The debate about the origin of the vertebrate dentition has been given fresh fuel by new fossil discoveries and developmental studies of extant animals. Odontodes (teeth or tooth-like structures) can be found in two distinct regions, the 'internal' oropharyngeal cavity and the 'external' skin. A recent hypothesis argues that regularly patterned odontodes is a specific oropharyngeal feature, whereas odontodes in the external skeleton lack this organization. However, this argument relies on the skeletal system of modern chondrichthyans (sharks and their relatives), which differ from other gnathostome (jawed vertebrate) groups in not having dermal bones associated with the odontodes. Their external skeleton is also composed of monoodontode 'pl...
Shark and ray (elasmobranch) dentitions are well known for their multiple generations of teeth, with...
Shark and ray (elasmobranch) dentitions are well known for their multiple generations of teeth, with...
The Middle Ordovician to Late Silurian represents an interval of approximately 50 million years, whi...
The debate about the origin of the vertebrate dentition has been given fresh fuel by new fossil disc...
<div><p>The debate about the origin of the vertebrate dentition has been given fresh fuel by new fos...
During their evolutionary history, modern sharks developed different tooth mineralization patterns t...
Origins of the vertebrate dentition, as a patterned, functional unit associated with the jaws, remai...
The Holocephali is a major group of chondrichthyan fishes, the sister taxon to the sharks and rays (...
International audienceThe shape of features involved in key biological functions, such as teeth in n...
Placoderms (Devonian fossil fishes) are resolved phylogenetically to the base of jawed vertebrates a...
According to the classical theory, teeth derive from odontodes that invaded the oral cavity in conju...
The teeth of sharks famously form a series of transversely organized files with a conveyor-belt repl...
Mechanisms of tooth replacement distribute incongruently among extant gnathostomes (jawed vertebrate...
Most pycnodontiform fishes are represented by their distinctive dentition alone, whereas articulated...
Ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) are the dominant vertebrate group today (+30 000 species, predomi...
Shark and ray (elasmobranch) dentitions are well known for their multiple generations of teeth, with...
Shark and ray (elasmobranch) dentitions are well known for their multiple generations of teeth, with...
The Middle Ordovician to Late Silurian represents an interval of approximately 50 million years, whi...
The debate about the origin of the vertebrate dentition has been given fresh fuel by new fossil disc...
<div><p>The debate about the origin of the vertebrate dentition has been given fresh fuel by new fos...
During their evolutionary history, modern sharks developed different tooth mineralization patterns t...
Origins of the vertebrate dentition, as a patterned, functional unit associated with the jaws, remai...
The Holocephali is a major group of chondrichthyan fishes, the sister taxon to the sharks and rays (...
International audienceThe shape of features involved in key biological functions, such as teeth in n...
Placoderms (Devonian fossil fishes) are resolved phylogenetically to the base of jawed vertebrates a...
According to the classical theory, teeth derive from odontodes that invaded the oral cavity in conju...
The teeth of sharks famously form a series of transversely organized files with a conveyor-belt repl...
Mechanisms of tooth replacement distribute incongruently among extant gnathostomes (jawed vertebrate...
Most pycnodontiform fishes are represented by their distinctive dentition alone, whereas articulated...
Ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) are the dominant vertebrate group today (+30 000 species, predomi...
Shark and ray (elasmobranch) dentitions are well known for their multiple generations of teeth, with...
Shark and ray (elasmobranch) dentitions are well known for their multiple generations of teeth, with...
The Middle Ordovician to Late Silurian represents an interval of approximately 50 million years, whi...