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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Dust and grit matter: abrasives of different size lead to opposing dental microwear textures in experimentally fed sheep (Ovis aries)
Nicole L. AckermansLouise F. MartinThomas M. KaiserDaniela E. WinklerDaniela E. WinklerMarcus ClaussJean-michel Hattsubject
0106 biological sciencesMolar010506 paleontology10253 Department of Small Animals1109 Insect SciencePhysiologyEvolutionRuminantDental WearAquatic Science010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesTexture (geology)MicrotextureAnimal scienceBehavior and Systematics1312 Molecular BiologyAnimalsGritOvisMolecular BiologySheep DomesticEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesFeeding experimentbiology630 Agriculture1104 Aquatic ScienceEcologyChemistryAbrasiveTooth wearDust1314 Physiologybiology.organism_classificationAbrasivesAnimal FeedDiet1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTooth wearInsect Science570 Life sciences; biologyParticulate MatterAnimal Science and Zoology1103 Animal Science and Zoologydescription
ABSTRACT External abrasives ingested along with the herbivore diet are considered main contributors to dental wear, though how the different sizes and concentrations of these abrasives influence wear remains unclear. Dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA) is an established method for dietary reconstruction which describes a tooth9s surface topography on a micrometre scale. The method has yielded conflicting results as to the effect of external abrasives. In the present study, a feeding experiment was performed on sheep (Ovis aries) fed seven diets of different abrasiveness. Our aim was to discern the individual effects of size (4, 50 and 130 µm) and concentration (0%, 4% and 8% of dry matter) of abrasives on dental wear, applying DMTA to four tooth positions. Microwear textures differed between individual teeth, but surprisingly, showed no gradient along the molar tooth row, and the strongest differentiation of experimental groups was achieved when combining data of all maxillary molars. Overall, a pattern of increasing height, volume and complexity of the tooth9s microscopic surface appeared with increasing size of dietary abrasives, and when compared with the control, the small abrasive diets showed a polishing effect. The results indicate that the size of dietary abrasives is more important for dental microwear texture traces than their concentration, and that different sizes can have opposing effects on the dietary signal. The latter finding possibly explains conflicting evidence from previous experimental DMTA applications. Further exploration is required to understand whether and how microscopic traces created by abrasives translate quantitatively to tissue loss.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-01-01 |