Claim: "Climate change" is enticing monkeys to have more promiscuous inter-species sex

From FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY and the “now if only climate change could cure the ‘I have a headache’ department comes this study that in the end, attributes change in behavior to “climate change…it is nature’s way to respond”. Oddly, there seems to be some red-team, blue-team, two-timing going on.

First genetic evidence of ongoing mating between 2 distinct species of guenon monkeys

Monkeys see, monkeys do cross species boundary

“Jimmy” is a hybrid male monkey in Dr. Kate Detwiler’s study group in Gombe National Park.
CREDIT Maneno Mpongo / Gombe Hybrid Monkey Project

A researcher from Florida Atlantic University is the first to document that two genetically distinct species of guenon monkeys inhabiting Gombe National Park in Tanzania, Africa, have been successfully mating and producing hybrid offspring for hundreds maybe even thousands of years. Her secret weapon? Poop.

Prior studies and conventional wisdom have suggested that the physical characteristics of guenon monkeys with a variety of dazzling colors and very distinct facial features like bushy beards and huge nose spots are a function of keeping them from interbreeding. The idea is that their mate choices and the signals they use to select a mate are species specific and that they share common traits linked to their species.

So if their faces don’t match, they shouldn’t be mating, right? Wrong, according to evidence from a novel study published in the International Journal of Primatology.

For the study, Kate Detwiler, Ph.D., author and an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology in FAU’s Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters, who first studied these monkeys in Gombe National Park in 1994, examined the extent and pattern of genetic transfer or gene flow from “red-tailed” monkeys (Cercopithecus ascanius) to “blue” monkeys (Cercopithecus mitis) due to hybridization.

These two species are the only forest guenons that colonized the narrow riverine forests along Lake Tanganyika that characterize Gombe National Park. They co-exist in the same forests as Jane Goodall’s chimpanzees and baboons. Detwiler identifies hybrid monkeys by their combined markings from both parental species. She estimates that about 15 percent of this population is made up of hybrids, which is very unusual.

Using mitochondrial DNA, extracted non-invasively from the feces of 144 red-tailed monkeys, blue monkeys, and hybrids, Detwiler is the first to show the movement of genetic material from one guenon species to another in an active hybrid zone. After examining the fecal samples, she found that all of the monkeys – hybrids, red-tails and blues have red-tailed mitochondrial DNA – all traced back to female red-tailed monkeys.

For this lineage of monkeys, it is the first time that science shows that not only is the DNA there, but so are the hybrids. Detwiler used mitochondrial DNA because it is more abundant than nuclear DNA in fecal samples, and only comes from the mother – indicating the maternal species in the hybridizing pair.

“There’s a lot of promiscuity taking place in Gombe National Park. Red-tails are mating with blues, blues are mating with red-tails, blues are mating with blues, red-tails are mating with red-tails, and hybrids are mating with everyone,” said Detwiler. “But we’re just not seeing any negative consequences from these two very different species repeatedly mating and producing offspring on an ongoing basis. If the differences in their facial features are so important and signal that they shouldn’t be mating, then why is this happening and why do I keep finding hybrid infants?”

A key finding from the study shows that the blue monkeys in Gombe National Park emerged out of the hybrid population, tracing their origins back to hybridization events between resident red-tails and blues most likely from outside the park. For her control groups, Detwiler collected and examined feces from blue monkeys from a park to the north and a park to the south where hybrids do not exist. These monkeys only had blue monkey mitochondrial DNA.

Detwiler speculates that red-tailed monkeys got to Gombe National Park first and thrived in the environment. Male blue monkeys outside the park had to find new homes after they were kicked out of their groups, which happens when they reach sexual maturity. Sex-driven, they ventured out into the landscape to find appropriate mates – female blue monkeys. Instead, they found the red-tailed females. Apparently, some female red-tailed monkeys were attracted to novel males with different faces and welcomed the sexual advances from these male blue monkeys.

“I keep coming back to the idea that if they are only supposed to mate with their own kind, then why did these red-tailed monkeys mate with the blue monkeys, especially if they had males of their own species around,” said Detwiler. “The female red-tailed monkeys present as willing partners and they are not coerced or forced into copulation with blue monkeys.”

Today, Gombe is an isolated forest habitat. Because they are very social and have had to share close quarters for decades or even centuries, Detwiler believes that they have socially learned that if you grow up in a hybrid group it is okay to mate with everyone.

