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Tooth histology,attachment, and replacement in the Ichthyopterygia reviewed in an evolutionary context
Authors:Erin E. Maxwell  Michael W. Caldwell  Denis O. Lamoureux
Affiliation:1.Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde,Stuttgart,Germany;2.Museum für Naturkunde,Berlin,Germany;3.Department of Biological Sciences,University of Alberta,Edmonton,Canada;4.St. Joseph’s College,University of Alberta,Edmonton,Canada
Abstract:Ichthyosaurs, an extinct group of Mesozoic marine diapsids, show a relatively small range of tooth crown morphologies. With few exceptions, members of the group bear a large number of conical teeth and show only minor heterodonty within a jaw. This uniformity in gross morphology masks a high degree of variation in both the quantity and arrangement of the mineralized tooth tissues. Here, we describe tooth tissue structure and distribution in derived ichthyosaurs. We synthesize these new observations with the historical literature, to map changes in the quantity and arrangement of tooth tissues. These changes affected tooth attachment, tooth replacement, plicidentine morphology, and the amount and distribution of cellular cementum. The amount of variation detected in features relating to ichthyosaurian dentition is not surprising given the geological longevity and morphological disparity of the group, but does emphasize the importance of extensive taxon sampling in studies of tooth histology and evolution. This study is important in that it incorporates morphological and histological information in a phylogenetic and developmental context, something that is rarely done for marine reptile dentitions.
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