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187562

THE TEETH OF THE LOWER JAW IN DONKEY, BUFFALO AND CAMEL

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Last updated: 28 Dec 2024

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Abstract

In donkey the incisors have occlusal surfaces which are represented by sharp edges in buffalo and blunt edges in camel. In all examined species the roots of the incisors are convergent, but the degree of the convergence in camel is more than that in donkey and buffalo. The incisors decrease in length from number 1 to 3 in donkey but increase in camel. In buffalo the first three incisors are nearly equal in length. In buffalo and camel the cheek teeth increase in length and breadth from front to back. In donkey P4 is the longest cheek tooth. In gneral, the cheek teeth terminate p < /strong>roximal to the mandibular canal either directly in camel or by a variable distances in donkey. However, in buffalo the cheek teeth cover the lateral asp < /strong>ect of th canal either partially or completely.

DOI

10.21608/avmj.1990.187562

Authors

First Name

K.E.H.

Last Name

ABDALLA

MiddleName

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Orcid

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Volume

23.2

Article Issue

46

Related Issue

27013

Issue Date

1990-07-01

Receive Date

1990-01-11

Publish Date

1990-07-01

Page Start

1

Page End

11

Print ISSN

1012-5973

Online ISSN

2314-5226

Link

https://avmj.journals.ekb.eg/article_187562.html

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https://avmj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=187562

Order

1

Type

Research article

Type Code

1,840

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Assiut Veterinary Medical Journal

Publication Link

https://avmj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

THE TEETH OF THE LOWER JAW IN DONKEY, BUFFALO AND CAMEL

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Article

Created At

23 Jan 2023