4.5 Article

Characters from the deciduous dentition and its interest for phylogenetic reconstruction in Hippopotamoidea (Cetartiodactyla: Mammalia)

Journal

ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 193, Issue 2, Pages 413-431

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa147

Keywords

Anthracotheres; dental ontogeny; homology; maximum-likelihood analysis; molarization; parsimony analyses

Categories

Funding

  1. Agence Nationale de la Recherche: Splash [ANR-15-CE32-0010-01]

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Teeth are important in phylogeny, with deciduous dentition potentially providing insights into evolutionary relationships. Studying deciduous dentition in cetartiodactyl taxa can help resolve debates within hippopotamoids. The use of deciduous dentition characters may shed light on the origins of dental homology.
Teeth are frequently used in phylogeny in order to better characterize the evolution of extinct mammal species. While most studies have focused on the adult dentition, the consideration of characters from the deciduous dentition could also contribute to reinforce phylogenetic assumptions or disentangle phylogenetic issues. We chose to investigate the characters of the deciduous dentition in cetartiodactyl taxa in relation to the disputed relationships within hippopotamoids, especially the position of Hippopotamidae. We describe the deciduous dentition of 51 species, among a dataset of 70 cetartiodactyls. We noticed that second and third deciduous premolars have a much lower degree of molarization, and are more suitable for coding than fourth deciduous premolars. Thirty-nine resulting characters were thus added to a previously published matrix, and parsimony and maximum-likelihood analyses were performed. Both analyses provided a better resolved topology for most taxa than without these characters, and with better support for most nodes in the parsimony analysis. Moreover, this analysis provides additional characters supporting the hypothesis of an emergence of hippopotamids within bothriodontine anthracotheres from the Palaeogene of Africa. The promising use of characters from the deciduous dentition in phylogeny should allow discussion of the underlying ontogenetic mechanisms at the origin of dental homology.

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