Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-24-2025
Publication Title
American Journal of Biological Anthropology
Abstract
Objectives: This study focuses on a dental microwear texture analysis of European pliopithecids and dryopithecins from the Miocene primate site of Rudabánya, Hungary. The goal is to determine whether these taxa, found in part together in the same deposits, differed in their food preferences, or at least consumed, on a daily basis, in a manner that might have facilitated sympatry. Materials and Methods: Here we report on a molar surface texture analysis of all available fossil primates from Rudabánya that preserve antemortem microwear. This includes both Anapithecus hernyaki (n = 14) and Rudapithecus hungaricus (n = 5, including one from Alsótelekes). Scanning confocal profilometry was used to generate point clouds, and texture complexity and anisotropy values were compared between the fossil taxa and contextualized with published data for an extant baseline series. Results: Texture complexity and anisotropy values for both samples fall within the range of extant frugivorous primates. Further, while anisotropy does not differ between the fossil taxa, Rudapithecus has a significantly higher complexity average than Anapithecus. Discussion: The difference in microwear texture complexity suggests that Rudapithecus individuals studied here consumed harder foods on average than did Anapithecus individuals did. This is consistent with the notion that dietary differences may have played a role in the niche separation of these taxa.
PubMed ID
40994026
Volume
188
Issue
1
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Ungar, Peter S.; Wilcox, Anna K.; and Begun, David R., "Dental Microwear and Diets of Late Miocene Primates From Rudabánya, Hungary" (2025). School of Dentistry Faculty Publications. 217.
https://digitalscholar.lsuhsc.edu/sod_facpubs/217
10.1002/ajpa.70131
Included in
Biological and Physical Anthropology Commons, Dentistry Commons, Evolution Commons, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Commons, Paleontology Commons