Jawless Vertebrate Had World's Sharpest Teeth

Marine creatures called conodonts used minuscule tooth points to apply large pressure to food















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Fossilized conodont teeth, seen here in a scanning electron microscope image, are sharper than any other teeth ever found. The tips are just 2 micrometres across. Image: D.Jones

From Nature magazine

An extinct primitive marine vertebrate had the sharpest dental structures ever known — with tips just one-twentieth of the width of a human hair, but able to apply pressures that could compete easily with those from human jaws.

The razor-sharp teeth belonged to conodonts, jawless vertebrates that evolved some 500 million years ago in the Precambrian eon and went extinct during the Triassic period, around 200 million years ago. The creatures roamed the planet for longer than any other vertebrate so far–– and despite their lack of jaws, they were the first creatures to evolve teeth.

To find out how these proto-teeth may have functioned, researchers used X-rays to create computer models of eight paired, food-processing structures from fossils of the conodont species Wurmiella excavata. Using finite-element analysis — a method commonly applied to model the effects of physical forces on aeroplanes — the team then compared the conodont teeth with similarly sized bat molars. The results are published today in Proceedings of The Royal Society B.

“We wanted to find out how these delicate teeth fitted together and how they could perform feeding functions,” says Philip Donoghue, a palaeobiologist at the University of Bristol, UK, and a co-author of the paper.

Sharp and specialized
The team found that the conodonts did not process food using a mechanism based on muscular force, as mammals do. Instead, they relied on minuscule forces that became extremely concentrated as a result of their teeth’s extreme sharpness, and the special way in which they gnawed.

Unlike mammalian teeth, which close perpendicularly (up and down), conodont teeth turned that action 90 degrees, slicing food from left to right. “The inter-angles of the blade-like teeth would have been trapped first at the back, rocked forward and separated again,” explains Donoghue.

But super-sharp teeth can cause problems. “If you have sharp teeth they are more likely to break,” says Donoghue. To overcome this, the animals seem to have been able to re-sharpen and repair worn teeth throughout their lives — a quality that other vertebrates have failed to evolve.

"Conodonts were the first vertebrates to 'experiment' with the evolution of complex food-processing teeth,” says Mark Purnell, a palaeontologist at the University of Leicester, UK. The latest work, he adds, “reveals conodonts’ independent lineage. They evolved dentitions including both slicing and interlocking crushing teeth millions of years before mammals or other vertebrates with jaws."

This discovery sheds light on the dental evolution of vertebrates. Fossilized conodont teeth are abundant in marine sedimentary rocks — the long-extinct animals could therefore provide many opportunities to test whether different groups of vertebrates independently converged on the same solutions to the problems of breaking down their food, says Purnell.

Conodonts, he says, demonstrate the power of natural selection. Facing feeding problems, these small animals explored food processing using materials and mechanisms similar to those of vertebrates with jaws, despite their physiological differences. "In some cases the resemblance of conodont teeth to those of other vertebrates is very striking, but they also produced some elegant and novel solutions tailor-made to their own needs," says Purnell.

This article is reproduced with permission from the magazine Nature. The article was first published on March 14, 2012.



5 Comments

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  1. 1. Elegia 04:13 AM 3/15/12

    It would've been nice to know what the conodonts themselves looked like -- eel-like, less than two inches long. Nevermind. I just googled them, but this article was missing some explication. :)

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  2. 2. Hootysdad 01:23 PM 3/15/12

    Comment to Elegia......

    My exact thoughts. Sometimes it makes you wonder what they are thinking.

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  3. 3. frankblank in reply to Elegia 01:51 PM 3/15/12

    And how they used those teeth - and on what. Guess that remains a mystery.

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  4. 4. jack.123 11:07 PM 3/15/12

    Isn't how they used those teeth in the fossil record with them?

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  5. 5. Michael M 10:46 PM 3/19/12

    in answer to your query above:
    Conodonts were probably thinking "what's for lunch?"

    Observing a pelagic fish here called lancetfish (Alepisaurus sp.), a thin-looking guy up to 6 feet long, I see transparent teeth like needles. Pressing my finger against one ofthe fangs, i draw blood - mine.
    What is to wonder is how a species grows to adult with such sharpness? At 2", conodonts were probably r-selected, with a short time to wear. Not knowing their prey, we cannot be sure. The description appears to be of scissors-type closing, which as we know can have self-sharpening effects!

    Conodonts may have opportuned a niche now occupied by lampreys, and may have had a more parasitic lifestyle. When we consider how numerous they are in the record, and their size, perhaps we can look for lesions on the surface of other fossils.

    This animal appeared in the Cambrian explosion, a time of species radiation following a massive extinction event, of what appear to be more sessile fauna. That period may have had more free lunches available.

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