Jennifer Pastorini
Hybridisation Between Two Eulemur Species
in the Wild
Eulemur is the most diverse and widespread genus of
the family Lemuridae, with five currently recognised species. The
mongoose lemur, E. mongoz, occurs on two Comorian
islands and in the northwest of Madagascar. The brown lemur, E. fulvus,
has the largest distribution of the five Eulemur species
and contains at least six subspecies. Brown lemurs are found in
all forested areas of Madagascar except the south and on the Comorian
island Mayotte. Mongoose lemurs and brown lemurs are the only two
lemur species found outside Madagascar, and were probably introduced
to the Comores by humans. E. fulvus is found in sympatry
with all four other Eulemur species, including E. mongoz.
D. Curtis and A. Zaramody carried out a 10-month study on mongoose
lemurs at Anjamena in northwestern Madagascar (Curtis 1997). During
the field work they observed animals, whose pelage coloration were
intermediate between E. mongoz and E.f. rufus.
This phenotypic variation led them to suspect interspecific hybridisation
at this site. This putative hybrid zone, has been substantiated
by a brown lemur which has the mtDNA genotype of a mongoose lemur
(Zaramody & Pastorini 2001).
We conducted a genetic survey of the hybrid zone between E.
mongoz and E. fulvus in the wild using mitochondrial
DNA and nuclear DNA markers. A fragment of mitochondrial DNA was
sequenced and the data examined in an attempt to clarify phylogenetic
relationships among mongoose lemurs and brown lemurs from Anjamena.
Close attention was given to the relative positions within the genus
Eulemur of each individual taken from this site. Microsatellites
were also be analysed to investigate the level of nuclear gene flow
between those two species in the wild.
This project was carried out in collaboration with Alphonse Zaramody
(Université de Mahajanga, Madagascar) and Deborah J. Curtis
(Oxford Brookes University, UK). |
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Literature
Curtis DJ (1997) The Mongoose Lemur (Eulemur mongoz):
A Study in Behaviour and Ecology. Dissertation, Universität
Zürich.
Zaramody A & Pastorini J (2001) Indications for hybridisation
between red-fronted lemurs (Eulemur fulvus rufus) and mongoose
lemurs (E. mongoz) in northwest Madagascar. Lemur News
6:28-31. Download
pdf (108 KB)
Pastorini J, Zaramody A, Curtis DJ, Nievergelt CM & Mundy
NI (2009) Genetic analysis of hybridization and introgression between
wild mongoose and brown lemurs. BMC Evolutionary Biology 9:32. Abstract/Download
Collaborators
Dr. Deborah
J. Curtis
Department of Anthropology & Geography, Oxford Brookes University,
Oxford, UK.
Alphonse
Zaramody
Département des Sciences de la Terre, Université de
Mahajanga, Mahajanga, Madagascar. |

E. mongoz female (left) and E.f. rufus female.
The picture above shows a hybrid female.
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