; Albertine, <span>2018b</span>; Marchi &amp; Hartstone-Rose, <span>2018</span>).</p><p>Adam is, hands-down, one of the most interesting individuals you will come across; he is a polymath, a modern version of Leonardo da Vinci. Indeed, like Leonardo, he is a superb artist whose work has even graced our <i>Anatomical Record</i> covers, for example, for this Special Issue as well as for a 2023 issue, “Dinosaurs: New Ideas from Old Bones” (Hartstone-Rose et al., <span>2023</span>). Like Leonardo, his mind seems always to be working, thinking of new projects and new ways to transmit them. For example, one of his recent, non-anatomical projects consisted of charting how animals behave during the recent solar eclipse; he even published his observations for a teenage audience (Hartstone-Rose &amp; Deutsch, <span>2025</span>; who even has time to think about this stuff when the grant is probably due?). But, this is Adam, and as JL has written about in a 2018 commentary for one of Adam's Special Issues (Laitman, <span>2018a</span>), Adam has been an Energizer Bunny since he was a child (JL has known him since he was a little boy running around the halls of the American Museum of Natural History; probably was the one responsible for some broken primate skeletons, but we couldn't prove it!)</p><p>So who better than to take on a project looking at one of the most intriguing, still largely unknown, groups of taxa than this trio comprised of a creative thinker from Australia, a master scholar from Sweden, and an energizer-bunny from New York (ok, now in North Carolina)? They have enlisted like-minded, at times, “out-of-the-box” comparative anatomists to re-think the world of sabertooths, broadly speaking. The 15 papers in this Special Issue will take you on a voyage exploring all sorts of hypertrophied teeth among living and extinct taxa going back to Late Triassic cynodonts to in-depth, and novel, insights into the iconic sabertooth felid lineage itself. Questions will be addressed on the underlying nature of the growth processes of hypertrophied dentition, why particular teeth followed this path, with implications for understanding the basic biology of dental and cranial development. And, of course, insightful discussions on the functions of the sabers themselves; so many possibilities, but which are the most likely?</p><p><i>The Anatomical Record</i> is most proud to showcase this extraordinary new view into the enigmatic world of sabertooths. While it may not make you happy about visiting your dentist, it will give you a greater appreciation of what teeth can tell us.</p><p><b>Jeffrey T. Laitman:</b> Conceptualization; writing – original draft; investigation; writing – review and editing. <b>Heather F. Smith:</b> Writing – original draft; writing – review and editing; visualization; validation.</p>","PeriodicalId":50965,"journal":{"name":"Anatomical Record-Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology","volume":"308 11","pages":"2821-2824"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://anatomypubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ar.70052","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Anatomical Record sinks its teeth into the world of sabertooths in a new special issue\",\"authors\":\"Jeffrey T. Laitman,&nbsp;Heather F. Smith\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/ar.70052\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Next to paying taxes, having in-laws move next door, or, for academics, getting a call saying “the Dean wants to see you,” having to go to the dentist is up there with most hated activities. Many of us can still hear in our mind's ear the buzzing sounds of those horrid drills for days after our painful visits to those chairs of pain. No matter how many tanks with cute angel fish, pictures of Greek beaches, or attempts at soothing music, nothing makes a dentist visit, and their (seemingly gleeful) assault on our teeth, bearable. These encounters are for many of us the modern equivalent of the medieval torture of being put on the rack. With apologies to dentists, most of the world really hates teeth!