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Macroevolutionary dynamics of dentition in Mesozoic birds reveal no long-term selection towards tooth loss

Neil Brocklehurst, Daniel J. Field

2021iScience23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Several potential drivers of avian tooth loss have been proposed, although consensus remains elusive as fully toothless jaws arose independently numerous times among Mesozoic avialans and dinosaurs more broadly. The origin of crown bird edentulism has been discussed in terms of a broad-scale selective pressure or trend toward toothlessness, although this has never been quantitatively tested. Here, we find no evidence for models whereby iterative acquisitions of toothlessness among Mesozoic Avialae were driven by an overarching selective trend. Instead, our results support modularity among jaw regions underlying heterogeneous tooth loss patterns and indicate a substantially later transition to complete crown bird edentulism than previously hypothesized (∼90 mya). We show that patterns of avialan tooth loss adhere to Dollo's law and suggest that the exclusive survival of toothless birds to the present represents lineage-specific selective pressures, irreversibility of tooth loss, and the filter of the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction.

Topics & Concepts

EdentulismTooth lossMesozoicDentitionEvolutionary biologyVertebrateCretaceousBiologyExtinction (optical mineralogy)PaleontologyExtinction eventMedicineGeneticsGeneDentistryBiological dispersalEnvironmental healthOral healthStructural basinPopulationPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyEvolution and Paleontology StudiesIchthyology and Marine Biology
Macroevolutionary dynamics of dentition in Mesozoic birds reveal no long-term selection towards tooth loss | Litcius