Author:
Cool SM,Bennet MB,Romaniuk K
Abstract
This investigation employed undecalcified thin (10 �m) and thick (100 �m) mid-root sections
of surgically removed canine teeth, and thick sections of diaphyseal fore- and hind-limb bones
from 14 fruit bats (Pteropus alecto and R poliocephalus) of known age, to attempt to establish a
relationship between the chronological age of these animals and changes in the cross-sectional
morphology of the hard tissues. Growth layers in bone, dentine and cementum were clearly
visible in cross sections when viewed by Nomarski interference microscopy. The number of
growth layers in the periosteal region of long bones and in dentine varied widely within a given
section, making it impossible to estimate age from these tissues. Dental cementum most reliably
reflected the age of fruit bats, with both growth layers and the radial thickness of cementum
showing significant correlations with age (P<0.05). Linear regression was used to formulate
equations for estimating age. The simplicity of this technique may provide investigators with a
useful method for estimating the age of pteropodid fruit bats.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
12 articles.
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