The Role of Grass vs. Exogenous Abrasives in the Paleodietary Patterns of North American Ungulates

Equids have often been discussed regarding tooth morphological change due to the evolution of highly hypsodont teeth over time, the hyper-grazing habits of modern horses, and an older view that the acquisition of hypsodonty and the widespread appearance of grasslands were synchronous. Many more rece...

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Main Authors: Gina M. Semprebon, Florent Rivals, Christine M. Janis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2019.00065/full
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spelling doaj-41b0cce893ae44adb73fde908bca59d42020-11-25T00:32:44ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution2296-701X2019-03-01710.3389/fevo.2019.00065446507The Role of Grass vs. Exogenous Abrasives in the Paleodietary Patterns of North American UngulatesGina M. Semprebon0Florent Rivals1Florent Rivals2Florent Rivals3Christine M. Janis4Christine M. Janis5Department of Biology, Bay Path University, Longmeadow, MA, United StatesICREA, Barcelona, SpainInstitut Català de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social (IPHES), Tarragona, SpainUniversitat Rovira i Virgili (URV), Àrea de Prehistòria, Tarragona, SpainDepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI, United StatesSchool of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, United KingdomEquids have often been discussed regarding tooth morphological change due to the evolution of highly hypsodont teeth over time, the hyper-grazing habits of modern horses, and an older view that the acquisition of hypsodonty and the widespread appearance of grasslands were synchronous. Many more recent studies, however, have reported asynchrony in the origin of hypsodonty and the widespread appearance of grasslands and have considered exposure to exogenous grit as important evolutionary drivers of hypsodonty in ungulates. We tracked changes in crown height (hypsodonty index), relative abrasion (mesowear), and food and grit scar topography on dental enamel (microwear) to examine the relative contributions of grass vs. grit as a driving force in ungulate tooth changes during the evolution of North American Equidae compared to four North American ruminant artiodactyl families (Camelidae, Antilocapridae, Dromomerycidae, and Merycoidodontidae). We mirror other studies by finding that the overall pattern of the timing of the attainment of hypsodonty is inconsistent with grazing as the main impetus for the “Great Transition” within equids nor within the artiodactyl families as highly hypsodont ungulates post-date the spread of widespread grasslands. Mesowear closely mirrored hypsodonty trends in all families. Microwear patterns, particularly high degrees of enamel pitting (particularly large pits) and unusually coarse scratch textures in all five families, are consistent with exposure to exogenous grit as the main driver of hypsodonty acquisition prior to the consumption of significant levels of grass. Equidae exhibited a wider array of dietary behavior than the other families through most of their evolutionary history. Even so, grass was a much more common dietary item for equids than for the other families, and when combined with exogenous grit, which was more accelerated from the early Miocene onward based on more pitting and coarser scratch textures, may explain the more extreme acquisition of hypsodonty in equids compared to the artiodactyl families studied and set the stage for the Equidae alone to become hypergrazers in the Recent.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2019.00065/fullungulatesmicrowearmesowearhypsodontypaleodiet
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gina M. Semprebon
Florent Rivals
Florent Rivals
Florent Rivals
Christine M. Janis
Christine M. Janis
spellingShingle Gina M. Semprebon
Florent Rivals
Florent Rivals
Florent Rivals
Christine M. Janis
Christine M. Janis
The Role of Grass vs. Exogenous Abrasives in the Paleodietary Patterns of North American Ungulates
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
ungulates
microwear
mesowear
hypsodonty
paleodiet
author_facet Gina M. Semprebon
Florent Rivals
Florent Rivals
Florent Rivals
Christine M. Janis
Christine M. Janis
author_sort Gina M. Semprebon
title The Role of Grass vs. Exogenous Abrasives in the Paleodietary Patterns of North American Ungulates
title_short The Role of Grass vs. Exogenous Abrasives in the Paleodietary Patterns of North American Ungulates
title_full The Role of Grass vs. Exogenous Abrasives in the Paleodietary Patterns of North American Ungulates
title_fullStr The Role of Grass vs. Exogenous Abrasives in the Paleodietary Patterns of North American Ungulates
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Grass vs. Exogenous Abrasives in the Paleodietary Patterns of North American Ungulates
title_sort role of grass vs. exogenous abrasives in the paleodietary patterns of north american ungulates
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
issn 2296-701X
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Equids have often been discussed regarding tooth morphological change due to the evolution of highly hypsodont teeth over time, the hyper-grazing habits of modern horses, and an older view that the acquisition of hypsodonty and the widespread appearance of grasslands were synchronous. Many more recent studies, however, have reported asynchrony in the origin of hypsodonty and the widespread appearance of grasslands and have considered exposure to exogenous grit as important evolutionary drivers of hypsodonty in ungulates. We tracked changes in crown height (hypsodonty index), relative abrasion (mesowear), and food and grit scar topography on dental enamel (microwear) to examine the relative contributions of grass vs. grit as a driving force in ungulate tooth changes during the evolution of North American Equidae compared to four North American ruminant artiodactyl families (Camelidae, Antilocapridae, Dromomerycidae, and Merycoidodontidae). We mirror other studies by finding that the overall pattern of the timing of the attainment of hypsodonty is inconsistent with grazing as the main impetus for the “Great Transition” within equids nor within the artiodactyl families as highly hypsodont ungulates post-date the spread of widespread grasslands. Mesowear closely mirrored hypsodonty trends in all families. Microwear patterns, particularly high degrees of enamel pitting (particularly large pits) and unusually coarse scratch textures in all five families, are consistent with exposure to exogenous grit as the main driver of hypsodonty acquisition prior to the consumption of significant levels of grass. Equidae exhibited a wider array of dietary behavior than the other families through most of their evolutionary history. Even so, grass was a much more common dietary item for equids than for the other families, and when combined with exogenous grit, which was more accelerated from the early Miocene onward based on more pitting and coarser scratch textures, may explain the more extreme acquisition of hypsodonty in equids compared to the artiodactyl families studied and set the stage for the Equidae alone to become hypergrazers in the Recent.
topic ungulates
microwear
mesowear
hypsodonty
paleodiet
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2019.00065/full
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