4.5 Article

Dental microwear texture gradients in guinea pigs reveal that material properties of the diet affect chewing behaviour

期刊

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
卷 224, 期 13, 页码 -

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COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.242446

关键词

Mastication; Bite force; Tooth wear; Abrasion

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资金

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (ERC Consolidator Grant) [681450]

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The study found that different diets have varying impacts on dental microwear texture in animals, with posterior tooth positions experiencing more wear from plant diets and a more uniform wear distribution along the tooth row from pelleted diets. This is due to the continuous intake and comminution of plant material during feeding, resulting in opposing wear gradients for plant versus pelleted diets.
Dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA) is widely used for diet inferences in extant and extinct vertebrates. Often, a reference tooth position is analysed in extant specimens, while isolated teeth are lumped together in fossil datasets. It is therefore important to test whether dentalmicrowear texture (DMT) is tooth position specific and, if so, what causes the differences in wear. Here, we present results from controlled feeding experiments with 72 guinea pigs, which received either fresh or dried natural plant diets of different phytolith content (lucerne, grass, bamboo) or pelleted diets with and without mineral abrasives (frequently encountered by herbivorous mammals in natural habitats). We tested for gradients in dentalmicrowear texture along the upper cheek tooth row. Regardless of abrasive content, guinea pigs on pelleted diets displayed an increase in surface roughness along the tooth row, indicating that posterior tooth positions experience more wear compared with anterior teeth. Guinea pigs feedings on plants of low phytolith content and low abrasiveness (fresh and dry lucerne, fresh grass) showed almost no DMT differences between tooth positions, while individuals feeding on more abrasive plants (dry grass, fresh and dry bamboo) showed a gradient of decreasing surface roughness along the tooth row. We suggest that plant feeding involves continuous intake and comminution by grinding, resulting in posterior tooth positions mainly processing food already partly comminuted and moistened. Pelleted diets require crushing, which exerts higher loads, especially on posterior tooth positions, where bite forces are highest. These differences in chewing behaviour result in opposing wear gradients for plant versus pelleted diets.

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