</p><p>With the possible exception, that is, of paleontologists and evolutionary biologists. Many of that ilk are as inseparably glued to teeth as accountants are to tax time. For them, every nook and cranny, every related feature of bite force, the nature of masticatory biomechanics and muscle function, or the influence of tooth shape on skull shape, and how all this fits into the evolutionary cosmos, is their perpetual candy store of insatiable delicatibles. While it is hard to pinpoint when the systematic study of teeth began—our ancestors probably first gained interest when one was hit in the mouth with a rock in the Pliocene of Africa and noticed things falling out—much can be traced to the work by the great Richard Owen in <i>Odontography: or, A Treatise on the Comparative Anatomy of the Teeth</i> (<span>1840</span>–1845; see also Turp, Brace, and Alt, <span>1997</span>). Ever since, it has been an ongoing smorgasbord for any and all fascinated by those enamel-wrapped packages lodged in the mouth (for a glimpse into this world, particularly as it realtes to mammalian and human diet and evolution, see the overview by Ungar (<span>2017</span>)—a brilliant anthropologist from New York City who gave up biting into Pastrami sandwiches for the delicacies of Arkansas!)</p><p>While toothophiles find any shard of enamel from our past a possible story, there are some animals that set their collective mouths watering. Indeed, what could be more fascinating to them than examing one of the most curious, complicated, and extraordinary groups to ever show their toothy grins: sabertooths? This group can be seen as the “Holy Grail” for those who seek to explore many facets of the comparative biology of teeth, from internal structure, to masticatory forces and effects on the skull, to societal communication among and between groups, to how this morphology appeared and re-appeared evolutionarily. And this leads us to this month's special, Special Issue: “Long in the Tooth: New Insights into the Functional Morphology of Sabertooths.” The Special Issue has been Guest edited by three most interesting, and accomplished, comparative anatomists: Adam Hartstone-Rose of the Department of Biological Sciences of North Carolina State University in Raleigh, North Carolina; Tahlia I. Pollock of the Paleobiology Research Group at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom; and Lars Werdelin from the Department of Paleobiology of the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm, Sweden (Hartstone-Rose et al., <span>2025</span>, Figures 1 and 2).</p><p>As is our custom, a few words of thanks for this dynamic trio who have worked hard to bring depth and breadth to examining the remarkable sabertoothed taxa. First, we offer a hearty welcome to the newcomers to our journal, Tahlia Pollock (Pollock &amp; Anderson, <span>2025</span>) and Lars Werdelin (Werdelin, <span>2025</span>). Dr. Pollock, the junior member of the trio, is a relatively recent graduate from the world “down-under” coming from the noted Monash University in beautiful Melbourne, Australia. While each of the group has published occasionally on teeth, Dr. Pollock's focus is the most centered on dentition and related biomechanics. And even early in her career, she has explored the dental world of groups as diverse as whales and a host of carnivores, including Tasmanian devils. “Good on ya,” as they say in her old neck of the woods, and welcome to <i>The Anatomical Record</i>. Joining