key: cord-0031536-d48geih8 authors: Miller, Harrison S.; Avrahami, Haviv M.; Zanno, Lindsay E. title: Dental pathologies in lamniform and carcharhiniform sharks with comments on the classification and homology of double tooth pathologies in vertebrates date: 2022-05-11 journal: PeerJ DOI: 10.7717/peerj.12775 sha: c9a2f3bfa87e7074360b05a50b90551b19f6b33b doc_id: 31536 cord_uid: d48geih8 Double tooth pathologies are important indicators of trauma, disease, diet, and feeding biomechanics, and are widely documented in mammals. However, diagnosis of double tooth pathologies in extinct non-mammalian vertebrates is complicated by several compounding factors including: a lack of shared terminology reflecting shared etiology, inconsistencies in definitions and key features within and outside of mammals (e.g., gemination, fusion, twinning, concrescence); differences in tooth morphology, heterodonty, regeneration, and implantation between mammals and non-mammalian vertebrates; and the unmet need for diagnostic criteria that can be applied to isolated teeth, which are common in the fossil record. Here we report on double tooth pathologies in the lamniform and carcharhiniform Cenozoic sharks Otodus megalodon (NCSM 33639) and Carcharhinus leucas (NCSM 33640, 33641). All three teeth bear a singular bifid crown with mirrored halves and abnormal internal microstructure—a single, bifurcating pulp cavity in C. leucas and a more than tripling of vessels in O. megalodon (from two to seven main ascending canals). We identify these abnormalities as likely examples of gemination due to their symmetry, which rules out fusion of tooth buds in one tooth file in different developmental stages in polyphyodont taxa; however, we note that incomplete forms of mesiodistal tooth fusion can be morphologically indistinguishable from gemination, and thus fusion cannot be rejected. We further compile and recategorize, when possible, the diversity of tooth pathologies in sharks. The identification of double tooth pathologies in O. megalodon and C. leucas has paleobiological implications. Such pathologies in sharks are largely hypothesized to stem from trauma to developing tooth buds. Carcharhinus leucas is known to feed on prey documented to cause feeding-related oral traumas (e.g., rays, sawfish, spiny fish, and sea urchins). However, O. megalodon, is considered to have largely fed on marine mammals, and perhaps turtles and/or fish, raising the possibility that the dietary diversity of this species is, as of yet, underappreciated. The genetic underpinnings of tooth morphogenesis and regeneration is highly conserved throughout vertebrate evolution, suggesting a homologous framework can be established. However, more research is needed to link developmental, paleobiological, and/or paleoenvironmental factors to gemination/fusion in polyphyodont taxa. We argue that the definitions and diagnostic criteria for dental pathologies in vertebrates require standardization in order to advance macroevolutionary studies of feeding trauma in deep time. A wide array of dental pathologies have been reported across multiple vertebrate clades, in both extant (Aalderink et al., 2015; Crossley et al., 1998; Jett et al., 2017; Jones & Franklin, 2006; Scarpetta & Bell, 2020; Shen et al., 2011; Winer et al., 2016b; Winer, Liong & Verstraete, 2013) and extinct taxa (Candeiro & Tanke, 2008; Jäger, Cifelli & Martin, 2020; Kirillova, 2009; Matthias, McWhinney & Carpenter, 2016; Reisz et al., 2011; Xing et al., 2013) . In particular, a category of dental pathologies known as tooth doubling, or connate teeth, is well documented in extant mammalian clades, especially humans (Agnihotri, Marwah & Goel, 2007; Camargo, Aritaa & Watanabe, 2016; Cetinbas et al., 2007; Ertaş et al., 2014; Guler et al., 2013; Hülsmann, Bahr & Grohmann, 1997; Hunasgi et al., 2017; Jain, Yeluri & Munshi, 2014; Kamura, 2019; Knežević et al., 2002; Mahendra et al., 2014; Sharma et al., 2015; Shokri, Baharvand & Mortazavi, 2013; Syed et al., 2016; Tasa, 1998; Tsesis et al., 2003) . Double tooth pathologies occur when either a single tooth splits into two teeth (gemination and twinning; Lucas & Schoch, 1987; Fig. 1A) or when two or more teeth merge (fusion and concrescence; Lucas & Schoch, 1987; Figs. 1B-1D) . These pathologies are not mutually exclusive, and although rare, can occur in tandem. Specifically, there are documentations of fusion and concrescence co-occurring in humans (Aldred, Gordon & Talacko, 2011; Syed et al., 2016) and felines (Verstraete et al., 1996) . Gemination (Fig. 1A) is the result of a partial division of a single tooth bud (Lucas & Schoch, 1987) . It is the most commonly reported double tooth pathology with a wide representation across terrestrial and marine mammals, including extant representatives of Hominidae (Agnihotri, Marwah & Goel, 2007; Camargo, Aritaa & Watanabe, 2016; Ertaş et al., 2014; Jain, Yeluri & Munshi, 2014; Knežević et al., 2002; Mahendra et al., 2014; Sharma et al., 2015; Shokri, Baharvand & Mortazavi, 2013; Tasa, 1998; Tsesis et al., 2003) , Pinnipedia (Abbott & Verstraete, 2005; Kahle et al., 2018) , Felidae (Aghashani et al., 2016; Gomerčić et al., 2009; Mestrinho et al., 2018) , Ursidae (Clark et al., 2017) , Cercopithecidae (Colyer, 1928) , Equidae (Easley, 2006) , Talpidae (Feldhamer & Towery, 2010; Kawada et al., 2006; Kawada et al., 2011) , Canidae (Gisburne & Feldhamer, 2005; Hitchin & Morris, 1966) , Mustelidae (Hauer, 2002) , Cetacea (Loch et al., 2011; Norton, 2009) , and Muridae (Sofaer, 1969) . Gemination is also reported in the extinct taxa Coryphodontidae (Lucas & Schoch, 1987) , Condylarthra (Rose & Smith, 1979) , and Mammuthus (Burns, Baker & Mol, 2003) . Twinning (also referred to as schizodontia) (Fig. 1B) is identified as two mirrored teeth occupying a single tooth position and is thought to be caused by the complete cleavage of a single tooth bud (essentially complete gemination of the tooth) (Lucas & Schoch, 1987) . It has been reported in Hominidae (Hunasgi et al., 2017; Sharma et al., 2015) , Canidae (Fine, 1964) , and Condylarthra (Rose & Smith, 1979) . Fusion (also referred to as synodontia) (Fig. 1C ) occurs when teeth are united by their dentine and/or enamel due to the complete or incomplete union of two or more tooth buds during development (Lucas & Schoch, 1987) . Fusion has been reported in Hominidae (Cetinbas et al., 2007; Guler et al., 2013; Hülsmann, Bahr & Grohmann, 1997; Kamura, 2019; Syed et al., 2016) , Pinnipedia (Winer et al., 2016a) , and Felidae (Verstraete et al., 1996) . However, in some of these cases, a more general definition of fusion is used that includes concrescence, therefore in the literature it can be difficult to discriminate between reports of these conditions (e.g., Cetinbas et