Lab 9 - Teeth, Limbs and Vertebrae
Terms describing teeth:
Terms describe:
The attachment of teeth to the bones of the jaw
Skin attachment - Teeth are anchored to the skin by collagen fibers that run into the dentine from the dermis (in sharks).
Ligamentous in fangs of rattlesnakes
Pleurodont - may be ancestral attachment
Each tooth touches the bone with the outer surface of the root, may be joined to the jaw by cement or collagenous fibers.
Acrodont - scarcely have any roots
teeth abut against the rim of the jawbone by a continuous rim of hard tissue (most Osteichthyes).
Thecodont - roots of teeth in sockets (alveoli) in jawbone
The replacement of teeth in the mouth
Most vertebrates replace their teeth continuously, generation after generation, throughout life.
polyphyodont
Most mammals have only 2 generations of teeth.
diphyodont
Some acrodont teeth and plates of fused teeth are never replaced.
Whether the teeth are the same or different in shape
Homodont - Teeth are all about the same shape (most vertebrates, few mammals).
Heterodont - Teeth have different form and functions in different parts of the tooth row (mammals, a few fish).
Two characteristics of cheek teeth:
The surface characteristics of the cheek teeth
Bunodont: omnivorous, flat crowns covered with enamel
Lophodont: transverse ridged cusps
Selenodont: longitudinal ridged cusps
Secodont: carnassial carnivorous dentition
The height of the cheek teeth
Brachydont: low crowned
Hypsodont: high crowned
Examples:
Alligator shows dentition that is thecodont (attachment), polyphyodont (replacement), homodont (variety of teeth).
Mammals show dentition that is thecodont, heterodont.
Mammalian cheek teeth may be designed for crushing and cutting of food - teeth capable of withstanding pressure - or designed to withstand wear.
Modifications for crushing / cutting:
1. Low crowned teeth (short and squat) grow to a specific size and then stop. The entire tooth surface is encased in enamel, the strongest of the tooth substances. Such teeth are brachydont.
Carnivores have shearing, cutting molars - brachydont, secodont dentition.
Epitomized by cat, cougar with single row of cusps
Bear, human dentition is omnivorous - brachydont, bunodont dentition
Flat crowned, dome like crushing molars
Modifications to resist wear:
2. Tall, high crowned hypsodont dentition
White - enamel
Brown - dentine
Enamel wears less than dentine or cement between crowns, leaving a rough, file-like surface.
Self-sharpening file
Deer - ridges of teeth run anterior-posterior (front to back)
moonshaped, hypsodont, selenodont dentition
chew back and forth
Beaver - hypsodont, lophodont
chew side to side
ridges run side to side
Horse- hysodont, selenolophodont
ridges run in both directions
chew in a circle
3. Rootless teeth do have unconstricted roots, grow continuously
Rodents such as beaver
Heterodont teeth require thecodont attachment.
Snake fang attached by a ligament, formed by two fused teeth to create fang.
Wolf eel has heterodont, acrodont teeth.
Trends in dentition:
Decreased tooth number, reduced areas of placement
eg fish have teeth all over the mouth, on many bones of skull and on
tongue
In derived condition, teeth only on ridge of mouth
Increased size of teeth
Big teeth near pivot of jaw increases mechanical advantage, pressure
that can be exerted.
Not responsible for dental formulae
Vertebrae
know centrum, neural arch and spine, transverse process, hemal arch, zygopophyses
5 styles of vertebrae
Amphicoelus - concave on front and back, not interlocking
fish
With move to land, interlocking vertebrae (by centrum)
Procoelus - domed (convex) in back (posteriorly),
concave in front (anteriorly) - frog
Opistocoelus - domed (convex) in front (anteriorly),
concave in back (posteriorly) - turtle
Heterocoelus - fit like knuckles - bird
Acoelus - flat centrum on back and front - mammal
Resist compression, zygopophyses (spines coming off neural arch) interlock
prezygopophyses - before neural arch
postzygopophyses - after neural arch
Trunk vertebrae - between two girdles
Cervical vertebrae - condyles from back of skull fit into them
amphibians - 2 condyles
reptiles - 1 condyle, ball and socket joint
mammals - two condyles
Appendicular skeleton
ID bones of pelvic and pectoral girdles and limbs
Note walking style.
Plantigrade - ankle joint (us)
Digitigrade - balls of feet (cat)
Ungulagrade - tips of toes - toenail (cow)
Combined with reduction and fusion of distal limb elements
result is long, fast stride, increased running speed
Compare appendicular skeleton for birds and mammals, note modifications for flight
Bird skeleton - modification and adaptation for flight
furcula - fused clavicles
Cat - no clavicles (very reduced, unattached slivers of bone)
Scapulas not attached to arm, can absorb high impact, increase flexibility