Dr. Pollock is a scientist who needs little introduction to those of us in the field of comparative and evolutionary anatomy, Professor Lars Werdelin. Professor Werdelin is arguably the most influential carnivore paleontologist of the last several decades, both for his own prodigious science, and all he did to advance his field as a co-Editor-in-Chief of another esteemed journal, the <i>Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology</i>. Indeed, and as most fitting for this special issue, Professor Werdelin has had a sabertooth felid (<i>Dinofelis werdelini</i>) and extinct hyaenid genus (<i>Werdelinus</i>) named in his honor. As they say in JL's home town of Brooklyn, “he ain't chopped liver”! We are honored to have him as part of our <i>Anatomical Record</i> family.</p><p>That leaves us to say our thanks to Professor Hartstone-Rose—Adam, as we are much too familiar for formal titles. Adam is a central member of <i>The Anatomical Record</i> family, being among our most productive Associate Editors and prolific contributors. His science overarches many areas, but essentially investigates the intersection of structure and function in muscles and the bone muscle interface. Adam's target populations are largely primates—covering a range of strepsirrhines and platyrrhines—but his comparative net extends throughout mammals and often includes carnivorans and bats. As noted, the output from his laboratory and students (he is a dedicated mentor and no surprise how many students have flocked to his bench) is prodigious, with work appearing in many journals, including the <i>American Journal of Biological Anthropology</i>, <i>PLoS One</i>, <i>FASEB Journal</i>, among others. His group has published frequently with us, including research on teeth, bite force, masticatory muscles, muscle architecture of dietary muscle (e.g., Perry et al., <span>2011</span>, <span>2013</span>; Hartstone-Rose et al., <span>2012</span>; Burrows et al., <span>2018</span>; Fabre et al., <span>2018</span>; Hartstone-Rose &amp; Santana, <span>2018</span>; Deutsch et al., <span>2019</span>, <span>2025</span>; Dickinson, Basham, et al., <span>2019a</span>; Dickinson, Kolli, et al., <span>2019b</span>; Hartsone-Rose et al., <span>2018</span>, <span>2019</span>; Leonard et al., <span>2019</span>; Dickinson et al., <span>2024</span>; Dickinson &amp; Hartstone-Rose, <span>2025</span>; Faillace et al., <span>2025</span>; Moretti et al., <span>2025</span>); studies on muscle fiber or on post-cranial muscles (e.g., Boettcher et al., <span>2019</span>; Dickinson &amp; Hartstone-Rose, <span>2025</span>; Leischner et al., <span>2018</span>); and even an interesting foray investigating the ecomorphological correlates of inner and middle ear anatomy within phyllostomid bats (Dickinson et al., <span>2023</span>). In addition to all the above, Adam has Guest Edited two outstanding <i>Anatomical Record</i> Special Issues that explored the behavioral correlates of muscle functional morphology, one on cranial muscles (Hartstone-Rose &amp; Santana, <span>2018</span>; Laitman, <span>2018a</span>; Laitman &amp; Albertine, <span>2018a</span>); the second on post-cranial muscles (Laitman, <span>2018b</span>; Laitman &amp; Albertine, <span>2018b</span>; Marchi &amp; Hartstone-Rose, <span>2018</span>).