al., 2007; Hülsmann, Bahr & Grohmann, 1997) . In other cases, tooth doubling is reported without discrimination between fusion or gemination, so the exact condition is unclear (Tsesis et al., 2003) . Concrescence (Fig. 1D ) occurs when the roots of two or more teeth are united by cementum or dentine after complete morphogenesis (Lucas & Schoch, 1987) , whereby the teeth are complete and conjoined. It has been reported in Hominidae (Kamura, 2019; Syed et al., 2016) , Pinnipedia (Kryukova, 2017) , Talpidae (Asahara, Kryukov & Motokawa, 2011) , Muridae (Peterková et al., 2000) , Felidae (Verstraete et al., 1996) , and Equidae (Spasskaya, 2014) . The etiological factors that contribute to these pathologies are not well known and likely vary across vertebrate clades, but several have been suggested including vitamin deficiency, hormonal irregularities, infection, inflammation of surrounding tissues, genetic predispositions, hereditary or congenital diseases, nutritional deficiency, local traumas, ionizing radiation, endocrine influences, environmental factors, space restriction during development, and excessive occlusal force (Guler et al., 2013; Hunasgi et al., 2017; Mahendra et al., 2014; Syed et al., 2016) . These etiological factors have been cited as contributing factors in other tooth pathologies as well. For example, trauma, aberrant tooth replacement, and genetic expression have been proposed to cause split carinae (termed cutting edges in Chondrichthyes) (Welsh, Boyd & Spearing, 2020)-a tooth pathology wherein the serrated cutting surface of the tooth bifurcates abnormally. This pathology is reported in extinct taxa such as theropod dinosaurs (Tyrannosauridae, Erickson, 1995; Paraves, Fiorillo & Gangloff, 2001; Han et al., 2011; and Carcharodontosauridae, Candeiro & Tanke, 2008) , mammals (Nimravidae, Welsh, Boyd & Spearing, 2020), and fish (Otodus megalodon, Itano, 2013) . Although tooth doubling is widely reported in extinct taxa, the currently accepted subtypes of double tooth pathologies that utilize a developmental framework were categorized based on a mammalian model (Pindborg, 1970) . Discriminating among different types of double tooth pathologies is difficult in the absence of developmental data and/or preservation of complete dentition (More & Tailor, 2012; Patil et al., 2013; Camargo, Aritaa & Watanabe, 2016) . Given that the majority of pathological fossil shark teeth are recovered as isolated elements (Martínez-Pérez et al., 2018; Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer, 2000) and that the morphology of the dentition of sharks and mammals differ, refined diagnoses of double tooth pathologies in shark teeth based on developmental history are lacking. Double tooth pathologies including those simply described as bicuspid and/or coalescent teeth have been reported in chondrichthyans (Leonodus carlsi (Botella, 2006; Botella, Valenzuela-Ríos & Martínez-Pérez, 2009 ), Batoidea (Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer, 2000 Delpiani, Figueroa & Mabragaña, 2012; Romer, 1942) , Chlamydoselachidae (Gudger, 1937) , Heterodontidae (Gudger, 1937 ), Carcharhiniformes (Balbino & Antunes, 2007 Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer, 2000; Gudger, 1937) , and Lamniformes (Agassiz, 1843; Balbino & Antunes, 2007; Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer, 2000; Boessenecker, 2016; Cappetta & Case, 1975; Davis, 1890; Hubbell, 1996; Itano, 2013; Roemer, 1849; Shimada, 1997; Vuuren et al., 2015) ). In the absence of a developmental diagnosis, questions remain about the commonality, homology, and phylogenetic distribution of the various types of tooth doubling in the fossil record, as well as the equivalence of these pathologies between mammals and chondrichthyans. Here we describe double tooth pathologies in the lamniform Otodus megalodon and the carcharhiniform Carcharhinus leucas, two Cenozoic shark species that vastly differ in ecology and tooth morphology. C. leucas, commonly known as the bull shark, evolved during the Miocene (Matich & Heithaus, 2012) . It is a widely distributed coastal predator found in tropical, subtropical, and temperate ecosystems and is a highly efficient osmoregulator that can travel between fresh and marine waters and respond to sudden changes in salinity with minimal metabolic costs (Matich & Heithaus, 2012) . The maximum body size of C. leucas has been reported to be in the range of 2.85-3.27 m (Habegger et al., 2012; Hoarau et al., 2021) . Most carcharhiniforms, including C. leucas, exhibit the orthodont tooth histotype (i.e., they have hollow pulp cavities), the second most common histotype in sharks (Jambura et al., 2020; Moyer, Riccio & Bemis, 2015) . O. megalodon was a much larger shark, estimated to reach maximum body sizes in the range of 14.2-18 m (Pimiento & Balk, 2015; Shimada, 2019) and was a globally distributed apex predator of marine ecosystems for as many as 14 million years. O. megalodon appears in the fossil record around the middle Miocene (15.9 Ma) (Pimiento & Clements, 2014) , but there are varying opinions on when it went extinct. Some suggest that O. megalodon went extinct near the Pliocene/Pleistocene boundary (2.6 Ma) (Pimiento & Clements, 2014) , whereas others propose a much earlier extinction around the end of the early Pliocene (3.6 Ma) suggesting that specimens found in a locality dated later than this have been reworked (Boessenecker et al., 2019) . Lamniforms, such as O. megalodon exhibit osteodont dentition (their pulp cavities are filled with osteodentine), a histotype so far known to be exclusive to this group (Jambura et al., 2020; Moyer, Riccio & Bemis, 2015) . In order to determine whether gemination, fusion, twinning, concrescence, or some combination can be substantiated in these teeth, we describe their gross and internal morphology using nano-CT imaging. We then examine the morphological evidence for the formation of each pathological tooth. Identifying the types of tooth pathologies and their distribution among vertebrate clades can provide important paleobiological information on tooth developmental anomalies, and injuries, with potential implications for behavior, such as feeding traumas in selachians. Our figured specimen sample consists of six Cenozoic shark teeth, representing pathological and non-pathological examples of two species-Otodus megalodon and Carcharhinus leucas. We examined three C. leucas teeth, two with a double tooth pathology (NCSM 33640 and NCSM 33641) Here we follow Jambura et al. (2019) and Shimada (2019) in placing O. megalodon within the genus Otodus and subclade Otodontidae. Some authors propose alternative genus-species combinations, such as Carcharodon megalodon or Carcharocles megalodon (e.g. Cappetta, 1987; Purdy et al., 