“…The range of dental lesions observed in the marsupials, including enamel discoloration, enamel defects such as hypoplasia, pitting and flaking, and increased tooth wear, was similar to the characteristic dental lesions described for fluoride toxicosis in eutherian mammals (Kierdorf et al, 1993(Kierdorf et al, , 1996a(Kierdorf et al, ,b, 2000Shupe et al, 1984;Walton, 1988), as expected from the evolutionary convergence between marsupials and eutherians (Madsen et al, 2001). Although the observed dental abnormalities could in principle also result from congenital disease, malnutrition, mineral deficiencies, or disease such as parasitism during crown formation in juveniles (Azorit et al, 2012;Brook et al, 1997;Suckling, 1989), resources at this high-fluoride site have not been limited over the previous decade and a previous investigation that assessed gastrointestinal parasite levels, and levels of calcium, phosphorus and selenium in macropodid bones at this site, did not reveal any differences when compared to low-fluoride areas (Clarke et al, 2006). In addition, the histopathological changes documented in the dental enamel of marsupials from this known highfluoride site support the diagnosis of dental fluorosis (Kierdorf et al, unpublished observations).…”