New studies of enamel microstructure in Mesozoic mammals: A review of enamel prisms as a mammalian synapomorphy
Publication information:
C. B. Wood, E. R. Dumont, and A. W. Crompton. 1999. “New Studies of Enamel Microstructure in Mesozoic Mammals: A Review of Enamel Prisms As a Mammalian Synapomorphy”. Journal of Mammalian Evolution, 6, Pp. 177-213
Abstract
Characters from enamel microstructure have not been used in recent phylogenetic analyses of Mesozoic Mammalia. Reasons are that enamel characters have been perceived as (A) variable without regard to systematic position of taxa, (B) inconsistently reported within the literature, and (C) simply scored as either prismatic or not prismatic in earlier mammals. Our work on Mesozoic mammals such as Sinoconodon, Gobiconodon, Triconodontidae, Docodon, Laolestes, and others suggests that synapsid columnar enamel (SCE) structure was easily transformed into plesiomorphic prismatic enamel (PPE) and that PPE may be described with at least five independent character states. Two PPE characters-a flat, open prism sheath and a planar prism seam-were present in the cynodont Pachygenelus and in several Jurassic and Cretaceous mammals. We propose that appearance of a prism sheath transforms SCE into PPE and that reduction and loss of a prism sheath reverse PPE into SCE, in both phylogeny an!