“…The potential significance of fallback foods has been widely embraced by the anthropological community (e.g., Rosenberger, 2013) and is increasingly used to explain dietary variation and interpret masticatory morphology in a variety of extant and extinct primates (e.g., Alba et al, 2010;Chancellor et al, 2012;Daegling et al, 2013;Doran-Sheehy et al, 2009;Etiendem and Tagg, 2013;Grine et al, 2006aGrine et al, , 2006bGrueter et al, 2009;Hanya and Bernard, 2012;Irwin et al, 2014;Laden and Wrangham, 2005;Porter et al, 2009;Strait et al, 2009Strait et al, , 2013Ungar et al, 2008;Vogel et al, 2009;Wright et al, 2009). One feature linked to the fallback food concept is primate molar enamel thickness Lambert et al, 2004).…”