Dental and skeletal pathology in lungfish jaws and tooth plates


Autoria(s): Kemp, Anne
Data(s)

01/01/2003

Resumo

Many lungfish of the tooth plated lineage, both fossil and living, are affected by dental and skeletal pathologies including dental caries, abscesses and cysts within the bone or tooth plate, osteopenia, bone hypertrophy, and malocclusion. These conditions, while influenced in part by structural relationships of soft and hard tissues in the tooth plates, jaw bones and surrounding oral tissues, can also be used as indicators of the kind of environment inhabited by the fish. The disease processes have specific structural consequences, related either to the pathology or to attempts to heal the damage, and usually alter the form and function of the tooth plate or bone. Consequently they can be distinguished from postmortem diagenetic or taphonomic effects, which alter the structure in less specific ways and show no sign of healing. Dental caries, the most common pathological condition in dipnoan dentitions, is recognisable in lungfish from the Devonian of Western Australia, the Tertiary of South Australia and the Northern Territory and from living lungfish in south east Queensland. Other pathologies have a more sporadic occurrence.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:64379

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Geological Society of Australia

Palavras-Chave #Paleontology #Lungfish #Pathology #Bones #Tooth Plates #Environment #Taphonomy #New-south-wales #Neoceratodus-forsteri #Australian Lungfish #Sorbitorhynchus-deleaskitus #Devonian Lungfish #Osteichthyes #Dipnoi #Fossil #Skulls #Injury #C1 #260112 Palaeontology #780104 Earth sciences
Tipo

Journal Article