2001; Pimiento, 2010; Boessenecker, 2016) . This ongoing taxonomic debate does not affect our results. We follow Cappetta (2012) and Shimada (2002) for dental terminology including the labial (external) and lingual (internal) face, distal (further from the mid-point of the jaw) and mesial side (closer to the midpoint of the jaw), anterior (closer to the front of the jaw) and posterior (closer to the back of the jaw) position, root (anchors the tooth to the jaw), neck (borderline between root and crown), crown (cap composed of dentine and enameloid that is attached to the root), cusp (sharp point formed by the tip of the crown), apex (tip of the crown), cutting edge (smooth or serrated edge of the crown), serrations (individual sharp points along the cutting edge), basal ledge (distinct ledge seen on the labial side at the base of the crown), central foramen (distinct vascular opening on the lingual side of the tooth), nutrient groove (vascular groove in the root leading to central foramen). We follow Martínez-Pérez et al. (2018) and Ivanov & Nilov (2016) for vascular terminology (e.g., main ascending, secondary ascending, secondary horizontal canals, small horizontal, small vertical (or ascending), large longitudinal (or semicircular), and small branching secondary canals) and Pindborg (1970) for the definitions of double tooth pathology types. All teeth were photographed using either a DSLR camera, in conjunction with image stacking operations in Adobe Photoshop, or a Keyence VHX-1000E image stacking microscope. Linear, angular, and serration density measurements were collected using digital calipers, or a Keyence VHX-1000E image stacking microscope and ImageJ 1.53e (Rasband & Image, 2011) . Measurement standards are illustrated in Fig. 2 Hendrickx, Mateus & Araújo (2015) , and NH, RH, RL, RW. LAPL, LIPL, LLCL, RLCL, LLDD, and RLDD were created for this study. Mesiocentral, distocentral, left lateral, and right lateral serration density measurements were measured along the cutting edge where visible, then mean and variance was taken. The internal morphology and structure of the C. leucas teeth NCSM 33640, NCSM 33641, and NCSM 34038 and the O. megalodon teeth NCSM 9545 and NCSM 33639 were investigated using the ZEISS Xradia 510 Versa X-ray microscope located in the Analytical Instrumentation Facility at North Carolina State University using the following scanning protocol, 160 kV and 63 µA. The CT images were captured using a voxel size of 26.92 mm and image dimensions of 1,024 px × 1,004 px. CT data was segmented by hand without the use of algorithms, and 3D models were produced using the software Avizo Lite 9.0 (Thermo Fisher Scientific, 2018). All micro-CT data and 3D models produced for this study are available in the MorphoSource repository, under project P367889 at https://www. morphosource.org. We compiled the diagnostic characteristics previously published in Purdy et al. (2001) , Pimiento (2010) , and Boessenecker (2016) to refer NCSM 9545, 14984, and 33639 to the otodontid (megatoothed) shark O. megalodon. Our referral is based on: large size (crown height 107.59-91.10 mm, Table 1 ); a large chevron-shaped neck bearing thin enameloid (Pimiento, 2010; Boessenecker, 2016) ; fine serrations (0.75-1.47 serrations per mm on left lateral cutting edge in lingual view; Table 1 ) (Pimiento, 2010; Boessenecker, 2016) ; a convex lingual face (Pimiento, 2010) , a slightly convex to flat labial face (Pimiento, 2010) , and absence of cusplets on large teeth (Purdy et al., 2001) . All teeth are highly symmetrical (Fig. 3) suggesting they represent anterior teeth (Purdy et al., 2001) , this combined with the large, broad nature of the teeth suggests they were located in the upper jaw (Smith et al., 2018) . However, due to the highly symmetrical nature of the tooth, we are unable to determine if the tooth derives from the left or right side of the upper jaw, thus we use the terms "left lateral/right lateral" in place of "mesial/distal." The pathological O. megalodon tooth, NCSM 33639 ( Fig. 3) is the largest in our sample with a crown height of 107.59 mm and a basal crown length of 108.37 mm. Cutting edges are dull and abraded, but where preserved, the mean value of individual serrations is 1.45 per mm on the left lateral cutting edge in lingual view and 1.76 per mm on the right lateral cutting edge in lingual view (Table 1 ; Fig. 3D ). In lingual view, the crown is split medially from the apex to the neck forming two discrete cusps (Fig. 3A) . Whereas in labial view, the division appears incompletely developed, expressed as a shallower groove and restricted to the crown tip (Fig. 3B ). The tip of the left lateral cusp in lingual view is slightly more extensive and overlaps the right lateral cusp in lingual view (Fig. 3D ). The left lateral cusp in lingual view is slightly taller and mesiodistally longer than the right lateral cusp in lingual view. The basal ledge is fairly pronounced compared to other O. megalodon teeth in our study sample. In our sample of both pathological and non-pathological O. megalodon teeth the labial surface of the root is broadly flat or concave slightly, and the lingual surface is broadly convex. On the non-pathological O. megalodon teeth (NCSM 9545 and 14984) there is a convex bulge that occurs across the lingual surface of the root, immediately basal to the neck. This bulge is a prominent feature in the majority of the O. megalodon teeth we CT data confirms that in pathological (NCSM 33639) and non-pathological (NCSM 9545) examples of O. megalodon teeth, the tooth is filled with osteodentine and lacks a pulp cavity as in other selachians with osteodont dentition (Jambura et al., 2018; Jambura et al., 2019) (Fig. 4) . Previous scans of O. megalodon teeth were noted as not having sufficient resolution (30 µm) to detect the peripheral vascular structure (Jambura et al., 2019) . From our scans (<0.7 mm), we were able to visualize most of the vascular network of these O. megalodon teeth. The internal vascular structure of the O. megalodon teeth NCSM 9545 and 33639 is similar to two of the vascular networks described by Ivanov & Nilov (2016) (Vascular Systems 2 and 3). Overall, in both teeth, there is a network of small, secondary canals with large, main ascending canals. The small, secondary canals can be further parsed into four types (sensu Ivanov & Nilov, 2016) : small horizontal, small vertical (or ascending), large longitudinal (or semicircular), and small branching secondary canals. Ivanov & Nilov (2016) use this terminology to describe the vascular systems of orthodont shark teeth, which they note as being more diverse with regard to vascular morphology than osteodont shark teeth. However, Martínez-Pérez et al. (2018) applied these terms to osteodont shark