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1 August 2002 THE DIET OF WORMS: AN ANALYSIS OF MOLE DENTAL MICROWEAR
Mary T. Silcox, Mark F. Teaford
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Abstract

We compared microwear from shearing facets of lower molars from Parascalops breweri (the hairy-tailed mole) and Scapanus orarius (the coast mole) with that from other small mammal species including a tenrec, a hedgehog, 3 primates, and 2 bats. The 2 mole species exhibit a distinct microwear pattern that is characterized by many short, narrow scratches, and relatively few pits. Although the molars of the streaked tenrec (Hemicentetes nigriceps) differ profoundly in morphology from those of moles, they show a very similar pattern of microwear on their shearing facets. This common pattern (missing in the rest of the comparison sample) is likely a product of the importance of earthworms in the diets of both H. nigriceps and the moles and is plausibly explained by the interaction between teeth and soil from the inside and outside of earthworms. These results may be useful in interpreting microwear patterns in fossil mammals.

Mary T. Silcox and Mark F. Teaford "THE DIET OF WORMS: AN ANALYSIS OF MOLE DENTAL MICROWEAR," Journal of Mammalogy 83(3), 804-814, (1 August 2002). https://doi.org/10.1644/1545-1542(2002)083<0804:TDOWAA>2.0.CO;2
Accepted: 1 March 2002; Published: 1 August 2002
KEYWORDS
dental microwear
Hemicentetes
moles
Parascalops
Scapanus
tenrecs
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