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Geometric morphometric analyses are used to explore variation of maxillary dental arcades of Australopithecus afarensis, expanding on the work of Hanegraef and Spoor, 2025 (Morphological variation of the Australopithecus afarensis maxilla. Journal of Human Evolution, 201, 103651) by integrating evidence from a large sample of virtually reconstructed mandibles. Size and shape of maxillary dental arcades can be predicted accurately from mandibular landmarks based on strong covariation between occluding upper and lower dentitions, and a novel method was developed to correct for reduced shape variation in these predictions. As predictions are restricted to the alveolar process, morphological information about the rest of the maxilla is lost. The trade-off between a smaller sample with comprehensive morphology and a larger sample with restricted morphology is discussed. Here, we analyzed 9 original and 17 predicted A. afarensis dental arcades in the comparative context of 448 extant hominine (modern human and African ape) maxillae. This study found that (1) degrees of size and shape variation are high in A. afarensis, potentially even higher than in Gorilla species when including the predictions in the fossil sample, (2) no allometry was detected, even when expanding the A. afarensis sample with predictions, (3) size and shape do not significantly change over time when analyzing original and predicted A. afarensis dental arcades together, and (4) sexual form and shape dimorphism, but not sexual size differences, are reduced when including A. afarensis predictions in the fossil sample. Our results quantifying the range and pattern of variation of the A. afarensis maxilla provide a comparative context when assessing whether or not other Plio-Pleistocene hominin specimens are conspecific.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ar.70027 | DOI Listing |
Anat Rec (Hoboken)
July 2025
Centre for Human Evolution Research, Natural History Museum, London, UK.
Geometric morphometric analyses are used to explore variation of maxillary dental arcades of Australopithecus afarensis, expanding on the work of Hanegraef and Spoor, 2025 (Morphological variation of the Australopithecus afarensis maxilla. Journal of Human Evolution, 201, 103651) by integrating evidence from a large sample of virtually reconstructed mandibles. Size and shape of maxillary dental arcades can be predicted accurately from mandibular landmarks based on strong covariation between occluding upper and lower dentitions, and a novel method was developed to correct for reduced shape variation in these predictions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anat
July 2025
Department of Natural Sciences, Daemen University, Amherst, New York, USA.
Crocodylians have often been grouped into ecomorphological categories based on snout characters and diet, but quantitative dental morphology has rarely been used for this purpose. We collected Euclidean measurements from the teeth of 18 extant crocodylian species spanning a range of sizes and snout ecomorphotypes, normalized the data for size heterodonty using regression analyses, grouped the crowns into eight dental sections along the arcade, and ran a K-means cluster analysis to cluster individuals based on shape heterodonty. Five clusters emerged, each reflecting different degrees of gracility or robustness of crowns and their variation along the jaw arcade.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
May 2025
Department of Veterinary Medicine, Campus of Engineering and Agricultural Sciences (CECA), Federal University of Alagoas, Maceio 57200-000, Brazil.
Donkeys were traditionally used as draft animals for transporting cargo, as a means of transportation, and for riding purposes before the advent of mechanization. Following this historical shift, their economic significance declined, making them targets for other industries, such as Chinese industries that use donkey skin to extract gelatin (ejiao). Since donkey slaughter is not a regulated activity in Brazil, the welfare and survival of donkeys are increasingly at risk as demand for their skins rises.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anat
August 2025
Department of Organismal Biology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
New teeth are predominantly initiated lingually or postero-lingually to the old teeth in vertebrates. Osteichthyan dentitions typically consist of linear rows of shedding teeth, but internal to the marginal jawbones osteichthyans primitively have an extra dental arcade, in which teeth are sometimes spread out into a field and not organized in rows. The tooth plates of lungfish are specialized from the jawbones of the inner dental arcade, but the teeth are arranged in radial tooth rows with new teeth added at the anterior and labial end of the rows and without shedding the old teeth, distinct from other osteichthyan dentitions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOphthalmic Genet
June 2025
Ophthalmology, Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, East Melbourne, Australia.
Background: ROSAH syndrome is an autosomal dominant systemic disease featuring etinal dystrophy, ptic nerve edema, plenomegaly, nhidrosis and migrainous eadache. Ocular manifestation of ROSAH syndrome can simulate posterior uveitis, vasculitis, generalized retinal dystrophy and neuroretinitis.
Purpose: To report a case of a 17-year-old female presenting with recurrent vitreous hemorrhage on a background of dental anomalies and anhidrosis.