teeth, suggesting that they are broadly applicable. In both our O. megalodon teeth, the main ascending canals extend from the root to the apex of the crown and have a distinct "L" shape in which the canal starts to hook towards the lingual face once it approaches the root (Figs. 4B and 4F), as described in Martínez-Pérez et al. (2018) . This is similar to an Early Devonian shark Leonodus carlsi tooth documented by Martínez-Pérez et al. (2018) that exhibits main ascendant vascular canals connected at the base of the tooth by a "T"-shape junction and emerging at the base of the labial and lingual regions. Main ascending canals are also roughly twice the diameter of all secondary canals. The average diameter of the main ascending and secondary canals of NCSM 9545 are 369.54 and 184.85 mm, respectively. Whereas, the average diameter of the main ascending and secondary canals of NCSM 9545 are 347.36 and 166.57 mm, respectively (Table S1 ). The longitudinal canals in both teeth are larger than the other secondary canals, with diameters approximating those of the main ascending canals, but have a semicircular shape and are constrained to the root. Horizontal and vertical secondary canals have similar diameters to branching secondary canals but are longer and more linear. The pathological O. megalodon tooth (NSCM 33639) differs from the non-pathological tooth (NCSM 9545) (Fig. 4A ) in that the former has more than double the quantity of main ascending canals (seven) than the latter, which has only two (Fig. 4E ). One of these main ascending canals bifurcates toward the apex of the crown in concordance with the externally divided crown and may have been affected by the pathology; there is no bifurcation to this extent seen in NCSM 9545 (Fig. 4) . The main ascending canals in NCSM are more concentrated on one side of the tooth as opposed to NCSM 9545 where they are concentrated in the middle. There is also more differentiation in the size of the canals in NCSM 33639; with main ascending canals ranging in diameter from 215.36-753.76 mm and secondary canals ranging from 107.68-269.20 mm, vs NCSM 9545; with main ascending canals ranging in diameter from 242.28-511.48 mm and secondary canals ranging from 134.60-269.20 mm (Table S1 ). We compiled the diagnostic characteristics previously published in Purdy et al. (2001) and Marsili (2006) to refer NCSM 34038, NCSM 33640, and NCSM 33641 to the carcharhinid shark C. leucas. Our referral is based on: broad, triangular-shaped cusps on upper teeth and arrow-shaped cusps on lower teeth with serrated lateral cutting edges (Marsili, 2006; Fig. 5) ; coarser serration near the base than the apex of the crown (Marsili, 2006; Fig. 5 ); straight or slightly wavy mesial cutting edge that is sometimes weakly convex near the tip of the cusp (Purdy et al., 2001; Fig. 5 ); concave distal cutting edge (Marsili, 2006; Fig. 5 ); convex lingual face of the crown characterized by a well-developed neck-area (Marsili, 2006 ; Figs. 5B, 5F, 5J); flat labial face of crown (Marsili, 2006; Figs. 5A, 5E, 5I) ; and high root characterized by a lingual nutrient groove (Marsili, 2006; Fig. 5) . NCSM 34038 and NCSM 33641 are broad and serrated, suggesting they are anterior teeth from the upper jaw (Smith et al., 2018) . NCSM 33640 is long, slender, and dull, suggesting it is an anterior tooth from the lower jaw (Smith et al., 2018) . The pathological C. leucas tooth, NCSM 33640, exhibits cutting edges that are sharp and well preserved. Where preserved, the mean value of individual serrations is 3.38 per mm on the mesial cutting edge and 2.66 on the distal cutting edge (Table 1 ; Fig. 5D ). In lingual view, the crown is split medially from the apex to the neck forming two discrete cusps (Fig. 5A) . Whereas in labial view, the division appears incompletely developed, expressed as a shallower groove and restricted to the midpoint of the crown (Fig. 5B ). In addition, the two cusps have been separated mesiodistally, this is the only pathological tooth in the our sample to exhibit this separation. Due to this separation, the inside edges of each side of the cusp bear serrations (Fig. 5D) . The mesial cusp is taller and mesiodistally shorter than the distal cusp. The pathological C. leucas tooth, NCSM 33641, exhibits cutting edges that are fairly dull. Where preserved, the mean value of individual serrations is 3.01 mm on the mesial cutting edge and 3.24 mm on the distal cutting edge (Table 1; Fig. 5H ). In lingual view, the crown is split medially from the apex to the neck forming two discrete cusps (Fig. 5E ). Whereas in labial view, the division appears incompletely developed, expressed as a shallower groove and restricted to the crown tip (Fig. 5F ). The mesial cusp is taller and mesiodistally longer than the distal cusp. Both the mesial and distal cusp exhibit curvature. However, the distal cusp exhibits mesially directed curvature, whereas the mesial cusp exhibits distally directed curvature; similar to the rest of the crown, and folds underneath the distal side. In our sample of non-pathological C. leucas teeth NCSM 34038 (n = 1) and NCSM 29144 (n = 4), each tooth, except a single poorly preserved tooth, exhibits a fully or partially preserved nutrient groove. When well-preserved, the nutrient groove begins at the base of the root along the midline and travels apically halfway up the root before merging with the central foramen. In the largest and best preserved C. leucas tooth from the NCSM 29144 lot the nutrient groove continues apically from the central foramen as a single shallow fossa before terminating at the crown enameloid. This single apically directed midline fossa is also present in well-preserved teeth in the NCSM collections previously In both pathological C. leucas teeth this midline lingual groove is absent, and instead there is an apically oriented midline ridge, which is paralleled mesially and distally by two subtle grooves. The ridge is pronounced in NCSM 33647 and the grooves are subtle, whereas in NCSM 33640 the ridge is more faint and the grooves are more prominent. In our sample (including pathological and non-pathological teeth) CT-scans reveal that, along with the central foramen, smaller vascular canals open across the external surface of the root and within the nutrient groove. Internally, the diameter of the central foramen is distinctly larger than these smaller canals. In the non-pathological tooth NCSM 34038 the central foramen continues as a single canal, traveling apically to open into the pulp cavity. In pathological tooth NCSM 33640 there is a single large central foramen that is offset towards the mesial side of the nutrient groove. Internally, this foramen appears to bifurcate prior to merging with the pulp cavity. Additionally, there are a series of