The deciduous, or milk, dentition, of Mustela frenata, as known from immature specimens of Mustela frenata noveboracensis and Mustela frenata frenata available for this study, is comprised of canines, one on each side above and below, and 3 cheek teeth on each side above and below. See figures [2-9]. The upper cheek teeth from anterior to posterior are: a minute peglike tooth in general similar to the first premolar of the permanent dentition; a shearing tooth in general similar to P4 of the permanent dentition; and an anteroposteriorly compressed tooth in general similar to M1 of the permanent dentition. In the lower jaw, behind the canine, there is first a minute peglike tooth, second a two-rooted tooth similar in general outline to a permanent third premolar, and finally a shearing tooth corresponding in function to m1 of the permanent dentition.
No postnatal specimens which show deciduous incisors have been examined.
Selected, outstanding differences between the permanent teeth and the deciduous teeth are as follows: In the deciduous teeth the canine above has on the posterior face a well-defined ridge extending from the tip to the cingulum. This ridge is absent or at most faintly indicated in the permanent tooth. The lower deciduous canine, in cross section is seen to have a marked indentation on the anteromedial border in the region of the cingulum; this indentation is lacking in the permanent tooth. The anterior one of the deciduous cheek teeth, both above and below, is single rooted and its crown-surface is only about one-fifteenth as much as that of the anterior premolar of the permanent dentition. The second deciduous cheek tooth below has two roots, usually fused, and differs from p4 of the permanent dentition in having the tip of the principal cusp more recurved, in having the anterior basal cusp better developed and the posterior heel less well developed.
The second deciduous cheek tooth above corresponds in function and general plan of construction to P4 of the permanent dentition but differs from that tooth in the more pronounced protostyle, longer tritocone, more posteriorly located deuterocone and as noted by Leche (1915:322) separation of the protocone and tritocone by a notch. The third upper deciduous tooth has a single cusp internally and two cusps laterally. Thus it reverses the relation of parts seen in M1 where the internal moiety is larger than the lateral or buccal moiety. The third deciduous tooth below differs from m1 in very much shorter talonid and separation of the paraconid from the protoconid by a deeper notch.
All the features in which the last two deciduous teeth, both above and below, are described as differing from their functional counterparts in the permanent dentition, are features found in the permanent teeth of primitive fossil mustelids and certain fossil and Recent viverrids. Even so, taking into account Leche's (1915) work, which shows that the milk teeth of some carnivores have structures lacking in the corresponding permanent teeth of the same individual animal and also in the teeth of genera that seem to be ancestral, a person suspects that some of the structural features mentioned above are not inheritances of ancestral conditions but rather specializations of the milk dentition.
Figs. 2-9. Views of permanent and deciduous teeth of Mustela frenata nigriauris. Incisors not shown. In each instance teeth are of the left side.
Permanent dentition × 3. No. 32421, Mus. Vert. Zoöl., ♂, adult; Berkeley, Alameda County, California; obtained October 4, 1921, by D. D. McLean.