Tooth Size Variation in Pinniped Dentitions

It is contentious whether size variation among mammalian teeth is heterogeneous or homogeneous, whether the coefficient of variation is reliable, and whether the standard deviation of log-transformed data and the residual of standard deviation on mean variable size are useful replacements for the coefficient of variation. Most studies of tooth size variation have been on mammals with complex-crowned teeth, with relatively little attention paid to taxa with simple-crowned teeth, such as Pinnipedia. To fill this gap in knowledge and to resolve the existing controversies, we explored the variation of linear size variables (length and width) for all teeth from complete permanent dentitions of four pinniped species, two phocids (Histriophoca fasciata, Phoca largha) and two otariids (Callorhinus ursinus, Eumetopias jubatus). Size variation among these teeth was mostly heterogeneous both along the toothrow and among species. The incisors, canines, and mesial and distal postcanines were often relatively highly variable. The levels of overall dental size variation ranged from relatively low as in land carnivorans (Phoca largha and both otariids) to high (Histriophoca fasciata). Sexual size dimorphism varied among teeth and among species, with teeth being, on average, larger in males than in females. This dimorphism was more pronounced, and the canines were larger and more dimorphic relative to other teeth in the otariids than in the phocids. The coefficient of variation quantified variation reliably in most cases. The standard deviation of log-transformed data was redundant with the coefficient of variation. The residual of standard deviation on mean variable size was inaccurate when size variation was considerably heterogeneous among the compared variables, and was incomparable between species and between sexes. The existing hypotheses invoking developmental fields, occlusal complexity, and the relative timing of tooth formation and sexually dimorphic hormonal activity do not adequately explain the differential size variation along the pinniped toothrow.


Introduction
Variation is a prerequisite for evolution by natural selection. Therefore, variation has been the focus of considerable biological research for over 150 years [1][2][3]. No characterization of a taxon, population, organism, or organ can be complete without characterizing its variation.
Dentition is of fundamental importance for the study of mammalian evolution. This is because teeth are highly informative of a mammal's taxonomic identity, ecological adaptation, and phylogenetic relationships, and because they are chiefly inorganic, which makes them durable and relatively abundant in the fossil record [4,5]. The size of a tooth crown is fixed by the cessation of enamel apposition before tooth eruption, offering a correlate to body size [6][7][8][9], which in turn correlates with many aspects of an animal's life history and ecology [10,11].
A common index of variation is CV, which is the ratio of SD to mean (these and other statistical abbreviations used in the paper are explained in Table 1). Because ME tends to uniformly contribute to SD, CV is usually negatively correlated with mean variable size and may become artificially high if the ME of a variable is high and the variable is small [12]. To counteract this bias in CV, two alternative measures of variation (SDL and RSD) were proposed [12]. SDL and RSD have been used in several studies [12][13][14][15], but the usefulness of these indices and the reliability of CV, though discussed [12][13][14][15][16][17], have remained largely unexplored.
An array of studies have documented (using CV) patterns of variation in tooth size within mammalian dentitions, with certain teeth being consistently more or less variable than others (e.g., [13,14,[18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28]). These patterns have been explained in terms of the relative position of teeth in a developmental [29] (morphogenetic [30] or growth [31]) field [18,19,24,32], the relative occlusal complexity of tooth crowns [13,15,20,21], or the relative timing of tooth formation and sexually dimorphic hormonal activity [12][13][14][15]18]. The hypothesis invoking relative tooth position in a developmental field assumes that the level of variation in the size of a tooth depends on the position of that tooth in an incisor, canine, or postcanine field and that teeth in the center of such a developmental field are less variable than those at the periphery of that field [18,19]. The hypothesis invoking relative tooth occlusal complexity postulates that the level of size variation in teeth is inversely proportional to their occlusal complexity [20].

