穿刺性能测试揭示了鳍状齿不同的喂养模式。

C. M. Peredo, D. N. Ingle, C. Marshall
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引用次数: 3

摘要

海洋哺乳动物在进化史上经历了一系列戏剧性的形态转变,促进了它们向水中生活的生态过渡。鳍足动物是渐新世(~ 27 Ma)由陆生食肉动物进化而来的海洋哺乳动物的一个分支。然而,鳍足类动物已经失去了哺乳动物和食肉动物进食的标志性牙齿创新,如爪状盆或剪切食肉动物。现代鳍足类动物不咀嚼猎物,但可以通过切割行为来缩小猎物的体积。通常,小型猎物会被整个吞下。然而,鳍足类动物显示出广泛的后犬齿形态。我们通过测量七个现存鳍状属的颊齿的穿刺性能来研究牙齿形态与鳍状进食之间的关系。穿刺性能测量为最大的力量和最大的能量,需要穿刺一个标准化的猎物项目(Loligo sp)。我们报告了七个属中穿刺性能值的显着差异,并根据颊齿形态和穿刺性能确定了三个不同的类别:有效,无效和中度穿刺器。此外,我们使用两个不同的指标来测量牙齿排的总体复杂性,取向补丁计数旋转(OPCR)和救济指数(RFI)。复杂度指标都不能预测穿刺性能。最后,我们在已知鳍足动物摄食策略的更广泛背景下讨论这些结果,并为后续探索特定牙齿形态的生态变化奠定基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Puncture performance tests reveal distinct feeding modes in pinniped teeth.
Marine mammals underwent a dramatic series of morphological transformations throughout their evolutionary history that facilitated their ecological transition to life in the water. Pinnipeds are a diverse clade of marine mammals that evolved from terrestrial carnivorans in the Oligocene (∼27 Ma). However, pinnipeds have secondarily lost the dental innovations emblematic of mammalian and carnivoran feeding, such as a talonid basin or shearing carnassials. Modern pinnipeds do not masticate their prey, but can reduce prey size through chopping behavior. Typically, small prey are swallowed whole. Nevertheless, pinnipeds display a wide breadth of morphology of the post-canine teeth. We investigated the relationship between dental morphologies and pinniped feeding by measuring the puncture performance of the cheek-teeth of seven extant pinniped genera. Puncture performance was measured as the maximum force and the maximum energy required to puncture a standardized prey item (Loligo sp). We report signficant differences in the puncture performance values across the seven genera, and identify three distinct categories based on cheek-teeth morphology and puncture performance: effective, ineffective, and moderate puncturers. In addition, we measured the overall complexity of the tooth row using two different metrics, Orientation Patch Count Rotated (OPCR) and Relif Index (RFI). Neither metric of complexity predicted puncture performance. Finally, we discuss these results in the broader context of known pinniped feeding strategies and lay the groundwork for subsequent efforts to explore the ecological variation of specific dental morphologies.
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