“The Gombe hybrid population is extremely valuable because it can be used as a model system to better understand what hybridization looks like and how genetic material moves between species,” said Detwiler. “We have this amazing laboratory in nature to help us answer many questions about hybridization and how species boundaries are maintained. This research is very timely because hybridization often occurs in response to environmental changes, as we are seeing with climate change and modified landscapes — it is nature’s way to respond.”

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Steve Ta
April 24, 2018 3:37 am

“I keep coming back to the idea that if they are only supposed to mate with their own kind”
Perhaps this somewhat racist interpretation is simply wrong, and nobody has told these monkeys what they are ‘supposed’ to do ?

Tom Gelsthorpe
April 24, 2018 3:50 am

Climate’s making monkeys grow horns. Imagine that!

Tom in Florida
April 24, 2018 4:40 am

I heard that a red monkey had been picked up so many times by a blue monkey that she started to grow handles.

Tom Schaefer
April 24, 2018 5:44 am

I’d like to point out a difference in humans. We know the consequences of mate selection, at least those of us who can think clearly. Are you advancing and declining? It is to be common and acceptable to speak of good breeding or stock. As society has devolved, so has the ability of many to make good decisions, and the Left has given cultural cover for these decisions and encouraged them.
When longevity escape velocity arrives, I’ve got a plan for the mothers of the ~20 children I’m going to have every century.

April 24, 2018 6:43 am

The best study I’ve seen in biology in decades … and Detwiler l had to spoil it with a non sequitur blob of climate change feces.
Climate change 101 has one demonstrable fact in its playbook: the tropics remain largely unchanged, even during a glacial maximum. When it does warm, temperatures increase going toward the poles where most of global warming occurs (Arctic Amplification). I have experienced the lack of any change in equatorial Africa east and west over more than 50yrs having worked and lived there. In the1960s, Lagos, Nigeria varied over the year by only 3°C, 25-28°C, this during the galloping ice age cometh scare by some of the same devious actors in today’s heat death guerrilla campaign. I returned to the same boring weather in 1999 and I see that today, it’s the same even though the Lysenkoist have switched to hot air mode.

michael hart
April 24, 2018 7:43 am

Umm…have they thought through the bit about climate change, I wonder? So there is going to be more strange and bizarre shagging going on due to carbon dioxide? Are these people working for or against fossil fuels?

Dave Anderson
April 24, 2018 9:02 am

More sunshine = more monkey shines.

paqyfelyc
April 24, 2018 10:47 am

So, Kate Detwiler objects “red” mating with “blue”. I guess she also objects “white” mating with “black”, or… ?

April 24, 2018 11:24 am

Perhaps even more scandalous and biologically implausible would be global warming causing shagging between warmistas and denaiyars. A new period setting for Romeo and Juliet?

Neo
April 24, 2018 11:47 am

By any chance are these monkeys involved in fracking ?
Researchers at the Yale School of Public Health have discovered that the rates of two major sexually transmitted infections (STIs), gonorrhea and chlamydia, are 21% and 19% higher, respectively, in Ohio counties with high shale gas activity (“fracking”), compared to counties without any fracking. Rates of a third STI, syphilis, were not elevated.

s-t
April 24, 2018 12:27 pm
Urederra
April 24, 2018 1:39 pm

Maybe some (or all) of those monkeys are daltonic.

s-t
April 24, 2018 7:55 pm

Man-giraffe breeding is NOT an experiment that should be repeated:
https://youtu.be/EHIKEHCXfjU

dudleyhorscroft
April 26, 2018 5:22 am

Based on the differentiation between red-tailed and blue monkeys in this paper, it is clear that in Homo Sapiens, Negroes, Caucasians, Australoids, and Chinese (what is the scientifically correct term for the ‘slant eyed’ human species?) are four different species. As such, there should be no interbreeding and any off-spring of an interspecies mating should be sterile. Result???
One wonders about Darwin’s finches. Allegedly in the various islands they have become separate species and there is no interbreeding. But have scientists tried taking a male of species A and isolating it with several females of species Z? If so, what happened? Did A reject all offers from the Zs? Similarly with that genus of gulls which allegedly encircle the globe, each group able to interbreed with the group next to it, except where the two ends of the chain come together, where they are determined as separate species due to lack of interbreeding.