Abbreviation or symbol
Name and/or definition CV Coefficient of variation, or the ratio of the standard deviation of a variable to the arithmetic mean of that variable, multiplied by 100 M/F Sexual size dimorphism index, or the ratio of the arithmetic mean of a variable in males to the arithmetic mean of that variable in females ME Measurement error, or [s 2 ind /(s 2 ind + s 2 pop )] × 100, where s 2 ind is the variance of the repeated measurements of a variable in a single individual, and s 2 pop is the variance of the measurements of that variable among all individuals in the sample [12] mean Arithmetic mean n Sample size P Probability of wrongly rejecting the null hypothesis of no difference or relationship r Pearson's product moment correlation coefficient Finally, the hypothesis invoking the relative timing of tooth formation and sexually dimorphic hormonal activity proposes that teeth forming before the onset of sex-linked differentiation in hormonal balance are less variable than those forming during sexually differentiated growth and that the latter teeth show progressively higher variation indices when males and females are pooled [18].
Polly [12] argued that the observed patterns of variation were the effect of size-related bias in CV and that size variation among mammalian teeth is indeed relatively homogeneous both within and among species. The generality of this conclusion was undermined by subsequent studies [14][15][16][17], which showed that the patterns of tooth size variation seen in the dentitions of various land carnivorans were not entirely generated by bias in CV.
Variation in tooth size has been studied in various mammalian clades, mainly in primates (e.g., [19,20,22,23,[26][27][28]33]) and canids (e.g., [12-14, 16, 21, 24, 34-39]). Most studies have been on taxa with complex-crowned teeth, which prevail among mammals, with relatively little attention paid to taxa with simple-crowned teeth, such as Pinnipedia, a clade of aquatic (mostly marine) carnivorans (Fig 1). The only study of tooth size variation using a large sample from a pinniped species to date has been that of Miller et al. [40], who investigated the ringed seal's (Pusa hispida) third lower premolar and the harp seal's (Pagophilus groenlandicus) lower postcanines. These authors found that CVs for size variables of these teeth were higher than those in the compared land carnivorans and therefore hypothesized that the postcanines of pinnipeds are more variable in size than those of land carnivorans due to evolutionary simplification of morphology via selective release.
The purpose of this study was fourfold: (1) to evaluate the reliability and usefulness of CV, SDL, and RSD; (2) to describe and compare the variation of tooth size within and among species of Pinnipedia representing its two major extant clades, Otariidae and Phocidae; (3) to compare the variation of tooth size between pinnipeds and land carnivorans; and (4) to test hypotheses related to tooth size variation. Specifically, we test the following hypotheses: (1) that CV is not a reliable measure of variation and that SDL and RSD are more reliable [12]; (2) that size variation among mammalian teeth is relatively homogeneous both within and among species except highly variable canines in some species [12]; (3) that the postcanines of pinnipeds are more variable in size than those of land carnivorans due to evolutionary simplification of morphology [40]; (4) that the level of variation in the size of a tooth depends on the position of that tooth in an incisor, canine, or postcanine developmental field, with teeth in the center of that field being less variable than those at the periphery [18,19]; (5) that the level of size variation in teeth is inversely proportional to their occlusal complexity [20]; and (6) that teeth forming before the onset of sex-linked differentiation in hormonal balance are less variable than those forming during sexually differentiated growth, with the latter teeth showing progressively higher variation indices when males and females are pooled [18].

Materials and Methods
Measurements were collected from permanent dentitions in skeletonized specimens of four species representing two families of Pinnipedia from the collections of five institutions (Fig 1,  Tables 2 and 3). According to the collection records, these specimens derived from wild animals on and around the Japanese Islands. For each specimen, two linear size variables (length and width; Table 4) were measured on all teeth of one body side, left or right, depending on the state of preservation. All measurements were taken with digital calipers to the nearest 0.01 mm. ME was assessed by measuring variables 10 times for one randomly selected specimen. Size variation was quantified using three indices: CV, SDL, and RSD. Sexual size dimorphism was evaluated with M/F [41]. Data on the complete sequence of tooth eruption were taken from the relevant literature (these data were available only for Callorhinus ursinus). Statistical analyses were performed in R versions 2.13.2 and 3.0.2 [42].
In all species, I 1 was smaller than I 2 , I 2 was smaller than I 3 , and I 2 was smaller than I 3 . The incisors had the smallest mean mesiodistal length in all species except I 3 in male E. jubatus and I 3 in male C. ursinus. I 1 in all species except C. ursinus, I 2 in all species except C. ursinus and male E. jubatus, and both lower incisors in all species had the smallest mean vestibulolingual width (Figs 2A, 3A, 4A and 5A).
