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Myological and osteological approaches to gape and bite force reconstruction in Smilodon fatalis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Masticatory gape and bite force are crucial for understanding the behavior and ecology of Smilodon fatalis, despite ongoing debates about its chewing habits.
  • Researchers developed osteological proxies based on modern cats to estimate muscle length, gape, and bite force in S. fatalis.
  • Findings suggest that while S. fatalis has a larger angular gape compared to modern felids, its bite force estimates are similar to those of smaller felids; this may indicate a unique predatory strategy involving both canine and carnassial teeth for capturing large prey.

Article Abstract

Masticatory gape and bite force are important behavioral and ecological variables. While much has been written about the highly derived masticatory anatomy of Smilodon fatalis, there remains a great deal of debate about their masticatory behaviors. To that end, we establish osteological proxies for masticatory adductor fascicle length (FL) based on extant felids and apply these along with previously validated techniques to S. fatalis to provide estimates of fascicle lengths, maximum osteological gapes, and bite force. While the best correlated FL proxies in extant felids do not predict particularly long fascicles, these proxies may be of value for less morphologically distinct felids. A slightly less well correlated proxy predicts a temporalis FL 15% longer than that of Panthera tigris. While angular maximum bony gape is significantly larger in S. fatalis than it is in extant felids, linear gape at the canine tip and carnassial notch were not significantly different from those of extant felids. Finally, we produce anatomical bite force estimates of 1283.74 N at the canine and 4671.41 N at the carnassial, which are similar in magnitude to estimates not of the largest felids but of the much smaller P. onca, with S. fatalis producing slightly less force at the canines and more at the carnassials. These estimates align with previous predictions that S. fatalis may have killed large prey with canine shearing bites produced, in part, by force contributions of the postcranial muscles.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ar.25529DOI Listing

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