</p><p>Adam is, hands-down, one of the most interesting individuals you will come across; he is a polymath, a modern version of Leonardo da Vinci. Indeed, like Leonardo, he is a superb artist whose work has even graced our <i>Anatomical Record</i> covers, for example, for this Special Issue as well as for a 2023 issue, “Dinosaurs: New Ideas from Old Bones” (Hartstone-Rose et al., <span>2023</span>). Like Leonardo, his mind seems always to be working, thinking of new projects and new ways to transmit them. For example, one of his recent, non-anatomical projects consisted of charting how animals behave during the recent solar eclipse; he even published his observations for a teenage audience (Hartstone-Rose &amp; Deutsch, <span>2025</span>; who even has time to think about this stuff when the grant is probably due?). But, this is Adam, and as JL has written about in a 2018 commentary for one of Adam's Special Issues (Laitman, <span>2018a</span>), Adam has been an Energizer Bunny since he was a child (JL has known him since he was a little boy running around the halls of the American Museum of Natural History; probably was the one responsible for some broken primate skeletons, but we couldn't prove it!)</p><p>So who better than to take on a project looking at one of the most intriguing, still largely unknown, groups of taxa than this trio comprised of a creative thinker from Australia, a master scholar from Sweden, and an energizer-bunny from New York (ok, now in North Carolina)? They have enlisted like-minded, at times, “out-of-the-box” comparative anatomists to re-think the world of sabertooths, broadly speaking. The 15 papers in this Special Issue will take you on a voyage exploring all sorts of hypertrophied teeth among living and extinct taxa going back to Late Triassic cynodonts to in-depth, and novel, insights into the iconic sabertooth felid lineage itself. Questions will be addressed on the underlying nature of the growth processes of hypertrophied dentition, why particular teeth followed this path, with implications for understanding the basic biology of dental and cranial development. And, of course, insightful discussions on the functions of the sabers themselves; so many possibilities, but which are the most likely?</p><p><i>The Anatomical Record</i> is most proud to showcase this extraordinary new view into the enigmatic world of sabertooths. While it may not make you happy about visiting your dentist, it will give you a greater appreciation of what teeth can tell us.</p><p><b>Jeffrey T. Laitman:</b> Conceptualization; writing – original draft; investigation; writing – review and editing. <b>Heather F. Smith:</b> Writing – original draft; writing – review and editing; visualization; validation.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":50965,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Anatomical Record-Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology\",\"volume\":\"308 11\",\"pages\":\"2821-2824\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.1000,\"publicationDate\":\"2025-09-10\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://anatomypubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ar.70052\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Anatomical Record-Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://anatomypubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ar.70052\",\"RegionNum\":4,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Anatomical Record-Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://anatomypubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ar.70052","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

除了纳税、让姻亲搬到隔壁,或者对学生来说,接到“院长要见你”的电话,不得不去看牙医是最令人讨厌的事情。我们中的许多人在痛苦地坐在那些痛苦的椅子上几天后,仍然可以在我们的脑海中听到那些可怕的钻头发出的嗡嗡声。不管有多少装着可爱的天使鱼的鱼缸,希腊海滩的照片,或者舒缓音乐的尝试,没有什么能让牙医的拜访,以及他们(看似愉快的)对我们牙齿的攻击,变得可以忍受。对我们中的许多人来说,这些遭遇相当于中世纪被送上刑架的酷刑。向牙医道歉,世界上大多数人真的讨厌牙齿!除了可能的例外,那就是古生物学家和进化生物学家。这类人中的许多人就像会计师对纳税时间一样粘得死死的。对他们来说,每一个角落和缝隙,咬合力的每一个相关特征,咀嚼生物力学和肌肉功能的本质,或者牙齿形状对头骨形状的影响,以及所有这些如何适应进化的宇宙,都是他们永不满足的糖果店。虽然很难确定对牙齿的系统研究是从什么时候开始的——我们的祖先可能是在非洲上新世被石头砸到嘴里并注意到东西掉出来的时候才开始感兴趣的——但这可以追溯到伟大的理查德·欧文在《牙齿学》(1840-1845;参见Turp, Brace, and Alt, 1997)中所做的工作。从那以后,它一直是一个持续的自助餐,任何和所有着迷于那些珐琅包装的包裹在嘴里(一瞥这个世界,特别是因为它涉及哺乳动物和人类的饮食和进化,见概述Ungar(2017) -一个杰出的人类学家从纽约市放弃咬熏牛肉三明治阿肯色州的美味!)虽然爱牙者发现任何来自我们过去的牙釉质碎片都是一个可能的故事,但有些动物却让他们垂涎不已。