In H. fasciata, P 3 and P 4 were longer and broader than other upper postcanines in most specimens. P 1 was in most cases the shortest upper postcanine, and M 1 was in most cases the narrowest. P 3 and P 4 were longer and broader than other lower postcanines in most specimens.  Table 6. Abbreviations for tooth lengths and widths are explained in Table 4.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0137100.g002 Range, mean, SD, and RSD are given in millimeters, SDL is in log millimeters, ME and CV are in per cent. Asterisks indicate the means and CVs of males that differ significantly (*P 0.05, **P 0.001) from those of females according to Welch's t-test (means) or Z-test (CVs) results. Statistical abbreviations and symbols are explained in Table 1. Abbreviations for tooth lengths and widths are expanded in Table 4.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0137100.t006 P 1 was the shortest and in most cases the narrowest lower postcanine, P 2 was in most cases the second shortest, and M 1 was in most cases the second narrowest ( Fig 4A). In P. largha, P 3 was the longest upper postcanine in most specimens, P 4 was the broadest in most specimens, and P 1 was the shortest and in most cases the narrowest. P 3 and M 1 were longer than other lower postcanines in most specimens (M 1 was in most cases longer than P 3 ). P 3 was also in most cases the broadest lower postcanine, and P 1 was both the shortest and the narrowest (Fig 5A).

Variation indices
CVs and SDLs were in most cases highest in H. fasciata, in most cases lowest in E. jubatus, and in most cases intermediate in C. ursinus and P. largha (Figs 6B, 6C, 7B and 7C). Both the highest and lowest RSDs were most frequent in E. jubatus (Figs 6D and 7D). H. fasciata had the widest range of CVs, C. ursinus had the widest range of SDLs, and E. jubatus had the widest range of RSDs; P. largha showed the narrowest range for all of these indices. Specifically, CVs, SDLs, and RSDs, respectively, ranged 4.8-14.7%, 0.021-0.074 log mm, and -0.153-0.394 mm in C. ursinus (Fig 2B-2D, Table 6); 4.0-10.0%, 0.017-0.047 log mm, and -0.333-0.377 mm in E. jubatus (Fig 3B-3D, Table 7); 7.3-18.5%, 0.032-0.080 log mm, and -0.104-0.187 mm in H. fasciata (Fig 4B-4D, Table 8); and 5.4-9.9%, 0.024-0.044 log mm, and -0.062-0.115 mm in P. largha (Fig 5B-5D, Table 9). As expected, CVs and SDLs were in most cases higher when males and females were pooled (for C. ursinus, compare Table 6 and Fig 8).  Table 8. Abbreviations for tooth lengths and widths are explained in Table 4. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0137100.g004 When the variation indices were compared among the classes of teeth within the toothrow, the indices for incisors were largely relatively high. The incisor indices varied from the lowest (CV, SDL, and RSD in P. largha, and RSD in H. fasciata) to the highest (CV, SDL, and RSD in all species) in the toothrow (Figs 2B-2D, 3B-3D, 4B-4D and 5B-5D). Of a total of 10 incisor size variables, six variables (WI 1 , WI 2 , LI 2 , WI 2 , LI 3 , and WI 3 ) in one or both sexes of H. fasciata, five variables (LI 3 , WI 3 , LI 2 , LI 3 , and WI 3 ) in one or both sexes of C. ursinus, four variables (WI 1 , WI 2 , LI 2 , and LI 3 ) in one or both sexes of P. largha, and one variable (LI 3 ) in female E. jubatus had their CVs significantly higher than most CVs for the corresponding variables (lengths or widths, respectively) within the toothrow (Fig 9). In comparison to the variation indices for other tooth classes, those for canines were high in C. ursinus, male E. jubatus, and mostly also in male P. largha; low in H. fasciata; and from low to high in female E. jubatus and female P. largha. The canine indices varied from the lowest (CV, SDL, and RSD in female E. jubatus, female and male H. fasciata, and female P. largha) to the highest (CV, SDL, and RSD in male E. jubatus and RSD in both sexes of C. ursinus and P. largha) in the toothrow (Figs 2B-2D, 3B-3D, 4B-4D and 5B-5D). CVs for LC 1 , LC 1 , and WC 1 in female or male C. ursinus were significantly higher while those for WC 1 in female E. jubatus  Table 9. Abbreviations for tooth lengths and widths are explained in Table 4. and LC 1 , WC 1 , LC 1 , and WC 1 in female or female and male H. fasciata were significantly lower than most CVs for other tooth lengths or widths, respectively, in the toothrow (Fig 9). The variation indices for postcanines mostly tended to progressively increase or decrease from the first premolar to the last molar or decrease from both the first premolar and last molar to one of the intermediary postcanines. These indices varied from the lowest (CV, SDL, and RSD in C. ursinus, E. jubatus, and P. largha) to the highest (CV, SDL, and RSD in all species) in the toothrow (Figs 2B-2D, 3B-3D, 4B-4D and 5B-5D). CV for LM 2 significantly exceeded all other CVs for tooth lengths within the toothrow in both sexes of C. ursinus. CVs for two other variables (LP 1 and WM 2 ) in female C. ursinus, two variables (LM 1 and LP 2 ) in male E. jubatus, and six variables (WM 1 , LP 1 , WP 1 , LP 2 , LP 3 , and LM 1 ) in female H. fasciata differed significantly from most CVs for other tooth lengths or widths, respectively, in the toothrow (Fig 9).
