| Literature DB >> 31774829 |
Michael D D'Emic1,2, Patrick M O'Connor3,4, Thomas R Pascucci1, Joanna N Gavras1, Elizabeth Mardakhayava1, Eric K Lund3,4,5.
Abstract
Tooth replacement rate is an important contributor to feeding ecology for polyphyodont animals. Dinosaurs exhibit a wide range of tooth replacement rates, mirroring their diverse craniofacial specializations, but little is known about broad-scale allometric or evolutionary patterns within the group. In the current broad but sparse dinosaurian sample, only three non-avian theropod tooth replacement rates have been estimated. We estimated tooth formation and replacement rates in three additional non-avian theropod dinosaurs, the derived latest Cretaceous abelisaurid Majungasaurus and the more generalized Late Jurassic Allosaurus and Ceratosaurus. We created the largest dental histological and CT dataset for any theropod dinosaur, sectioning and scanning over a dozen toothed elements of Majungasaurus and several additional elements from the other two genera. Using this large sample, we created models of tooth formation time that allow for theropod replacement rates to be estimated non-destructively. In contrast to previous results for theropods, we found high tooth replacement rates in all three genera, with Allosaurus and Ceratosaurus rates of ~100 days and 56 days for Majungasaurus. The latter rate is on par with those of derived herbivorous dinosaurs including some neosauropods, hadrosaurids, and ceratopsians. This elevated rate may be a response to high rates of tooth wear in Majungasaurus. Within Dinosauria, there is no relationship between body mass and tooth replacement rate and no trends in replacement rate over time. Rather, tooth replacement rate is clade-specific, with elevated rates in abelisaurids and diplodocoids and lower rates in coelurosaurs.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31774829 PMCID: PMC6880968 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224734
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Craniofacial and dental histology of the theropod dinosaurs included in this study.
(A) Allosaurus (BYU 8901), (B) Ceratosaurus (BYU 12893) and (C) Majungasaurus (FMNH PR 2278) surface reconstructions derived from computed tomography data and dentine histology. Scale bars below each cranial element(s) equal 10 cm. Histological sections derived from (D) Majungasaurus (MAD 07757), (E) Ceratosaurus (MWC 1), and (F) Allosaurus (BYU 2028), illustrating incremental daily lines (von Ebner) in dentine, which extend obliquely from upper left to lower right in each image. Scale bar of 100 μm applies to (D–F).
Fig 2Models of tooth formation time.
Tooth Formation time versus tooth apicobasal length for Diplodocus (triangles), Camarasaurus (squares), and Majungasaurus (circles). Sauropod data from [2]. Silhouettes by S. Hartman from www.phylopic.org.
Fig 3Phylogeny, time, and body mass in relation to tooth replacement rate.
(A) Natural log of tooth replacement rates plotted on a time-calibrated phylogeny [17] of dinosaurs. Grey numbers indicate tooth replacement rates in days. (B) Natural log of body mass versus tooth replacement rate in dinosaurs. Blue polygon indicates carnivorous taxa, yellow polygon indicates herbivorous taxa. Data for Majungasaurus, Ceratosaurus, and Allosaurus are from this paper; data from Dicraeosaurus are from Schwarz et al. [16]; data from Giraffatitan are from Kosch et al. [15]; data from other sauropodomorphs are from D’Emic et al. [2]; data for other taxa are from Erickson [1]. ‘Titanosauria indet.” refers to the titanosaur premaxilla described by Coria and Chiappe [18] and analyzed by D’Emic et al. [2]. Silhouettes by S. Hartman and M. Wedel from www.phylopic.org.