事实上,有什么能比研究剑齿虎这个最奇怪、最复杂、最不寻常的种群来展示它们的咧嘴笑更让他们着迷呢?对于那些寻求探索牙齿比较生物学的许多方面的人来说,这一群体可以被视为“圣杯”,从内部结构到咀嚼力和对头骨的影响,到群体之间和群体之间的社会交流,再到这种形态如何在进化中出现和重新出现。这就引出了这个月的特刊:“长牙:剑齿虎功能形态学的新见解。”本期特刊由三位最有趣、最有成就的比较解剖学家担任客座编辑:北卡罗来纳州罗利市北卡罗莱纳州立大学生物科学系的亚当·哈特斯通-罗斯;英国布里斯托尔大学古生物研究小组的Tahlia I. Pollock;以及瑞典斯德哥尔摩瑞典自然历史博物馆古生物学系的Lars Werdelin (Hartstone-Rose et al., 2025,图1和2)。按照我们的惯例,我要对这三位充满活力的人说几句感谢的话,他们努力工作,从深度和广度上考察了这非凡的剑齿虎类群。首先,我们衷心欢迎我们杂志的新成员,塔利亚·波洛克(波洛克&安德森,2025)和拉斯·沃德林(沃德林,2025)。波洛克博士是三人组中资历较浅的一位,他毕业于风景秀丽的澳大利亚墨尔本著名的莫纳什大学(Monash University),毕业时间相对较晚。虽然每个小组偶尔都会发表关于牙齿的文章,但波洛克博士的重点是牙列和相关的生物力学。甚至在她职业生涯的早期,她就探索了不同群体的牙齿世界,包括鲸鱼和许多食肉动物,包括塔斯马尼亚魔鬼。“干得好”就像她老家的人说的,欢迎来到解剖记录。加入波洛克博士的是一位科学家,Lars Werdelin教授,对于我们这些在比较和进化解剖学领域工作的人来说,他几乎不需要介绍。沃尔德林教授可以说是近几十年来最有影响力的食肉动物古生物学家,不仅因为他自己惊人的科学成就,还因为他作为另一本受人尊敬的杂志《脊椎动物古生物学杂志》(journal of Vertebrate Paleontology)的联合主编为推进自己的领域所做的一切。事实上,为了最适合本期特刊,沃德林教授以他的名字命名了一种剑齿虎猫科动物(Dinofelis werdelini)和一种已灭绝的鬣狗属(Werdelinus)。就像他们在JL的家乡布鲁克林说的,“他不是剁肝”!我们很荣幸他能成为我们解剖记录大家庭的一员。这让我们对哈特斯通-罗斯-亚当教授表示感谢,因为我们太熟悉了,不适合正式的头衔。 亚当是解剖记录家族的核心成员,是我们最有成效的副编辑和多产的贡献者之一。他的科学涵盖了许多领域,但本质上是研究肌肉和骨骼肌界面的结构和功能的交集。亚当的目标群体主要是灵长类动物——包括一系列链鼻和颈鼻——但他的比较网扩展到哺乳动物,通常包括食肉动物和蝙蝠。如前所述,他的实验室和学生(他是一位敬业的导师,毫不奇怪有多少学生涌向他的工作台)的产出是惊人的,其工作发表在许多期刊上,包括美国生物人类学杂志,PLoS One, FASEB杂志等。他的团队经常与我们一起发表文章,包括对牙齿、咬力、咀嚼肌、膳食肌肉肌肉结构的研究(例如Perry等人,2011年,2013年;Hartstone-Rose等人,2012年;Burrows等人,2018年;Fabre等人,2018年;Hartstone-Rose等人,Santana, 2018年;Deutsch等人,2019年,2025年;Dickinson, Basham等人,2019a; Dickinson, Kolli等人,2019b; hartson - rose等人,2018年,2019年;Leonard等人,2019年;Dickinson等人,2024年;Dickinson等人,2024年;Dickinson等人,2025年;Dickinson等人,2024年;Dickinson等人,2025年;Faillace et al., 2025;Moretti et al., 2025);肌纤维或颅后肌肉的研究(如Boettcher等人,2019;Dickinson等人;Hartstone-Rose, 2025; Leischner等人,2018);甚至还有一个有趣的尝试,研究了层状目蝙蝠内耳和中耳解剖的生态形态学相关性(Dickinson et al., 2023)。除此之外,Adam还客串编辑了两篇杰出的解剖记录特刊,探讨了肌肉功能形态的行为相关性,其中一篇是关于颅肌的(Hartstone-Rose & Santana, 2018; Laitman, 2018a; Laitman & Albertine, 2018a);第二个是颅后肌肉(Laitman, 2018b; Laitman & Albertine, 2018b; Marchi & Hartstone-Rose, 2018)。毫无疑问,亚当是你会遇到的最有趣的人之一;他是个博学多才的人,是现代版的达芬奇。事实上,像莱昂纳多一样,他是一位出色的艺术家,他的作品甚至为我们的解剖记录封面带来了亮点,例如,这一期特刊以及2023年的一期“恐龙:来自旧骨头的新想法”(Hartstone-Rose et al., 2023)。像列奥纳多一样,他的大脑似乎总是在工作,思考新的项目和新的方式来传递它们。例如,他最近的一个非解剖学项目包括绘制动物在最近的日食期间的行为;他甚至为青少年读者发表了他的观察结果(Hartstone-Rose & Deutsch, 2025;谁有时间考虑这些东西,因为补助金可能要到期了?)但是,这就是亚当,正如JL在2018年《亚当的特刊》(Laitman, 2018a)的评论中所写的那样,亚当从小就一直是劲量兔(JL从他还是个小男孩的时候就认识他了,他在美国自然历史博物馆的大厅里奔跑;可能是一些灵长类动物骨骼断裂的原因,但我们无法证明!)所以,有谁比这三人组更适合做一个项目,研究最有趣的,但在很大程度上仍然未知的分类群之一呢?这三人组由一位来自澳大利亚的创造性思想家,一位来自瑞典的大师学者和一位来自纽约的能量兔(好吧,现在在北卡罗来纳州)组成。他们有时会邀请志同道合、“打破常规”的比较解剖学家,从广义上重新思考剑齿虎的世界。本期特刊中的15篇论文将带你踏上一段探索现存和已灭绝分类群中各种肥大牙齿的旅程,这些牙齿可以追溯到晚三叠纪犬齿动物,深入而新颖地了解标志性的剑齿虎猫科动物谱系本身。问题将解决在肥大的牙齿生长过程的潜在性质,为什么特定的牙齿遵循这一路径,与理解牙齿和颅骨发育的基本生物学的含义。当然,还有关于军刀本身功能的深刻讨论;这么多可能性,但哪一个最有可能呢?《解剖记录》杂志非常自豪地展示了剑齿虎神秘世界的非凡新视角。虽然去看牙医可能不会让你开心,但它会让你更好地了解牙齿能告诉我们什么。Jeffrey T. Laitman:概念化;写作——原稿;调查;写作——审阅和编辑。希瑟·f·史密斯:写作-原稿;写作——审阅和编辑;可视化;验证。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The Anatomical Record sinks its teeth into the world of sabertooths in a new special issue

The Anatomical Record sinks its teeth into the world of sabertooths in a new special issue

Next to paying taxes, having in-laws move next door, or, for academics, getting a call saying “the Dean wants to see you,” having to go to the dentist is up there with most hated activities. Many of us can still hear in our mind's ear the buzzing sounds of those horrid drills for days after our painful visits to those chairs of pain. No matter how many tanks with cute angel fish, pictures of Greek beaches, or attempts at soothing music, nothing makes a dentist visit, and their (seemingly gleeful) assault on our teeth, bearable. These encounters are for many of us the modern equivalent of the medieval torture of being put on the rack. With apologies to dentists, most of the world really hates teeth!

