2008
DOI: 10.1638/06-064.1
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Irregular Tooth Wear and Longevity in Captive Wild Ruminants: A Pilot Survey of Necropsy Reports

Abstract: Clauss, M; Hatt, J M (2008). Irregular tooth wear and longevity in captive wild ruminants : a pilot survey of necropsy reports. Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine, 39(1):69-75.

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Cited by 23 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Reduced dental health in some captive mammals has been suggested as one factor limiting lifespan among these taxa in captivity [e.g., Clauss et al, 2007;Jurado et al, 2008;Kaiser et al, 2009]. However, given annual veterinary and dental examinations, tooth cleanings, and a controlled diet, we expected less overall tooth wear and few cases of tooth loss in the Indianapolis Zoo ring-tailed lemur population, when compared with the BMSR sample.…”
Section: Discussion Captive Vs Wild Ring-tailed Lemur Tooth Wearmentioning
confidence: 77%
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“…Reduced dental health in some captive mammals has been suggested as one factor limiting lifespan among these taxa in captivity [e.g., Clauss et al, 2007;Jurado et al, 2008;Kaiser et al, 2009]. However, given annual veterinary and dental examinations, tooth cleanings, and a controlled diet, we expected less overall tooth wear and few cases of tooth loss in the Indianapolis Zoo ring-tailed lemur population, when compared with the BMSR sample.…”
Section: Discussion Captive Vs Wild Ring-tailed Lemur Tooth Wearmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…Specifically, we integrated the study of these captive, known-aged lemurs, with controlled diets, annual medical evaluations, dental cleanings, and no predation, to provide a comparative template of patterns of dental wear one might expect in an ''optimal'' population. Although some captive mammals exhibit patterns of tooth wear that exceed those seen in wild populations [e.g., Clauss et al, 2007;Jurado et al, 2008;Kaiser et al, 2009], given their regular medical and dental care, we expected less overall tooth wear and fewer lost teeth in the captive Lemur catta sample when compared with the BMSR population. To our knowledge, ours are the first data comparing dental macrowear between wild and captive similar-aged individuals within a single primate species.…”
Section: Research Questionsmentioning
confidence: 82%
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