CV and SDL were significantly correlated with mean variable size only in H. fasciata and female P. largha. There was a significant positive correlation between CV and both SDL and RSD (Table 10). The weakest relationship between CV and RSD was observed in male H.  Table 4.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0137100.g006 fasciata (r = 0.52), female H. fasciata (r = 0.67), and female P. largha (r = 0.60). However, when the incisor variables were excluded from the comparison, r for this relationship increased to 0.89 in male H. fasciata, 0.98 in female H. fasciata, and 0.68 in female P. largha, all of these values being highly significant at P < 0.0003 according to Student's t-test results.
Plotting RSD against mean variable size revealed outliers from an otherwise normal distribution in both sexes of C. ursinus (LM 2 ) and male P. largha (WI 2 , LC 1 , and LP 1 ). No such outliers occurred in female P. largha and either sex of E. jubatus and H. fasciata (Fig 10).

Sexual dimorphism
All mean variables were significantly higher in males than in females in C. ursinus, E. jubatus, and P. largha (Tables 6, 7 and 9). In H. fasciata, 10 mean variables were significantly higher and 22 mean variables were insignificantly higher in males, whereas two mean variables (WI 2 and WI 3 ) were insignificantly higher in females (Table 8). Most variables had their CVs higher  Table 4.  (Table 7) and three variables in C. ursinus (Table 6), H. fasciata (Table 8), and P. largha (Table 9). SDLs were also mostly higher in males than in females in all species (Figs 2C, 3C, 4C and 5C). RSDs were mostly higher in males than in females in E. jubatus (Fig 3D), as frequently higher as lower in males than in females in C. ursinus (Fig 2D), and mostly lower in males than in females in H. fasciata and P. largha (Figs 4D and 5D).
M/Fs ranged 1.05-1.76 in C. ursinus (Table 6), 1.07-1.82 in E. jubatus (Table 7), 0.98-1.06 in H. fasciata (Table 8), and 1.03-1.12 in P. largha (Table 9). Most variables had the highest M/ F in E. jubatus, the second highest in C. ursinus, the third highest in P. largha, and the lowest in H. fasciata. When M/Fs were compared within species, the M/Fs of canines were highest and those of I 3 second highest in C. ursinus and E. jubatus but not in H. fasciata and P. largha, where the M/Fs of canines were within the 19 and eight highest M/Fs, respectively, and the M/ Fs of I 3 were within the 25 and 26 highest, respectively (Tables 6-9).
There was a significant positive correlation between M/F and mean variable size in C. ursinus and E. jubatus but not in H. fasciata and P. largha (Table 10). There was a moderate but significant positive correlation between M/F and CV in male C. ursinus and male E. jubatus, between M/F and SDL in male P. largha, and between M/F and RSD in both sexes of C. ursinus and male E. jubatus. The weakest relationship between M/F and the variation indices was in H. fasciata (Table 10).

Effect of tooth eruption sequence
There was a significant positive correlation between the sequence of tooth eruption and both mean and SD for the lengths of teeth in C. ursinus but not for the widths. There was no significant correlation between the tooth eruption sequence and CV, SDL, RSD, or M/F (Table 11). The variation indices were not progressively higher when ordered according to the sequence of tooth eruption (Fig 8).

