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Tooth chipping patterns and dental caries suggest a soft fruit diet in early anthropoids

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.24884

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dental caries; Egyptian Fayum; primate evolution; Propliopithecidae; tooth fractures

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The low prevalence of tooth chipping in the Fayum primate genera suggests a predominantly soft fruit diet and does not support habitual hard food mastication. The presence of caries in the fossils indicates consumption of soft, sugary fruits, at least in the Propliopithecidae. These results provide further evidence for low dietary diversity in early anthropoids, with soft fruits as their likely dominant food source.
ObjectivesFossils from the Fayum Depression, Egypt, are crucial for understanding anthropoid evolution due to the abundance of taxa and the time interval they represent (late Eocene to early Oligocene). Dietary and foraging behavioral interpretations suggest fruits were their dominant food source, although hard foods (e.g., seeds and nuts) and leaves could have been important dietary components for particular groups. In this study, we compare dental chipping patterns in five Fayum primate genera with chipping data for extant primates, to assess potential hard object feeding in early anthropoids.Materials and MethodsOriginal specimens were studied (Aegyptopithecus: n = 100 teeth; Parapithecus: n = 72, Propliopithecus: n = 99, Apidium: n = 82; Catopithecus: n = 68); with the number, severity, and position of chips recorded. Dental caries was also recorded, due to its association with soft fruit consumption in extant primates.ResultsTooth chipping was low across all five genera studied, with a pooled chipping prevalence of 5% (21/421). When split into the three anthropoid families represented, chipping prevalence ranged from 2.6% (4/154) in Parapithecidae, 6% (12/199) in Propliopithecidae, and 7.4% (5/68) in Oligopithecidae. Three carious lesions were identified in Propliopithecidae.DiscussionThe chipping prevalence is low when compared to extant anthropoids (range from 4% to 40%) and is consistent with a predominantly soft fruit diet, but not with habitual hard food mastication. The presence of caries supports consumption of soft, sugary fruits, at least in Propliopithecidae. Our results add support for low dietary diversity in early anthropoids, with soft fruits as likely dominant food sources. Tooth fractures in early primates.image

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