smaller accessory foramina visible across the external surface of the nutrient groove, one of which is offset to the distal side and may represent a second central foramen. However, internally this canal does not appear to maintain a size diameter consistent with the distinctly larger mesially offset central foramen. It is unclear from the external surface or internal scans if the other pathological tooth NCSM 33641 houses multiple central foramen or an internally bifurcating central foramen. Nonetheless, the concavity that houses the central foramen within the nutrient groove appears slightly mesiodistally expanded. Pathological (NCSM 33640 and NCSM 33641) and non-pathological (NCSM 34038) C. leucas teeth possess hollow pulp cavities (Fig. 6) . The non-pathological tooth exhibits a single, hollow pulp cavity as documented previously (Jambura et al., 2018) . This contrasts with the two pathological teeth examined, which house a bifurcated, single, hollow pulp cavity. Within our sample of double tooth pathologies in these two species of selachians, we note differences in the extent of crown splitting, bilateral height and recurvature of the doubled apices. For example, whereas the length of the lingual pathology is consistent among all teeth in our sample (extending from the apex of the crown to the neck of the tooth), the pathology length of the labial aspect varies. Crown splitting is restricted to the crown tip on NCSM 33639 (O. megalodon) and NCSM 33641 (C. leucas), but is restricted to the midpoint of the crown on NCSM 33640 (C. leucas). The height of the split apices also varies with the left lateral side of the cusp being taller on NCSM 33639 (O. megalodon) and NCSM 33640 (C. leucas), and the right lateral side being taller in NCSM 33641 (C. leucas), when viewed lingually. Finally, the degree of separation and degree of recurvature between the split crown apices is variable among our sample. Both apices are tightly appressed on NCSM 33639 (O. megalodon). The right lateral aspect of NCSM 33641 (C. leucas) folds underneath the left lateral aspect in lingual view, whereas the left lateral apex twists over the right lateral apex in lingual view on NCSM 33639. In contrast, the double apices are widely separated on NCSM 33640 (C. leucas). These differences are likely idiosyncratic features related to differential timing of gemination or fusion during development. Dental pathologies in extant and extinct chondrichthyans are well documented and include a range of abnormalities over a wide phylogenetic distribution (Fig. 7) . These deformations include, but are not limited to, notched, split, and deformed cutting edges, cracking of enameloid, excessive dentine growth, deformed tooth crowns, and the development of fossae and perforations (e.g., Hubbell, 1996; Shimada, 1997; Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer, 2000; Itano, 2013; Boessenecker, 2016) . Specifically, among Carcharhiniformes and Lamniformes, deformation/rotation/bending/twisting of the tooth, cutting edge deformation, root deformation, irregularly sized teeth, and irregular tooth rows have been reported. Some of the pathologies are only documented in a single genus/ species including tooth perforation (Carcharodon, Hubbell, 1996) , nutrient groove deformation (Cretoxyrhina mantelli, Shimada, 1997) , and neck deformation (Cretoxyrhina mantelli, Shimada, 1997) . Double tooth pathologies are also commonly reported in extant and extinct chondrichthyans. For example, basally conjoined teeth of the Lower Devonian early-diverging chondrichthyan Leonodus carlsi (Botella, 2006; Botella, Valenzuela-Ríos & Martínez-Pérez, 2009 ) are proposed to represent an example of fusion. Whereas, "bicuspid" and/or "coalescent" teeth and/or indeterminate double tooth abnormalities are identified in the Carcharhiniform Galeocerdo cuvier (Gudger, 1937 Gudger, 1937; Hubbell, 1996; Itano, 2013; Roemer, 1849; Shimada, 1997; Vuuren et al., 2015) . Various pathologies have been reported in O. megalodon specifically (e.g., Renz, 2002) ; however, these specimens are not housed in public repositories. We find multiple features point to gemination and/or fusion as the most likely etiology for the specimens of O. megalodon and C. leucas described herein including (1) a single incompletely split crown (as opposed to two crowns united by dentine and/or enameloid); (2) bifurcated, partially doubled internal morphology (pulp cavity in C. leucas and ascending canals of O. megalodon); and (3) only minor abnormalities to the root morphology along the midline. The latter includes a midline ridge with parallel grooves instead of a single midline groove, mesiodistally expanded nutrient groove near the central foramen, an internally bifurcating central foramen, and the possible presence of multiple central foramina in the pathological C. leucas tooth; and a concavity across the lingual surface between the neck and the crown in the pathological O. megalodon tooth. There are several main issues that complicate etiological diagnosis of double tooth pathologies in sharks and other vertebrates, which prevents comparison with those of mammals. First is the absence of shared terminology reflective of shared etiology. Whereas double tooth pathologies in sharks are often referred to as "bicuspid" or "coalescent" (e.g., Figure 7 Simplified Chondrichthyes composite phylogeny highlighting the published distribution of dental pathologies. Main branching structure of selachians including the pattern of divergence among Chlamydoselachidae, Heterodontidae, Carcharhinidae, Mitsukurinidae, Odontospididae, the relationships among Carcharhiniformes, and the placement of Carcharodon in Lamnidae follows Vélez-Zuazo & Agnarsson (2011). Extinct taxa from Otodontidae, Cretoxyrhinidae, Anacoracidae, and Archaeolamnidae were not included in the molecular analyses that form the backbone of this phylogeny. We have therefore grafted them unresolved within Lamniformes but outside Lamnidae (following Shimada et al., 2017; Siverson & Lindgren, 2005; Rozefelds, 1993; respectively and Cappetta, 2012) relative to the relationships of Mitsukurinidae, Odontospididae, and Lamnidae hypothesized by Vélez-Zuazo & Agnarsson (2011) and Sorenson, Santini & Alfaro (2014) . Cretomanta is placed unresolved within Batoidae following Underwood & Cumbaa, 2010. Leonodus is hypothesized to belong to a clade representing a sister group to all other chondrichthyans (Antarctilamna-Wellerous; Ginter, 2004) . Batoidea silhouette adapted from art by Piotr Siedlecki from FreeIMG: https://www.freeimg.net/photo/1471979/manta-ray-sting-silhouette. Selachii silhouettes adapted from art by Faceone911 Glass on toppng: https://toppng.com/free-image/ shark-silhouette-PNG-free-PNG-Images_49350. Carcharhinidae and Heterodontus