4.3 Article

What is dental ecology?

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Volume 148, Issue 2, Pages 163-170

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.21656

Keywords

tooth wear; primate; dental health; paleoecology; lemurs

Funding

  1. University of North Dakota (SSAC)
  2. ND EPSCoR
  3. Primate Conservation Inc.
  4. International Primatological Society
  5. St. Louis Zoo [FRC 06-1]
  6. University of Colorado-Boulder
  7. National Geographic Society
  8. American Society of Primatologists
  9. Lindbergh Fund
  10. National Science Foundation [BCS 0922465]

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Teeth have long been used as indicators of primate ecology. Early work focused on the links between dental morphology, diet, and behavior, with more recent years emphasizing dental wear, microstructure, development, and biogeochemistry, to understand primate ecology. Our study of Lemur catta at the Beza Mahafaly Special Reserve, Madagascar, has revealed an unusual pattern of severe tooth wear and frequent tooth loss, primarily the result of consuming a fallback food for which these primates are not dentally adapted. Interpreting these data was only possible by combining our areas of expertise (dental anatomy [FC] and primate ecology [MS]). By integrating theoretical, methodological, and applied aspects of both areas of research, we adopted the term dental ecologydefined as the broad study of how teeth respond to the environment. Specifically, we view dental ecology as an interpretive framework using teeth as a vehicle for understanding an organism's ecology, which builds upon earlier work, but creates a new synthesis of anatomy and ecology that is only possible with detailed knowledge of living primates. This framework includes (1) identifying patterns of dental pathology and tooth use-wear, within the context of feeding ecology, behavior, habitat variation, and anthropogenic change, (2) assessing ways in which dental development and biogeochemical signals can reflect habitat, environmental change and/or stress, and (3) how dental microstructure and macro-morphology are adapted to, and reflect feeding ecology. Here we define dental ecology, provide a short summary of the development of this perspective, and place our new work into this context. Am J Phys Anthropol 148:163170, 2012. (c) 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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