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Correlation of relative muzzle width and relative incisor width with dietary preference in ungulates
Authors:CHRISTINE M JANIS  DAVID EHRHARDT
Institution:Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Division of Biology and Medicine, Box G, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, U.S.A;Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, U.S.A.
Abstract:Qualitative observations suggest that grazing ungulates have relatively broader muzzles than browsing ones, and that grazers have incisors that are all of a similar size, as opposed to the large central and smaller lateral incisors seen in browsers. These differences may be correlated respectively with the need for grazing ungulates to maintain a large daily intake, or for browsing ungulates to forage selectively in a stand of vegetation. Quantitative examination of relative muzzle width and incisor width ratio in 95 species of living ungulates, correlated with seven different types of dietary preferences, substantiated these observations, although phylogenetic history may exhort a strong influence on morphological proportions. For example, equids have relatively narrower muzzles than grazing ruminants despite their less selective mode of feeding. The narrowest relative muzzle widths are not found in regular browsers, but in high level browsers and in mixed feeders in open habitats. Incisor width ratio can distinguish grazers from browsers, but can not be used to discriminate mixed feeders from other feeding types, and grazers appear to have incisors that are relatively broader overall than those of other dietary types, in correlation with their relatively broader muzzles.
Keywords:Cranial morphology  ungulates  dietary preferences
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