silhouettes adapted from art by Francois Libert and John Turnbull, respectively. Lamniformes silhouette from wikimedia commons. Chlamydoselachus silhouette adapted from art by Tambja on wikimedia commons. Leonodus based on Antarctilamna art by DiBgd from Wikimedia Commons. Silhouettes representing tooth Balbino & Antunes, 2007; Botella, 2006; Botella, Valenzuela-Ríos & Martínez-Pérez, 2009; Delpiani, Figueroa & Mabragaña, 2012; Gudger, 1937) , the terms "fusion," "concrescence," "gemination," and/or "twinning" are common in mammalian studies. The latter terms are associated with developmental processes allowing direct etiological comparisons, whereas the former are generally ambiguous (undefined developmentally) with respect to splitting or fusion of the tooth bud during morphogenesis. Mammals exhibit thecodont and largely diphyodont dentition (i.e., their teeth are completely enclosed in a deep socket of bone and most species only have two generations of teeth during their lifespan) (García & Zurriaguz, 2016) . The teeth of sharks are not housed in sockets, rather they are attached to the top of mineralized cartilaginous jaws via connective tissues (acrodont) and infinitely regenerated throughout life (polyphyodont) (Ripamonti, 2018) . Differences in tooth attachment, replacement frequency, and mode might affect how these double tooth pathologies manifest anatomically, or whether or not they occur at all. For example, incomplete breakdown of the dental lamina (a fold of oral epithelium that forms the tooth bud) is hypothesized to cause oral pathologies in mammals (Eversole, 1999; Štembírek et al., 2010) , but is an irrelevant etiology in sharks due to the presence of a continuously erupting dental lamina in the latter (Ripamonti, 2018) (although laminar injury in sharks would be expected to cause tooth pathology). Disease and genetic mutations have been proposed as alternative possible causes of tooth deformities in mammals. Although there have been no functional studies evaluating the impact of disease and genetic mutations on dental development in sharks, these etiologies have largely been discounted in part due to modern selachians being particularly resistant to infections (Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer, 2000 and references therein). Rather, tooth deformities in extant selachians, such as those resulting in tooth doubling, are generally hypothesized to be the result of trauma (Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer, 2000; Gudger, 1937) . Despite enormous variation in the form and function of vertebrate dentition, the structure and morphogenesis of teeth, the tooth regeneration process itself, and the genetic underpinnings of both are thought to be highly conserved throughout vertebrate evolution (Tucker & Fraser, 2014; Ripamonti, 2018) . This suggests that developmental characterizations of tooth pathologies are likely to be homologous across vertebrates, and therefore the terminology proposed for mammalian double tooth pathology subtypes is likely to be widely applicable beyond mammals. Second, there exists inconsistency in the application of mammalian terms for double tooth pathologies in the published literature, whereby the same terms are applied to different (hypothesized) developmental conditions and/or contrasting conditions are noted as key features for the same diagnosis. If terms and definitions lack standardization within mammals, this further complicates their extension outside the clade. For example, Kirillova (2009) describes tooth abnormalities in Mammuthus argued to represent damage to a single tooth bud during tooth morphogenesis as "fused" teeth. Based on the developmental condition, this etiology should equate to gemination. Hülsmann, Bahr & Grohmann (1997) describe human tooth abnormalities using the terms fusion and concrescence interchangeably when some examples should only equate to fusion and others should only equate to concrescence. Venkatesh et al. (2016) states that two distinct pulp cavities is a diagnostic feature of fusion, whereas a single pulp cavity is a diagnostic feature of gemination and cites Sekerci et al. (2011) for this definition. By contrast, Camargo, Aritaa & Watanabe (2016) state that fusion can be present with only one pulp cavity, even resulting in a single abnormally large tooth (More & Tailor, 2012) . Finally, More & Tailor (2012) suggest that gemination, twinning, concrescence, and other terms are types of "fusion", conflating all of these conditions with true fusion. Perhaps the most serious impediments to comparing double tooth abnormalities during the evolution of vertebrates rests in the nature of the fossil record itself including the commonality of tooth preservation outside the jaw and the inability to directly observe tooth morphogenesis. This is because the diagnostic difference between fusion and gemination is a developmental one and it is therefore difficult to discriminate among these pathologies in isolated teeth (More & Tailor, 2012; Patil et al., 2013) . Fusion is defined as the joining of two tooth buds in development, whereas gemination is defined as the interrupted splitting of a tooth bud resulting in a partially bifurcated tooth. Fusion can be complete, resulting in a single hypertrophied tooth, or incomplete resulting in separate crowns stemming from a single root, separate roots attached to a single crown, a partially divided root and single crown, or a partially divided crown and single root (Bhargava, Chaudhary & Aggarwal, 2012; More & Tailor, 2012; Patil et al., 2013; Camargo, Aritaa & Watanabe, 2016; Venkatesh et al., 2016) . Any incomplete form of fusion can be morphologically indistinguishable from gemination, particularly when attempting to compare key diagnostic features noted for mammals to double tooth pathologies in sharks. For example in a study on human dentition, Kelly (1978) noted that because gemination is the splitting of a single tooth bud, the halves are predicted to be mirror images; whereas fusion typically represents fusion of a supranumerary tooth (typically abnormal in shape) to a normal tooth. However, in clear instances of gemination in the tiger shark Galeocerdo cuvier and the blacktip shark Carcharhinus limbatus caused by the puncture of a tooth germ by a stingray spine (Gudger, 1937 ; rediagnosed here in Table 2 ), the two halves of the pathological teeth are morphologically distinct, reflecting the original asymmetry of the non-pathological tooth structure. Therefore, this criterion may only apply to teeth that are normally symmetrical and cannot be generally applied. In addition, Kelly (1978) notes that fusion in mammals is typically characterized by the presence of two distinct roots, whereas in cases of gemination, there is usually