Dental caries in living and extinct strepsirrhines with insights into diet

Author:

Selig Keegan R.1ORCID,López‐Torres Sergi23,Burrows Anne M.45ORCID,Silcox Mary T.6,Meng Jin37

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolutionary Anthropology Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

2. University of Warsaw, Faculty of Biology, Biological and Chemical Research Centre, Institute of Evolutionary Biology Warsaw Poland

3. Division of Paleontology American Museum of Natural History New York New York USA

4. Department of Physical Therapy Duquesne University Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Anthropology University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

6. Department of Anthropology University of Toronto Scarborough Toronto Ontario Canada

7. Earth and Environmental Sciences, Graduate Center, City University of New York New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractDental caries is one of the most common diseases afflicting modern humans and occurs in both living and extinct non‐human primates, as well as other mammalian species. Compared to other primates, less is known about the etiology or frequency of caries among the Strepsirrhini. Given the link between caries and diet, caries frequency may be informative about the dietary ecology of a given animal. Understanding rates of caries in wild populations is also critical to assessing dental health in captive populations. Here, we examine caries frequency in a sample of 36 extant strepsirrhine species (n = 316 individuals) using odontological collections of wild‐, non‐captive animals housed at the American Museum of Natural History by counting the number of specimens characterized by the disease. Additionally, in the context of studying caries lesions in strepsirrhines, case studies were also conducted to test if similar lesions were found in their fossil relatives. In particular, two fossil strepsirrhine species were analyzed: the earliest Late Eocene Karanisia clarki, and the subfossil lemur Megaladapis madagascariensis. Our results suggest that caries affects 13.92% of the extant individuals we examined. The frugivorous and folivorous taxa were characterized by the highest overall frequency of caries, whereas the insectivores, gummivores, and omnivores had much lower caries frequencies. Our results suggest that caries may be common among wild populations of strepsirrhines, and in fact is more prevalent than in many catarrhines and platyrrhines. These findings have important implications for understanding caries, diet, and health in living and fossil taxa.

Funder

American Museum of Natural History

Narodowe Centrum Nauki

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

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