info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Hybridization in howler monkeys: current understanding and future directions
Fecha
2015Registro en:
Cortés Ortiz, Liliana; Agostini, Ilaria; Aguiar, Lucas M.; Kelaita, Mary; Silva, Felipe Ennes; et al.; Hybridization in howler monkeys: current understanding and future directions; Springer; 2015; 107-131
978-1-4939-1956-7
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Cortés Ortiz, Liliana
Agostini, Ilaria
Aguiar, Lucas M.
Kelaita, Mary
Silva, Felipe Ennes
Bicca Marques, Julio Cesar
Resumen
Hybridization, or the process by which individuals from genetically distinct populations (e.g., species, subspecies) mate and produce at least some offspring, is of great relevance to understanding the basis of reproductive isolation and, in some cases, the origins of biodiversity. Natural hybridization among primates has been well known for a few taxa, but just recently the genetic confirmation of hybridization on a number of taxa has produced new awareness of the prevalence of this phenomenon in primates and its importance in primate evolution. The study of hybridization of Alouatta pigra and A. palliata in Mexico was among the first to genetically confirm the current occurrence of hybridization in primates. Following this study, other reports of hybridization across primate taxa have shown that this phenomenon is more widespread in the Primate order than was initially expected. Within the genus Alouatta, there have been reports on the presence of hybridization between A. caraya and A. guariba in a number of contact zones in Brazil and Argentina, and various studies are currently ongoing in some of these sites to understand the extent and patterns of hybridization between these species. In this chapter, we evaluate the extent of hybridization in the genus Alouatta, revise the current knowledge of the genetic and morphological aspects of these hybrid systems, and identify future directions in the study of hybridization within this genus, to understand the possible implications of the hybridization process in the evolutionary history of howler monkeys.