only a single root. Gudger (1937) Abnormally sized molar teeth Irregularly Sized Tooth Gudger (1937) Abnormal amount of teeth in tooth row Gudger (1937) Carcharhinus limbatus Tooth Division due to embedded sting-ray spine Gemination Gudger (1937) Galeocerdo cuvier Tooth Division due to embedded sting-ray spine Gemination Gudger (1937) Abnormally bicuspid tooth Double Tooth Pathology indet. Gudger (1937) Bent cusp Deformation/bending/twisting Gudger (1937) Cusp is reverse oriented mesially Irregular Tooth Row Balbino & Antunes (2007) Bent cusp Deformation/bending/twisting Balbino & Antunes (2007) Carcharodon Hooked cusp Deformation/bending/twisting Hubbell (1996) Tooth separated into two distinct teeth due to damaged gum tissue Double Tooth pathology indet. Hubbell (1996) Perforated tooth due to sting-ray spine Perforation Hubbell (1996) Two adjacent teeth merged together Double Tooth Pathology indet. Hubbell (1996) Entire tooth twisted Deformation/bending/twisting Hubbell (1996) Extreme deformation of tooth Deformation/bending/twisting Hubbell (1996) Gudger (1937) Abnormally small teeth Irregularly Sized Tooth Gudger (1937) Double Teeth/Twinning Double Tooth Pathology indet. Gudger (1937) (Continued ) However, these frequency data are based on human studies and cannot confidently be applied widely across vertebrates without additional research and Kelly (1978) himself notes a seemingly conflicting example of this pattern. Given the difference in tooth implantation and root morphology between mammals and sharks, the diagnostic utility of such a feature outside mammals is questionable. Several researchers have noted that the two pathologies can be differentiated by counting the number of teeth in the tooth row to determine if the total number of teeth is less or more than expected (e.g., Kelly, 1978; Patil et al., 2013) . Other than direct observation of tooth morphogenesis, this is the only criterion we are aware of that has been published as a definitive means to discriminate between gemination and fusion of teeth. Unfortunately, this criterion cannot be evaluated in isolated teeth, which are common in the fossil record, especially for sharks. Other diagnostic features may prove useful. Botella (2006) , Botella, Valenzuela-Ríos & Martínez-Pérez (2009) identified an instance of fusion in isolated shark teeth based on the conjoining of two different-sized teeth in Leonodus carlsi (62% difference), indicating the two teeth were in different stages of morphogenesis at the time of fusion and thus revealing a developmental signal. We suggest that differences in the developmental stages (useful for sharks or mammals) or differences in crown morphology due to the fusion of different, yet neighboring, tooth types in heterodont taxa or aberrant supranumerary teeth (useful for mammals) are additional criteria that may prove to be reliable for differentiating between fusion from gemination in isolated teeth. Research on the efficacy for these traits to serve as criteria for etiological-based diagnosis of double tooth morphologies in extant sharks and other non-mammalian vertebrates is needed to make confident diagnoses. The presence of internal bifurcation (main ascending canals in O. megalodon, and pulp cavity in C. leucas), only minor root abnormalities and a lack of clear root doubling, symmetrical mirroring of tooth halves (absence of any aberrant crown morphology, or developmental differences) suggests that gemination is more likely to have caused these double tooth pathologies; however, none of these features can be used to definitely rule out fusion for these specimens. To our knowledge, these are the first double tooth pathologies documented for either O. megalodon or C. leucas specifically; however, multiple other tooth pathologies are described and appear to be widespread in these taxa. Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer (2000) document a pathologic C. leucas tooth in which the cusp of the tooth is bent forward towards the jaw symphysis. Pathologies in O. megalodon are abundant and include split cutting edges (Itano, 2013) among other abnormalities. These include teeth bearing subtle, wavy cuts along the midpoint of the crown on the distal cutting edge (Boessenecker, 2016) and trauma to tooth germs that caused the teeth to buckle lingually and distally or caused distortion of the distal cutting edge (Purdy et al., 2001) . In extant taxa such tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier) and blacktip sharks (Carcharhinus limbatus), which have diets that consist of Batoidea (rays and skates), tooth abnormalities have been linked to feeding trauma, such as puncture by stingray spine (Gudger, 1937) . Injury due to the perforation of teleost or selachian fish spines during feeding has also been suggested to initiate tooth deformities (Becker, Chamberlain & Stoffer, 2000) . Therefore, the presence of gemination and/or fusion provides further support for feeding trauma in C. leucas and O. megalodon. C. leucas is known to be a generalist predator, having a diet composed of a wide diversity of prey including taxa known to cause feeding-related traumas that have previously been hypothesized to be linked to observed tooth deformations in other sharks. These include rays, sawfish, other sharks, bony fish, and sea urchins, all of which could potentially inflict damage to a developing tooth bud (Estupiñán-Montaño et al., 2017) . The diet of O. megalodon has been inferred to largely consist of cetaceans and sirenians based on general tooth morphology, estimations of bite force, predation and/or scavenging marks on prey, mechanical tooth damage, and evolutionary models (Godfrey et al., 2018; Diedrich, 2013; Medina-Gavilán et al., 2015 and references therein) . It has also been suggested that O. megalodon fed on turtles and fish (Aguilera & de Aguilera, 2004). Identification of tooth abnormalities in O. megalodon resulting from damage or perforation of a developing tooth bud may provide support for a diet consisting of a wider diversity of marine animals. Although purely speculative, these could include spiny fish, billfish, walrus, and rays among other taxa. Makaira (marlin) is a genus of Istiophoridae (billfish) characterized by a distinctive spear-like rostrum used for hunting (Domenici et al., 2014) . Makaira make up the diet of many modern sharks (Kitchell et al., 2002; Lowe et al., 1996) and interactions between these animals are known to occasionally become violent (Wisner, 1958) , and can result in the wounding or death of the shark (Block, Booth & Carey, 1992) . Maikaira and large spiny fish such as Mola (sunfish) are known to have inhabited the same environments as O. megalodon (e.g., the lower Middle Miocene Calvert Formation of Virginia (Weems, 1985; Carnevale & Godfrey, 2018; Perez et al., 2018) ) and could have been food sources. In addition, the late Miocene Gatun Formation of Panama preserves a paleonursery habitat for O. megalodon and also a high diversity of selachians including C. leucas (Pimiento et al., 2013) . Batoids (rays and skates) are also abundant in this formation and species such as Aetobatus (eagle rays), which are known to inhabit open waters and coral reefs, possess venomous tail barbs that are used defensively (Caceres et al., 2020; Schluessel, Bennett & Collin, 2010) . The late Neogene Purisima Formation of Northern California preserves a nearshore and estuarine environment and is represented by a highly diverse aquatic and terrestrial fauna including sharks such O. megalodon, rays, bony fish, toothed and baleen whales, sirenians, and seals (Boessenecker, Perry & Schmitt, 2014) . Among the pinnipeds from the Purisima Formation, Valenictus, an extinct genus of Odobenidae (walrus), had tusks that likely grew to be nearly half a meter long (Boessenecker, 2017; Deméré, 1994) . The Greenland shark Somniosus microcephalus likely feeds upon modern walruses (MacNeil et al., 2012) , and a similar predator-prey relationship may have existed between O. megalodon and Valenictus. The tusks of walruses are more blunt than fish spines and ray barbs. Nonetheless, they are capable of inflicting serious injury upon the polar bears that hunt them (Ovsyanikov, 1995) . If Valenictus constituted a portion of the diet of sharks in the Purisima fauna, their tusks may have posed a puncture risk to the developing tooth buds of O. megalodon. Finally, interactions between conspecifics or consexuals are well documented in elasmobranchs (Martin, 2007; Brunnschweiler & Pratt, 2008) , as is cannibalism (Gudger, 1932; Vorenberg, 1962; Budker, 1971; Snelson, Mulligan & Williams, 1984; Wetherbee, Gruber & Cortés, 1990; Vögler, Milessi & Quiñones, 2003) . Interactions such as these may occasionally involve mouth to mouth biting between individuals, potentially resulting in damage to the tooth bud and subsequent deformation of teeth, and could also be a source of oral trauma. Although we consider these abnormalities in C. leucas and O. megalodon to most likely be the result of feeding trauma, it is clear that in some cases of abnormal tooth doubling in selachians, such as the enigmatic shark Cretomanta, trauma due to feeding is unlikely, as this shark was presumably planktivorous (Underwood & Cumbaa, 2010). We describe the internal and external morphology of pathological and non-pathological teeth of the lamniform Otodus megalodon and carcharhiniform Carcharhinus leucas, including the first three-dimensional reconstructions of the internal microstructure of the teeth of these taxa. Our pathological teeth exhibit a single bifid crown with symmetrical halves and abnormal internal microstructure including a bifurcating pulp cavity in C. leucas and more than twice as many main ascending canals in O. megalodon. We rediagnose the double tooth pathologies in Galeocerdo cuvier and Carcharhinus limbatus as gemination based on puncture of a tooth germ by a stingray spine, which yields a developmental signal; however, diagnosing the isolated C. leucas and O. megalodon teeth in our sample is more complicated. A bifurcating pulp cavity and a bifurcating main ascending canal in C. leucas and O. megalodon respectively, and the lack of major root abnormalities in both taxa, suggests gemination is a more likely diagnosis. This is supported by the symmetry of these teeth, which rules out fusion of tooth buds in one tooth file in different developmental stages, a criterion that has been used to diagnose the only instance of documented fusion in chondrichthyans (Botella, 2006; Botella, Valenzuela-Ríos & Martínez-Pérez, 2009 ). However, symmetry cannot be used to rule out fusion of a neighboring tooth in a single row in polyphyodont taxa. Therefore in the absence of total tooth count we opt for a more conservative diagnosis of gemination and/or fusion for these teeth. Double tooth pathologies in sharks are largely hypothesized to stem from trauma to developing tooth buds. C. leucas is known to feed on a variety of prey documented to cause feeding-related traumas such as rays, sawfish, other sharks, bony fish, and sea urchins. The presence of double tooth pathologies in O. megalodon raises the question of whether the diet of this species (considered to consist mainly of marine mammals and possibly turtles and fish) was wider than currently appreciated. Additional study would be needed to link specific prey items to frequency of dental pathologies in sharks before confident dietary inferences could be made. Terminology, differential diagnoses, and definitions of double tooth pathologies are often inconsistently applied to extant and fossil specimens including mammalian and non-mammalian species making comparisons difficult. We argue for a consistent set of definitions and diagnostic criteria that may permit a more detailed understanding of the evolutionary history and prevalence of various dental pathologies in Chondrichthyes and comparatively across vertebrates. Such an effort may lead to new associations with behavioral, dietary, or paleopathological factors such as disease and trauma that can increase our understanding of the paleobiology of ancient animals. 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Jambura and editor Dr. K. De Baets for helpful reviews that greatly improved this manuscript. The authors declare that they have no competing interests. Harrison S. Miller performed the experiments, analyzed the data, prepared figures and/or tables, authored or reviewed drafts of the paper, and approved the final draft. Haviv M. Avrahami conceived and designed the experiments, analyzed the data, prepared figures and/or tables, authored or reviewed drafts of the paper, and approved the final draft. Lindsay E. Zanno conceived and designed the experiments, analyzed the data, authored or reviewed drafts of the paper, and approved the final draft. The following information was supplied regarding data availability:Data is available at MorphoSource, all specimens are housed at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, accession numbers: NCSM 33639, NCSM 9545, NCSM 34038, NCSM 33640, NCSM 33641. 1) NCSM 9545 (Otodus megalodon): https://www.morphosource.org/concern/media/ 000368558?locale=en.2) NCSM 33639 (Otodus megalodon): https://www.morphosource.org/concern/media/ 000368529?locale=en.3) NCSM 29144, 33640, 33641 (Carcharhinus leucas): https://www.morphosource.org/ concern/media/000368459?locale=en. Supplemental information for this article can be found online at http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/ peerj.12775#supplemental-information.