2015
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.118406
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Controlled feeding trials with ungulates: a new application of in vivo dental molding to assess the abrasive factors of microwear

Abstract: Microwear, the quantification of microscopic scratches and pits on the occlusal surfaces of tooth enamel, is commonly used as a paleodietary proxy. For ungulates (hoofed mammals), scratchdominant microwear distinguishes modern grazers from browsers, presumably as a result of abrasion from grass phytoliths (biogenic silica). However, it is also likely that exogenous grit (i.e. soil, dust) is a contributing factor to these scratch-dominant patterns, which may reflect soil ingestion that varies with feeding heigh… Show more

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Cited by 72 publications
(61 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
(96 reference statements)
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“…The pellet ingredient table [11] shows that the lucerne diet includes pure lignocellulose next to other components that contain acid detergent fibre and acid detergent lignin. Fibres have been suggested previously to be responsible for polishing dental surfaces [13]; our results also raise the possibility that some plant fibres might cause scratches. More comparative and experimental work is needed to explore this possibility.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
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“…The pellet ingredient table [11] shows that the lucerne diet includes pure lignocellulose next to other components that contain acid detergent fibre and acid detergent lignin. Fibres have been suggested previously to be responsible for polishing dental surfaces [13]; our results also raise the possibility that some plant fibres might cause scratches. More comparative and experimental work is needed to explore this possibility.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 69%
“…Phytoliths have long been considered as a major agent of wear [1,13] and grazing has been considered the main driver of the evolution of hypsodonty [3]. Our grass and grass-rice diets, rich in ADIA levels and known to contain phytoliths, did cause parallel scratches on enamel.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This manifests as dietary shifts, say from a less gritty diet to a more gritty diet, but should rarely manifest as an intraspecific shift from herbivory to carnivory, for example (Price, Hopkins, Smith, & Roth, ). We further agree with DeSantis et al () that experimental diets can and do change the properties of mammal tooth wear (Hoffman, Fraser, & Clementz, ). However, our study refers only to the natural diet of mammals.…”
supporting
confidence: 93%
“…These wear features are influenced by the properties of ingested food items (e.g., grass, leaves, fruits, insects, meat) or exogenous items (e.g., dust, grit), and have a rapid turnover of several days to one or two weeks (Teaford and Oyen 1989; Hoffmann et al 2015). Several microscopic techniques have been used for microwear analysis: scanning electron microscopy (e.g., Rensberger 1978; Walker et al 1978), stereomicroscopy (e.g., Solounias and Semprebon 2002; Semprebon et al 2004, 2016; Merceron et al 2005; Koenigswald et al 2010; Rivals et al 2010), and confocal microscopy (e.g., Scott et al 2005, 2006; Ungar et al 2008; Schulz et al 2010; Calandra and Merceron 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%