AI Article Synopsis

  • All vertebrate teeth share similar materials, but their durability varies significantly; shark teeth last only weeks while mammal teeth can last decades.
  • Shark teeth need to be functionally effective despite high stress from eating tough foods, leading to specific adaptations in their tooth structure.
  • The study reveals that Port Jackson shark teeth have unique microarchitecture that prevents rapid erosion, thus allowing them to efficiently hunt hard-shelled prey and supporting the idea that complex tooth structures have driven the evolution of diverse shark species.

Article Abstract

The teeth of all vertebrates predominantly comprise the same materials, but their lifespans vary widely: in stark contrast to mammals, shark teeth are functional only for weeks, rather than decades, making lifelong durability largely irrelevant. However, their diets are diverse and often mechanically demanding, and as such, their teeth should maintain a functional morphology, even in the face of extremely high and potentially damaging contact stresses. Here, we reconcile the dilemma between the need for an operative tooth geometry and the unavoidable damage inherent to feeding on hard foods, demonstrating that the tooth cusps of Port Jackson sharks, hard-shelled prey specialists, possess unusual microarchitecture that controls tooth erosion in a way that maintains functional cusp shape. The graded architecture in the enameloid provokes a location-specific damage response, combining chipping of outer enameloid and smooth wear of inner enameloid to preserve an efficient shape for grasping hard prey. Our discovery provides experimental support for the dominant theory that multi-layered tooth enameloid facilitated evolutionary diversification of shark ecologies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7686312PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-19739-0DOI Listing

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