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Dental sculpting and compensatory shearing crests demonstrated in a WEAR series of Presbytis rubicunda (Cercopithecoidea, Colobidae) with dental topography analysis.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Pampush, JD; Morse, PE; Kay, RF
Published in: American journal of biological anthropology
September 2024

Maintaining effective and efficient occlusal morphology presents adaptive challenges for mammals, particularly because mastication produces interactions with foods and other materials that alters the geometry of occlusal surfaces through macrowear and/or catastrophic failure (i.e. "chipping"). Altered occlusal morphologies are often less effective for masticating materials of given diet-but not always-some species exhibit dental sculpting, meaning their dentitions are set up to harness macrowear to hone their occlusal surfaces into more effective morphologies (i.e. secondary morphologies). Here we show that dental sculpting is present in the folivorous Presbytis rubicunda of Borneo.Thirty-one undamaged lower second molars of P. rubicunda exhibiting various stages of macroscopic wear were micro-CT scanned and processed into digital surfaces. The surfaces were measured for convex Dirichlet normal energy (vDNE, a measure of surface sharpness), and degree of surface wear. Regression analyses compared surface sharpness with several measures of wear to test for the presence and magnitude of dental sculpting.Positive correlations between the wear proxies and vDNE reveal that P. rubicunda wear in such a way as to become sharper, and therefore more effective chewing surfaces by exposing enamel-dentine junctions on their occlusal surfaces and then honing these junctions into sharpened edges. Compared to another primate folivore in which increasing surface sharpness with macrowear has been demonstrated (i.e., Alouatta palliata), the worn surfaces are similarly sharp, but the dental sculpting process appears to be different.The results presented here suggest that not only do some primates exhibit dental sculpting and the attendant secondary morphology, but that there appear to be multiple different morphological configurations that can achieve this result. P. rubicunda has thicker enamel and a more stereotyped wear pattern than A. palliata, although both show positive correlations of occlusal surface sharpness (vDNE) with various wear proxies. These findings shed light on the varied approaches for the maintenance of effective and efficient occlusal surfaces in primates.

Duke Scholars

Published In

American journal of biological anthropology

DOI

EISSN

2692-7691

ISSN

2692-7691

Publication Date

September 2024

Volume

185

Issue

1

Start / End Page

e24953

Related Subject Headings

  • X-Ray Microtomography
  • Tooth Wear
  • Molar
  • Borneo
  • Anthropology
  • Animals
  • 4401 Anthropology
  • 4301 Archaeology
  • 3103 Ecology
  • 2101 Archaeology
 

Citation

APA
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ICMJE
MLA
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Pampush, J. D., Morse, P. E., & Kay, R. F. (2024). Dental sculpting and compensatory shearing crests demonstrated in a WEAR series of Presbytis rubicunda (Cercopithecoidea, Colobidae) with dental topography analysis. American Journal of Biological Anthropology, 185(1), e24953. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24953
Pampush, James D., Paul E. Morse, and Richard F. Kay. “Dental sculpting and compensatory shearing crests demonstrated in a WEAR series of Presbytis rubicunda (Cercopithecoidea, Colobidae) with dental topography analysis.American Journal of Biological Anthropology 185, no. 1 (September 2024): e24953. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24953.
Pampush, James D., et al. “Dental sculpting and compensatory shearing crests demonstrated in a WEAR series of Presbytis rubicunda (Cercopithecoidea, Colobidae) with dental topography analysis.American Journal of Biological Anthropology, vol. 185, no. 1, Sept. 2024, p. e24953. Epmc, doi:10.1002/ajpa.24953.

Published In

American journal of biological anthropology

DOI

EISSN

2692-7691

ISSN

2692-7691

Publication Date

September 2024

Volume

185

Issue

1

Start / End Page

e24953

Related Subject Headings

  • X-Ray Microtomography
  • Tooth Wear
  • Molar
  • Borneo
  • Anthropology
  • Animals
  • 4401 Anthropology
  • 4301 Archaeology
  • 3103 Ecology
  • 2101 Archaeology