Presentation and Management of Dental Pad Fractures in Two Florida Manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris)
IAAAM 2021

Whitney Greene1; Vivian M. Lee1*+; Lynne Byrd1; Laura Denum1; Katharine Boerner1; M. Andrew Stamper2

1Mote Marine Laboratory and Aquarium, Sarasota, FL, USA; 2Disney’s Animals, Science, and Environment Walt Disney’s Parks and Resorts®, Bay Lake, FL, USA

Abstract

The Florida manatee (Trichechus manatus latirostris) has well-developed keratinized dental pads at the most rostral aspect of their mouth to assist with mastication.1 This unique development is thought to be an adaptive response to their highly abrasive diets which contain phytoliths and sediments and may accelerate dental wear.2,3,4 In May 2013, two Florida manatees at Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium presented with multiple fractures in their inferior dental pads. The fractures were successfully managed with nutritional modifications, dental pad trimming, and vigilant monitoring through behavioral husbandry training. Although surgery to remove the loose tissue around the fractures was planned, both fractures showed signs of spontaneous healing as early as 60 days post initial presentation. The fractures fully resolved with minimal intervention, mitigating significant health risks associated with surgery.5,6 To the authors’ knowledge, these are the first reported cases of dental pad fractures and their spontaneous healing and resolution in manatees.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Joe Gaspard, Vanessa Hensley, and members of the Manatee Care Department at Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium for their efforts in providing care to these manatees.

*Presenting author
+Student presenter

Literature Cited

1.  Beaty BL, Vitkovski T, Lambert O, Macrini TE. 2012. Osteological associations with unique tooth development in manatees (Trichechidae, Sirenia): a detailed look at modern Trichechus and a review of the fossil record. The Anatomical Record 295(9):1504–1512.

2.  Beatty BL, Castelblanco-Martınez DN, Morales-Vela B. 2011. Gross dental wear of manatees from Chetumal Bay, Mexico: a beginning to exhaustive studies of the ecological variables affecting tooth wear in marine mammals. Fifth International Sirenian Symposium, Biennial Meeting of the Society for Marine Mammalogy, Tampa, FL.

3.  Domning DP, Hayek L-AC. 1984. Horizontal tooth replacement in the Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis). Mammalia 48(1):105–127.

4.  Sanson GD, Kerr SA, Gross KA. 2007. Do silica phytoliths really wear mammalian teeth? J Archaeol Sci 34(4):526–531.

5.  DuPont GG. 2010. Problems with the dental hard tissues. In: Niemiec BA, editor. Small Animal Dental, Oral and Maxillofacial Disease: A Colour Handbook. London: Manson Publishing. p 127–156.

6.  Vertenten G, Gasthuys F, Cornelissen M, Schacht E, Vlaminck L. 2010. Enhancing bone healing and regeneration: present and future perspectives in veterinary orthopaedics. Vet Comp Orthop Traumatol 23(3):153–162.

 

Speaker Information
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Vivian M. Lee
Mote Marine Laboratory and Aquarium
Sarasota, FL, USA


MAIN : Session 9: Case Presentations 2 : Florida Manatee Dental Pad Fractures
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