posted on 2022-04-20, 14:33authored byReiko Matsuda Goodwin, Anh Galat-Luong, Gérard Galat
We report the presence
of at least one putative hybrid monkey, white-naped mangabey (Cercocebus
lunulatus) × olive baboon (Papio anubis), at Comoé National Park (CNP) in
north-eastern Côte d'Ivoire. C. lunulatus and P. anubis belong to two separate
clades within the African Papionini (Papionina), which is known to display a
complex pattern of evolutionary history involving ancient and recent hybridization. CNP is a bushy savanna-dominated protected area home to 12–13 primate
species. Only about 9–11 % of the land cover is forest. C. lunulatus is an
Endangered species while P. anubis is a Least Concern species. While conducting
a reconnaissance survey on June 23, 2019, the first author observed and
photographed a mangabey-baboon hybrid-like juvenile male monkey (2019A). At the
same area where 2019A was photographed, a camera trap (CT) captured a video of
a hybrid-like juvenile male monkey (2021B) on January 14, 2021, and another
nearby CT captured a video of a slightly older hybrid-like juvenile male monkey
(2021C) on May 23, 2021. Because there are reported cases of hybrids in
captivity that occurred between the members of the two separate clades of the
Papionini, the discovery of such intergeneric hybrids in the wild would not be
surprising. We examine the idiosyncratic features of the putative hybrids and
discuss the implication for conservation and future directions for
research, considering the potential interacting factors that
may lead to intergeneric hybridization. Specifically, to assess genetic
population structure within C. lunulatus and P. anubis and to clarify the
degree of gene flow among the two species, collecting biological matter from
the putative hybrids, mangabeys, and baboons is necessary. Also, to elucidate
the circumstances that might have stimulated hybridization, examining changes
that might have occurred in the two species’ ecology and demography is
essential.