Affiliation:
1. School of Biological Sciences (A08), University of SydneyNSW, Australia 2006
2. School of Environmental and Life Sciences (Earth Sciences), University of NewcastleNSW, Australia 2308
3. Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of GuelphOntario, Canada N1G 2W1
Abstract
We provide the first predictions of bite force (B
S
) in a wide sample of living and fossil mammalian predators. To compare between taxa, we calculated an estimated bite force quotient (BFQ) as the residual of B
S
regressed on body mass. Estimated B
S
adjusted for body mass was higher for marsupials than placentals and the Tasmanian devil (
Sarcophilus harrisii
) had the highest relative B
S
among extant taxa. The highest overall B
S
was in two extinct marsupial lions. BFQ in hyaenas were similar to those of related, non-osteophagous taxa challenging the common assumption that osteophagy necessitates extreme jaw muscle forces. High BFQ in living carnivores was associated with greater maximal prey size and hypercarnivory. For fossil taxa anatomically similar to living relatives, BFQ can be directly compared, and high values in the dire wolf (
Canis dirus
) and thylacine (
Thylacinus cynocephalus
) suggest that they took relatively large prey. Direct inference may not be appropriate where morphologies depart widely from biomechanical models evident in living predators and must be considered together with evidence from other morphological indicators. Relatively low BFQ values in two extinct carnivores with morphologies not represented among extant species, the sabrecat,
Smilodon fatalis
, and marsupial sabretooth,
Thylacosmilus atrox
, support arguments that their killing techniques also differed from extant species and are consistent with ‘canine-shear bite’ and ‘stabbing’ models, respectively. Extremely high BFQ in the marsupial lion,
Thylacoleo carnifex
, indicates that it filled a large-prey hunting niche.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
301 articles.
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