Reliability and usefulness of variation indices
Although variable size ranged widely in our study, most MEs were low (<0.5%) and there was mostly no significant negative correlation between CV and mean variable size. CV, SDL, and the size-independent RSD varied similarly along the toothrow and were significantly correlated in all species. These results suggest that in most cases CV measured variation reliably. In all species, CV and SDL showed similar levels of correlation with mean variable size, varied almost identically along the toothrow, and were very strongly correlated with each other (r = 0.99-1.00). This agrees with previous observations from land carnivorans [13][14][15] and suggests the redundancy of SDL with CV.
Even though independent of size and apparently mostly reliable, RSD was not fully reliable in both sexes of C. ursinus and male P. largha, as indicated by outliers from an otherwise normal distribution in the plots of this index against mean variable size. This problem of RSD was previously noticed by Polly [12], who argued that such outliers caused RSDs of large teeth to appear artificially low. Because such outliers represent relatively highly variable variables, we  Table 4. conclude that RSD can reliably measure variation when all variables are similarly variable, but this index may be misleading when one or more variables are markedly more variable than others. Another drawback that reduces the utility of RSD for measuring variation is that in contrast to CV and SDL, RSD is not comparable between different groups of organisms (e.g., species or sexes) if obtained from different regression analyses and that the way how RSD is calculated covers potential differences in variation between the compared groups of organisms (RSDs from each regression analysis are both positive and negative and center around zero).

Tooth size variation in pinnipeds
Differential variation along the toothrow and among species. Contrary to the hypothesis of Polly [12] that size variation among mammalian teeth is relatively homogeneous both within and among species except highly variable canines in some species, our results show that size variation among pinniped teeth can considerably differ both within and among species. Even though this variation was relatively homogeneous in P. largha, it was clearly heterogeneous in C. ursinus, E. jubatus, and H. fasciata. Not only canines but also incisors were relatively highly variable in most cases although the canines of H. fasciata were less variable than other teeth of the toothrow. Incisor and canine variables were partly difficult to measure, which could result in artificial inflation of their variation indices, but any relevant contribution from this potential source was not supported by the MEs of these variables, which were mostly lower than 1%. Moreover, differences in size variation were observed among postcanines. Probably most remarkable is the relatively high variation in the size of the most distal upper postcanines in both otariids, C. ursinus (M 2 ) and E. jubatus (M 1 ).
Our results from CV and SDL indicate that the dentition of H. fasciata is the most variable in size, that of E. jubatus is the least variable, and those of C. ursinus and P. largha are at intermediate levels of the overall size variation. Admittedly, there was a significant negative correlation between CV and mean variable size in both sexes of H. fasciata and female P. largha, which suggests that the values of this index might be artificially inflated in these species due to the size-related bias revealed by Polly [12]. However, contrary to this suggestion, CV was mostly lower in females than in males in both species although all (P. largha) or almost all (H. fasciata) mean variables were higher in males than in females. Furthermore, there was no significant negative correlation between CV and mean variable size in male P. largha, C. ursinus, or E. jubatus.
A comparison of CVs for the lengths of lower postcanines between Pagophilus groenlandicus (6.6-8.8% [40]) and H. fasciata (9.1-12.9%) suggests that the dentition of the former species is less variable in size. The CVs of 9.9% (males) and 9.5% (females) reported for the length of P 3 in Pusa hispida [40] are similar to those in H. fasciata (10.3 and 9.1%, respectively). In turn, CVs for the length and width of C 1 recorded from male Antarctic (Arctophoca gazella; 5.7% and 8.0%, respectively) and subantarctic (Arctophoca tropicalis; 8.1% and 8.8%, respectively) fur seals [49] are similar to or lower than those in the males of species examined here (8.0-9.4% and 7.2-8.9%, respectively).
Sexual dimorphism. Our results indicate that sexual size dimorphism is the most pronounced for the dentition of E. jubatus, the second most pronounced for the dentition of C. ursinus, the third most pronounced for the dentition of Phoca largha, and the least pronounced for the dentition of H. fasciata, with teeth being, on average, larger in males than in females in  Tables 6-9. Abbreviations for tooth lengths and widths are explained in Table 4.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0137100.g009 all species. Miller et al. [40] reported that the lower postcanines of Pagophilus groenlandicus and P 3 of Pusa hispida were, on average, also larger in males. It has also been noted that the canines of the northern and southern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris and M. leonina) were larger in males [50][51][52].
