Dental wear and grit ingestion in extant and extinct bears from Northern Spain

[Abstract] The dental morphology of the cave bear Ursus spelaeus (Rosenmuller & Heinroth, 1794) indicates its specialisation as a vegetation eater. Although vegetal matter plays also an important role in the diet of most living bears, the dental wear exhibited by cave bears differs qualitatively...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pinto, Ana, Andrews, P. J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Universidade da Coruña 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2183/6515
Description
Summary:[Abstract] The dental morphology of the cave bear Ursus spelaeus (Rosenmuller & Heinroth, 1794) indicates its specialisation as a vegetation eater. Although vegetal matter plays also an important role in the diet of most living bears, the dental wear exhibited by cave bears differs qualitatively from that seen in brown bears even on gross inspection. The diet of the extant brown bear Ursus arctos (Linnaeus, 1758) is well known from present-day stu-dies involving direct observation as well as scat analysis. The ingestion of tubers and other gritty foods has repeatedly been suggested as the cause for the extreme wear observed on cave bear teeth. In this work we seek to analyse the modes and degrees of enamel-wear in brown and cave bears from Northern Spain with the objective of shedding some light on the cave bear diet as regards to grit ingestion. We examine the incidence of gross wear features and enamel micro-fractures on the bear molars, and from this it is concluded that the cave bears analysed here did not ingest gritty foods and seemed to avoid putting into their mouth any object at all soiled with gritty dirt.