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A radiographic study of permanent molar development in wild Virunga mountain gorillas of known chronological age from Rwanda.

Alexandra E KralickM Loring BurgessHalszka GlowackaKeely Arbenz-SmithKate McGrathChristopher B RuffKing Chong ChanMichael R CranfieldTara S StoinskiTimothy G BromageAntoine MudakikwaShannon C McFarlin
Published in: American journal of physical anthropology (2017)
Despite sample limitations, our findings extend the known range of variation in radiographic estimates of molar formation timing in great apes, and provide a new age prediction technique based on wild specimens. However, mountain gorillas do not appear accelerated in radiographic assessment of molar formation compared to chimpanzees, as they are for other life history traits. Future studies should aim to resolve the influence of species differences, wild versus captive environments, and/or sampling phenomena on patterns observed here, and more generally, how they relate to variation in tooth size, eruption timing, and developmental life history.
Keyphrases
  • genetic diversity
  • genome wide
  • current status
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation