AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the development of specialized traits in juvenile sabertooth mammals, focusing on nimravid specimens, and how their growth patterns may influence adult morphology.
  • It reveals that some nimravids had their permanent upper canines erupt within a concavity created by their baby canines, highlighting a unique growth process.
  • The research also identifies converging features in the baby upper canines of three sabertooth groups, suggesting that it's crucial to examine both adult traits and their developmental changes when studying extreme morphological adaptations.

Article Abstract

The convergent suite of morphological traits characterizing the mammalian sabertooth ecomorphology is well documented, including modifications of the dental and osteological portions of the masticatory apparatus from a less-specialized carnivore condition. Equally important is how those specialized adult morphologies developed through ontogeny because previous studies have shown that growing such specialized craniodental traits may require evolutionary modification of growth patterns and tooth replacement mechanisms. Despite the understanding of convergent morphological specialization in adult sabertooth carnivores, the possibility of a convergent ontogenetic trajectory toward those adult morphologies has not been rigorously examined. The present study examines numerous previously undescribed juvenile nimravid specimens. The results provide insights about nimravid ontogeny and show, for the first time, that the nimravid sabertooth lineage included species in which the permanent upper canine erupted within a lingual concavity of the deciduous upper canine until it reached comparable crown height beyond the alveolar border. Furthermore, this investigation assesses the juvenile morphology and upper canine replacement of felid and barbourofelid sabertooth taxa. The results provide evidence of convergence in deciduous upper canine morphology of three sabertooth carnivore lineages (i.e., nimravid, felid, and barbourofelid), as well as preliminary evidence of convergence in the upper canine replacement process. It might be beneficial for studies of extreme morphological specialization to simultaneously consider convergence in adult morphologies and how morphologies change through ontogeny.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6875571PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5732DOI Listing

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