Abstract

Stereoscopic microwear and 3D surface texture analyses on the cheek teeth of ten Upper Triassic to Lower Cretaceous tritylodontid (Mammaliamorpha) taxa of small/medium to large body size suggest that all were generalist feeders and none was a dietary specialist adapted to herbivory. There was no correspondence between body size and food choice. Stereomicroscopic microwear analysis revealed predominantly fine wear features with numerous small pits and less abundant fine scratches as principal components. Almost all analyzed facets bear some coarser microwear features, such as coarse scratches, large pits, puncture pits and gouges pointing to episodic feeding on harder food items or exogenous effects (contamination of food with soil grit and/or dust), or both. 3D surface texture analysis indicates predominantly fine features with large void volume, low peak densities, and various stages of roundness of the peaks. We interpret these features to indicate consumption of food items with low to moderate intrinsic abrasiveness and can exclude regular rooting, digging or caching behavior. Possible food items include plant vegetative parts, plant reproductive structures (seeds and seed-bearing organs), and invertebrates (i.e., insects). Although the tritylodontid tooth morphology and auto-occlusion suggest plants as the primary food resource, our results imply a wider dietary range including animal matter.

Highlights

  • Tritylodontids (Synapsida Osborn, 1903 [1], Mammaliamorpha Rowe, 1988 [2], Tritylodontidae Cope, 1884 [3]) are a common, widespread, abundant, and yet understudied component of Mesozoic terrestrial ecosystems

  • The following two hypotheses guided our analysis: 1. All analyzed tritylodontid taxa subsisted on a predominantly herbivorous diet, i.e., primary and secondary food resources consist of living plants and/or shed plant parts

  • The comparative interpretation of the results from each method led to the following conclusions: 1. Hypothesis 1 (“All analyzed tritylodontid taxa subsisted on a predominantly herbivorous diet, i.e., primary and secondary food resources consist of living plants and/or shed plant parts”) is rejected

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Summary

Introduction

Tritylodontids (Synapsida Osborn, 1903 [1], Mammaliamorpha Rowe, 1988 [2], Tritylodontidae Cope, 1884 [3]) are a common, widespread, abundant, and yet understudied component of Mesozoic terrestrial ecosystems. Their earliest records are from the latest Rhaetian (Late Triassic, around 202 Ma) including Oligokyphus sp. From Canada [4], or the less certainly dated. 102 of the DFG Research Unit 771 “Function and performance enhancement in the mammalian dentition – phylogenetic and ontogenetic impact on the masticatory apparatus”. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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