Dental eruption in afrotherian mammals

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Afrotheria comprises a newly recognized clade of mammals with strong molecular evidence for its monophyly. In contrast, morphological data uniting its diverse constituents, including elephants, sea cows, hyraxes, aardvarks, sengis, t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lehmann Thomas, Asher Robert J
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2008-03-01
Series:BMC Biology
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/6/14
id doaj-5a44a66d47c44af5b6582b6283c90e96
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5a44a66d47c44af5b6582b6283c90e962020-11-25T00:26:58ZengBMCBMC Biology1741-70072008-03-01611410.1186/1741-7007-6-14Dental eruption in afrotherian mammalsLehmann ThomasAsher Robert J<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Afrotheria comprises a newly recognized clade of mammals with strong molecular evidence for its monophyly. In contrast, morphological data uniting its diverse constituents, including elephants, sea cows, hyraxes, aardvarks, sengis, tenrecs and golden moles, have been difficult to identify. Here, we suggest relatively late eruption of the permanent dentition as a shared characteristic of afrotherian mammals. This characteristic and other features (such as vertebral anomalies and testicondy) recall the phenotype of a human genetic pathology (cleidocranial dysplasia), correlations with which have not been explored previously in the context of character evolution within the recently established phylogeny of living mammalian clades.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Although data on the absolute timing of eruption in sengis, golden moles and tenrecs are still unknown, craniometric comparisons for ontogenetic series of these taxa show that considerable skull growth takes place prior to the complete eruption of the permanent cheek teeth. Specimens showing less than half (sengis, golden moles) or two-thirds (tenrecs, hyraxes) of their permanent cheek teeth reach or exceed the median jaw length of conspecifics with a complete dentition. With few exceptions, afrotherians are closer to median adult jaw length with fewer erupted, permanent cheek teeth than comparable stages of non-afrotherians. Manatees (but not dugongs), elephants and hyraxes with known age data show eruption of permanent teeth late in ontogeny relative to other mammals. While the occurrence of delayed eruption, vertebral anomalies and other potential afrotherian synapomorphies resemble some symptoms of a human genetic pathology, these characteristics do not appear to covary significantly among mammalian clades.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Morphological characteristics shared by such physically disparate animals such as elephants and golden moles are not easy to recognize, but are now known to include late eruption of permanent teeth, in addition to vertebral anomalies, testicondy and other features. Awareness of their possible genetic correlates promises insight into the developmental basis of shared morphological features of afrotherians and other vertebrates.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/6/14
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lehmann Thomas
Asher Robert J
spellingShingle Lehmann Thomas
Asher Robert J
Dental eruption in afrotherian mammals
BMC Biology
author_facet Lehmann Thomas
Asher Robert J
author_sort Lehmann Thomas
title Dental eruption in afrotherian mammals
title_short Dental eruption in afrotherian mammals
title_full Dental eruption in afrotherian mammals
title_fullStr Dental eruption in afrotherian mammals
title_full_unstemmed Dental eruption in afrotherian mammals
title_sort dental eruption in afrotherian mammals
publisher BMC
series BMC Biology
issn 1741-7007
publishDate 2008-03-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Afrotheria comprises a newly recognized clade of mammals with strong molecular evidence for its monophyly. In contrast, morphological data uniting its diverse constituents, including elephants, sea cows, hyraxes, aardvarks, sengis, tenrecs and golden moles, have been difficult to identify. Here, we suggest relatively late eruption of the permanent dentition as a shared characteristic of afrotherian mammals. This characteristic and other features (such as vertebral anomalies and testicondy) recall the phenotype of a human genetic pathology (cleidocranial dysplasia), correlations with which have not been explored previously in the context of character evolution within the recently established phylogeny of living mammalian clades.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Although data on the absolute timing of eruption in sengis, golden moles and tenrecs are still unknown, craniometric comparisons for ontogenetic series of these taxa show that considerable skull growth takes place prior to the complete eruption of the permanent cheek teeth. Specimens showing less than half (sengis, golden moles) or two-thirds (tenrecs, hyraxes) of their permanent cheek teeth reach or exceed the median jaw length of conspecifics with a complete dentition. With few exceptions, afrotherians are closer to median adult jaw length with fewer erupted, permanent cheek teeth than comparable stages of non-afrotherians. Manatees (but not dugongs), elephants and hyraxes with known age data show eruption of permanent teeth late in ontogeny relative to other mammals. While the occurrence of delayed eruption, vertebral anomalies and other potential afrotherian synapomorphies resemble some symptoms of a human genetic pathology, these characteristics do not appear to covary significantly among mammalian clades.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Morphological characteristics shared by such physically disparate animals such as elephants and golden moles are not easy to recognize, but are now known to include late eruption of permanent teeth, in addition to vertebral anomalies, testicondy and other features. Awareness of their possible genetic correlates promises insight into the developmental basis of shared morphological features of afrotherians and other vertebrates.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/6/14
work_keys_str_mv AT lehmannthomas dentaleruptioninafrotherianmammals
AT asherrobertj dentaleruptioninafrotherianmammals
_version_ 1725341623009673216