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Dental topography of prosimian premolars predicts diet: A comparison in premolar and molar dietary classification accuracies.

Publication ,  Journal Article
de Vries, D; Winchester, JM; Fulwood, EL; St Clair, EM; Boyer, DM
Published in: American journal of biological anthropology
September 2024

This study tests whether (1) premolar topography of extant "prosimians" (strepsirrhines and tarsiers) successfully predicts diet and (2) whether the combination of molar and premolar topography yields higher classification accuracy than using either tooth position in isolation.Dental topographic metrics (ariaDNE, relief index, and orientation patch count rotated) were calculated for 118 individual matched-pairs of mandibular fourth premolars (P4) and second molars (M2). The sample represents 7 families and 22 genera. Tooth variables were analyzed in isolation (P4 only; M2 only), together (P4 and M2), and combined (PC1 scores of bivariate principal component analyses of P4 and M2 for each metric). Discriminant function analyses were conducted with and without a measure of size (two-dimensional surface area).When using topography only, "prosimian" P4 shape predicts diet with a success rate that is slightly higher than that of M2 shape. When absolute size is included, premolars and molars perform comparably well. Including both premolar and molar topography (separately or combined) improves classification accuracy for every analysis beyond considering either in isolation. Classification accuracy is highest when premolar and molar topography and size are included.Our findings indicate that molar teeth incompletely summarize the functional requirements of oral food breakdown for a given diet, and that the mechanism selecting for premolar form is more varied than what is expressed by molar teeth. Finally, our findings suggest that fossil P4s (in isolation or with the M2) can be used for meaningful dietary reconstruction of extinct primates.

Duke Scholars

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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

e24995

Related Subject Headings

  • Molar
  • Diet
  • Bicuspid
  • Anthropology, Physical
  • Anthropology
  • Animals
  • 4401 Anthropology
  • 4301 Archaeology
  • 3103 Ecology
  • 2101 Archaeology
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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de Vries, D., Winchester, J. M., Fulwood, E. L., St Clair, E. M., & Boyer, D. M. (2024). Dental topography of prosimian premolars predicts diet: A comparison in premolar and molar dietary classification accuracies. American Journal of Biological Anthropology, 185(1), e24995. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24995
Vries, Dorien de, Julie M. Winchester, Ethan L. Fulwood, Elizabeth M. St Clair, and Doug M. Boyer. “Dental topography of prosimian premolars predicts diet: A comparison in premolar and molar dietary classification accuracies.American Journal of Biological Anthropology 185, no. 1 (September 2024): e24995. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24995.
de Vries D, Winchester JM, Fulwood EL, St Clair EM, Boyer DM. Dental topography of prosimian premolars predicts diet: A comparison in premolar and molar dietary classification accuracies. American journal of biological anthropology. 2024 Sep;185(1):e24995.
de Vries, Dorien, et al. “Dental topography of prosimian premolars predicts diet: A comparison in premolar and molar dietary classification accuracies.American Journal of Biological Anthropology, vol. 185, no. 1, Sept. 2024, p. e24995. Epmc, doi:10.1002/ajpa.24995.
de Vries D, Winchester JM, Fulwood EL, St Clair EM, Boyer DM. Dental topography of prosimian premolars predicts diet: A comparison in premolar and molar dietary classification accuracies. American journal of biological anthropology. 2024 Sep;185(1):e24995.

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

e24995

Related Subject Headings

  • Molar
  • Diet
  • Bicuspid
  • Anthropology, Physical
  • Anthropology
  • Animals
  • 4401 Anthropology
  • 4301 Archaeology
  • 3103 Ecology
  • 2101 Archaeology