hedelmäkset
Hedelmäkset is a Finnish-language term that literally translates to “fruit teeth.” In comparative zoology it is used informally to describe a particular dental morphology that evolved in several unrelated animal lineages for the efficient consumption of ripe fruit. The defining features of hedälmäkset include widely spaced, low-cusped molars that are flattened into broad grinding surfaces, and incisors that are thick and robust. Unlike the sharp, blade‑like teeth of carnivores or the high‑cusp teeth of herbivores that digest fibrous vegetation, hedälmäkset are optimised to break the soft pulp and tough skins of fleshy fruits while preserving the stones or seeds for later dispersal.
The term is most commonly applied to mammals such as strepsirrhine primates (e.g., lemurs), certain murid rodents
Because fruit discs are often high in sugars and low in fiber, the evolution of hedälmäkset is