The canines and, to a lesser degree, I 3 were the most sexually dimorphic teeth in C. ursinus and E. jubatus, where the observed ranges of canine variables did not overlap between sexes. The canines of these species were larger and more sexually dimorphic relative to other teeth than those of H. fasciata and Phoca largha. Moreover, there was a positive relation between sexual dimorphism and tooth size in both otariids, but no such a relationship was observed in the two phocids.

Comparison with nonpinniped carnivorans
A comparison of how the size of teeth changes with position along the toothrow between pinnipeds and other carnivorans (Fig 11) shows that the incisors and canines exhibit a similar variation, whereas the postcanines exhibit a different variation. Unlike the postcanines of land carnivorans, the pinniped postcanines are mostly very similar in size and, as indicated by our measurements, some can vary in sequence according to size within species.
Contrary to the hypothesis of Miller et al. [40] that the postcanines of pinnipeds are more variable in size than those of land carnivorans due to evolutionary simplification of morphology, our results indicate that the pinniped dentitions represent a wide spectrum of the levels of size variation ranging from a relatively low variation as in land carnivorans to a high variation (Fig 12). Furthermore, although the postcanines of both otariids were mostly simpler in form than those of the phocids (Fig 1), the latter were mostly more variable in size (Fig 12).  (Tables  6-9). Inset numbers represent the results of the Shapiro-Wilk test (W) and, under this test, the probability of wrongly rejecting the null hypothesis that the data are normally distributed (P). Numbers in parentheses refer to all data except outliers from an otherwise normal distribution. These outliers are highlighted in red and labeled with the variable abbreviation (explained in Table 4).
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0137100.g010 The sequence of tooth eruption follows Scheffer and Kraus [47] and is: I 2 , I 1 , I 3 , I 2 , P 1 , P 1 , I 3 , P 2 , P 2 , P 3 , P 4 , P 3 , P 4 , M 1 , C 1 , C 1 , M 1 , and M 2 (tooth symbols expanded in Table 5). Statistically significant coefficients at P 0.05 are indicated by an asterisk. P values derive from algorithm AS 89 [48]. Statistical abbreviations and symbols are explained in Table 1. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0137100.t011 Testing hypotheses that explain differential size variation along the toothrow The hypothesis invoking relative tooth position in a developmental field. Our results have not shown a consistent pattern to support this hypothesis. Whereas some of the results fit the predictions of the hypothesis (e.g., all variation indices for the lengths of upper teeth in male E. jubatus progressively increased in value from the central part to the mesial and distal ends of the postcanine toothrow; Fig 3B-3D), other results do not (e.g., all variation indices for the lengths of upper teeth in female C. ursinus progressively increased in value from the mesial to the distal end of the postcanine toothrow; Fig 2B-2D).
The hypothesis invoking relative tooth occlusal complexity. According to this hypothesis, the level of size variation in teeth is inversely proportional to their occlusal complexity [20]. This means that teeth that have similar occlusal complexity should be similarly variable in size. Our findings mostly negate this prediction. Even though teeth with similar occlusal complexity in most cases showed a similar size variation in Phoca largha, such teeth in most cases differed in size variation in C. ursinus, E. jubatus, and H. fasciata.
The hypothesis invoking the relative timing of tooth formation and sexually dimorphic hormonal activity. Our results do not support this hypothesis. In C. ursinus we have found  Table 5. Family affiliations are indicated for nonpinniped species. Arithmetic mean (mean) values are averaged between sexes based on data from this study (pinnipeds) and previous investigations (Lycalopex gymnocercus, pampas fox [F. J. Prevosti, pers. comm., 26 February 2013]; Vulpes vulpes, red fox [13]; Meles meles, European badger [25]) except for P 1 and P 1 of M. meles, where the values are from females [53].
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0137100.g011 neither a significant positive correlation between the sequence of tooth eruption and CV, SDL, or RSD nor a significant relationship between this sequence and M/F, and the teeth ordered according to the eruption sequence have not shown progressively higher variation indices for pooled males and females.