4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Are breeding teeth in Atlantic salmon a component of the drastic alterations of the oral facial skeleton?

Journal

ARCHIVES OF ORAL BIOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 2, Pages 213-217

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.archoralbio.2004.10.018

Keywords

dentition; tooth replacement; breeding teeth; spawning migration; salmo salar

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Upriver spawning migration of starving Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) involves drastic skeletal alterations, among which a toothless stage followed by the appearance of a new set of so-called breeding teeth has been described. To investigate this phenomenon, we examined the patterns of tooth replacement on the lower jaws in different life stages of wild animals before and after spawning. Prior to spawning, every position held either a functional or a replacement tooth, both in first-time (grilse) and repetitive (salmon) spawners. Teeth were in a similar developmental stage-every three positions along the tooth row. A functional tooth occurred in every third position and intermediate positions were taken by developing teeth. Within the of replacement, teeth were resorbed and not shed. Our observations on an process uninterrupted tooth replacement pattern provided no evidence of an intermediate toothless stage nor of a specialized breeding-teeth generation. Only animals that survived spawning (ketts) showed a highly variable tooth pattern, but with the initial every third position pattern still recognizable in some animals. We hypothesise that previous accounts describing a complete tooth loss/ replacement relate to proliferation of the oral mucosa that conceals the teeth prior to the breeding period and to the use of maceration techniques that could have removed at teeth with an incompletely mineralised base. (c) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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