With the possible exception, that is, of paleontologists and evolutionary biologists. Many of that ilk are as inseparably glued to teeth as accountants are to tax time. For them, every nook and cranny, every related feature of bite force, the nature of masticatory biomechanics and muscle function, or the influence of tooth shape on skull shape, and how all this fits into the evolutionary cosmos, is their perpetual candy store of insatiable delicatibles. While it is hard to pinpoint when the systematic study of teeth began—our ancestors probably first gained interest when one was hit in the mouth with a rock in the Pliocene of Africa and noticed things falling out—much can be traced to the work by the great Richard Owen in Odontography: or, A Treatise on the Comparative Anatomy of the Teeth (1840–1845; see also Turp, Brace, and Alt, 1997). Ever since, it has been an ongoing smorgasbord for any and all fascinated by those enamel-wrapped packages lodged in the mouth (for a glimpse into this world, particularly as it realtes to mammalian and human diet and evolution, see the overview by Ungar (2017)—a brilliant anthropologist from New York City who gave up biting into Pastrami sandwiches for the delicacies of Arkansas!)

While toothophiles find any shard of enamel from our past a possible story, there are some animals that set their collective mouths watering. Indeed, what could be more fascinating to them than examing one of the most curious, complicated, and extraordinary groups to ever show their toothy grins: sabertooths? This group can be seen as the “Holy Grail” for those who seek to explore many facets of the comparative biology of teeth, from internal structure, to masticatory forces and effects on the skull, to societal communication among and between groups, to how this morphology appeared and re-appeared evolutionarily. And this leads us to this month's special, Special Issue: “Long in the Tooth: New Insights into the Functional Morphology of Sabertooths.” The Special Issue has been Guest edited by three most interesting, and accomplished, comparative anatomists: Adam Hartstone-Rose of the Department of Biological Sciences of North Carolina State University in Raleigh, North Carolina; Tahlia I. Pollock of the Paleobiology Research Group at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom; and Lars Werdelin from the Department of Paleobiology of the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm, Sweden (Hartstone-Rose et al., 2025, Figures 1 and 2).

As is our custom, a few words of thanks for this dynamic trio who have worked hard to bring depth and breadth to examining the remarkable sabertoothed taxa. First, we offer a hearty welcome to the newcomers to our journal, Tahlia Pollock (Pollock & Anderson, 2025) and Lars Werdelin (Werdelin, 2025). Dr. Pollock, the junior member of the trio, is a relatively recent graduate from the world “down-under” coming from the noted Monash University in beautiful Melbourne, Australia. While each of the group has published occasionally on teeth, Dr. Pollock's focus is the most centered on dentition and related biomechanics. And even early in her career, she has explored the dental world of groups as diverse as whales and a host of carnivores, including Tasmanian devils. “Good on ya,” as they say in her old neck of the woods, and welcome to The Anatomical Record. Joining Dr. Pollock is a scientist who needs little introduction to those of us in the field of comparative and evolutionary anatomy, Professor Lars Werdelin. Professor Werdelin is arguably the most influential carnivore paleontologist of the last several decades, both for his own prodigious science, and all he did to advance his field as a co-Editor-in-Chief of another esteemed journal, the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. Indeed, and as most fitting for this special issue, Professor Werdelin has had a sabertooth felid (Dinofelis werdelini) and extinct hyaenid genus (Werdelinus) named in his honor. As they say in JL's home town of Brooklyn, “he ain't chopped liver”! We are honored to have him as part of our Anatomical Record family.

