I. Teeth

  1. Heterodont dentition
    1. Incisors: cutting, gathering food
    2. Canines: capturing food, communication displays
    3. Premolars: grinding or slicing
    4. Molars: grinding or slicing
  1. Tooth structure (Fig. 4.17)
    1. crown
    2. root
    3. enamel
    4. dentine
    5. pulp cavity
    6. cementum

  2. Tooth growth
    1. closed-rooted
    2. open-rooted (ever-growing)

  3. Tooth replacement
    1. Deciduous (milk) teeth
    2. Horizontal vs. vertical replacement

  4. Occlusal surfaces (Fig. 7.6)
  5. Variations on the basic pattern
    1. Homodont dentition
    2. Edentate
    3. Tusks
    4. Diastema

  6. Dental formulae (e.g., 3/3, 1/1, 4/3, 1/1)

II. Foods and Feeding

  1. Anatomy of the digestive system (Fig 7.2)
  2. Modes of foraging
    1. Insectivory
      1. aerial
      2. terrestrial
      3. myrmecophagy (ant-eating)

    2. Carnivory
      1. terrestrial
      2. aquatic
      3. sanguinivory (blood feeding)

    3. Herbivory
      1. ruminants
      2. hind gut fermenters
      3. granivory
      4. folivory
      5. frugivory
      6. nectivory
      7. gumivory
      8. mycophagy

    4. Filter feeding
    5. Omnivory

  3. Anatomical specializations associated with different modes of foraging
    Mode of foraging Teeth Tongue Stomach Intestines Cecum
    Insectivory numerous, spiky, incisors procumbent
    Example: mole
    Example: shrew
    -- simple short mostly lacking
    Myrmecophagy absent or reduced in numbers, peg-like
    Example: tamandua anteater
    extremely long (Fig 7.3) often roughened short small or lacking
    Terrestrial carnivory sharp incisors; long, conical canines; often carnassial cheek teeth; may have crushing molars
    Example: dog
    -- simple short small
    Aquatic carnivory homodont, spiky, numerous
    Example: common dolphin
    -- simple or multichambered (cetaceans) variable small
    Sanguinivory very sharp upper incisors; reduced cheek teeth
    Example: vampire bat
    grooved tubular, highly extensible long lacking?
    Herbivory (except nectivores) incisors robust or absent; canines reduced or absent; diastema; cheek teeth enlarged with complex occlusal surfaces
    Example: beaver
    -- simple (hindgut fermenters) or multichambered (ruminants) long large
    Filter feeding none (baleen)
    Example: humpback whale
    -- multichambered -- --
    Omnivory sharp incisors and canines; flat cheek teeth with rounded cusps
    Example: bear
    -- simple long small