REPLACEMENT OF DECIDUOUS FIRST PREMOLARS AND DENTAL ERUPTION IN ARCHAEOCETE WHALES
Open Access
- 1 February 2000
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Mammalogy
- Vol. 81 (1) , 123-133
- https://doi.org/10.1644/1545-1542(2000)081<0123:rodfpa>2.0.co;2
Abstract
Archaeocete whales of the subfamily Dorudontinae (Cetacea, Basilosauridae) show strong evidence of having replaced upper and lower 1st deciduous premolars with permanent teeth late in their dental eruption sequence. This situation is rare in modern mammals, many of which have no teeth in the 1st premolar position or which retain a deciduous tooth in the 1st premolar position that is not replaced. Evidence for replacement of deciduous 1st premolars in dorudontine archaeocetes comes from both juvenile and adult specimens of Dorudon atrox from Egypt and Zygorhiza kochii from North America. Replacement of deciduous 1st premolars by permanent teeth may have been precipitated by a general delay in skeletal maturation found in cetaceans, which allowed dental development to proceed for a longer period of time than is generally available for most mammals.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Classification of mammals: above the species levelChoice Reviews Online, 1998
- Middle to Late Eocene Basilosaurines and DorudontinesPublished by Springer Nature ,1998
- Classification and distribution of Oligocene Aetiocetidae (Mammalia; Cetacea; Mysticeti) from western North America and JapanIsland Arc, 1994
- Waipatia maerewhenua, new genus and new species (Waipatiidae, new family), an archaic Late Oligocene dolphin (Cetacea: Odontoceti: Platanistoidea) from New ZealandProceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History., 1994
- Life history and the evolution of human maturationEvolutionary Anthropology, 1992
- Hind Limbs of Eocene Basilosaurus: Evidence of Feet in WhalesScience, 1990
- Remingtonocetus harudiensis, new combination, a Middle Eocene archaeocete (Mammalia, Cetacea) from Western Kutch, IndiaJournal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 1986
- Dental anomaly in a fossil squalodont dolphin from New Zealand, and the evolution of polydonty in whalesNew Zealand Journal of Zoology, 1982
- Notes on Pleistocene and Recent Tapirs.George Gaylord SimpsonThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1947
- Notice of Fossil Bones Found in the Tertiary Formation of the State of LouisianaTransactions of the American Philosophical Society, 1834