Tooth loss and alveolar remodeling in Sinosaurus triassicus (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Lower Jurassic strata of the Lufeng Basin, China
Tooth loss and alveolar remodeling in Sinosaurus triassicus (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Lower Jurassic strata of the Lufeng Basin, China作者机构:Department of Biological Sciences University of Alberta School of the Earth Sciences and Resources China University of Geosciences Pipestone Creek Dinosaur Initiative Division of Vertebrate Paleontology Natural History Museum and Biodiversity Research Institute University of Kansas Key Laboratory of Ecology of Rare and Endangered Species and Environmental Protection (Guangxi Normal University) Ministry of Education Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology Chinese Academy of Sciences Department of Computer Engineering Chengdu Electromechanical College
出 版 物:《Chinese Science Bulletin》 (中国科学通报)
年 卷 期:2013年第58卷第16期
页 面:1931-1935页
核心收录:
基 金:We thank Chairman Laigen Wang(World Dinosaur Valley Park Yunnan Province China)for providing ZLJT01 for study
主 题:下侏罗统 兽脚类 牙齿 肺泡 中国 恐龙 禄丰盆地 地层
摘 要:Pathological or traumatic loss of teeth often results in the resorption and remodeling of the affected alveoli in mammals. However, instances of alveolar remodeling in reptiles are rare. A remodeled alveolus in the maxilla of the Chinese theropod Sinosaurus (Lower Jurassic Lower Lufeng Formation) is the first confirmed example of such dental pathology in a dinosaur. Given the known relationship between feeding behavior and tooth damage in theropods (teeth with spalled enamel, tooth crowns embedded in bone) and the absence of dentary, maxillary, and premaxillary osteomyelitis, traumatic loss of a tooth is most likely the cause of alveolar remodeling. Based on the extent of remodeling, the injury and subsequent tooth loss were non-fatal in this individual.