That leaves us to say our thanks to Professor Hartstone-Rose—Adam, as we are much too familiar for formal titles. Adam is a central member of The Anatomical Record family, being among our most productive Associate Editors and prolific contributors. His science overarches many areas, but essentially investigates the intersection of structure and function in muscles and the bone muscle interface. Adam's target populations are largely primates—covering a range of strepsirrhines and platyrrhines—but his comparative net extends throughout mammals and often includes carnivorans and bats. As noted, the output from his laboratory and students (he is a dedicated mentor and no surprise how many students have flocked to his bench) is prodigious, with work appearing in many journals, including the American Journal of Biological Anthropology, PLoS One, FASEB Journal, among others. His group has published frequently with us, including research on teeth, bite force, masticatory muscles, muscle architecture of dietary muscle (e.g., Perry et al., 2011, 2013; Hartstone-Rose et al., 2012; Burrows et al., 2018; Fabre et al., 2018; Hartstone-Rose & Santana, 2018; Deutsch et al., 2019, 2025; Dickinson, Basham, et al., 2019a; Dickinson, Kolli, et al., 2019b; Hartsone-Rose et al., 2018, 2019; Leonard et al., 2019; Dickinson et al., 2024; Dickinson & Hartstone-Rose, 2025; Faillace et al., 2025; Moretti et al., 2025); studies on muscle fiber or on post-cranial muscles (e.g., Boettcher et al., 2019; Dickinson & Hartstone-Rose, 2025; Leischner et al., 2018); and even an interesting foray investigating the ecomorphological correlates of inner and middle ear anatomy within phyllostomid bats (Dickinson et al., 2023). In addition to all the above, Adam has Guest Edited two outstanding Anatomical Record Special Issues that explored the behavioral correlates of muscle functional morphology, one on cranial muscles (Hartstone-Rose & Santana, 2018; Laitman, 2018a; Laitman & Albertine, 2018a); the second on post-cranial muscles (Laitman, 2018b; Laitman & Albertine, 2018b; Marchi & Hartstone-Rose, 2018).

Adam is, hands-down, one of the most interesting individuals you will come across; he is a polymath, a modern version of Leonardo da Vinci. Indeed, like Leonardo, he is a superb artist whose work has even graced our Anatomical Record covers, for example, for this Special Issue as well as for a 2023 issue, “Dinosaurs: New Ideas from Old Bones” (Hartstone-Rose et al., 2023). Like Leonardo, his mind seems always to be working, thinking of new projects and new ways to transmit them. For example, one of his recent, non-anatomical projects consisted of charting how animals behave during the recent solar eclipse; he even published his observations for a teenage audience (Hartstone-Rose & Deutsch, 2025; who even has time to think about this stuff when the grant is probably due?). But, this is Adam, and as JL has written about in a 2018 commentary for one of Adam's Special Issues (Laitman, 2018a), Adam has been an Energizer Bunny since he was a child (JL has known him since he was a little boy running around the halls of the American Museum of Natural History; probably was the one responsible for some broken primate skeletons, but we couldn't prove it!)

So who better than to take on a project looking at one of the most intriguing, still largely unknown, groups of taxa than this trio comprised of a creative thinker from Australia, a master scholar from Sweden, and an energizer-bunny from New York (ok, now in North Carolina)? They have enlisted like-minded, at times, “out-of-the-box” comparative anatomists to re-think the world of sabertooths, broadly speaking. The 15 papers in this Special Issue will take you on a voyage exploring all sorts of hypertrophied teeth among living and extinct taxa going back to Late Triassic cynodonts to in-depth, and novel, insights into the iconic sabertooth felid lineage itself. Questions will be addressed on the underlying nature of the growth processes of hypertrophied dentition, why particular teeth followed this path, with implications for understanding the basic biology of dental and cranial development. And, of course, insightful discussions on the functions of the sabers themselves; so many possibilities, but which are the most likely?

The Anatomical Record is most proud to showcase this extraordinary new view into the enigmatic world of sabertooths. While it may not make you happy about visiting your dentist, it will give you a greater appreciation of what teeth can tell us.

Jeffrey T. Laitman: Conceptualization; writing – original draft; investigation; writing – review and editing. Heather F. Smith: Writing – original draft; writing – review and editing; visualization; validation.

求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
15.00%
发文量
266
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: The Anatomical Record
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:604180095
Book学术官方微信