
One group of monkeys is going through an unexpected transition â their coats are changing rapidly from charcoal black to creamy yellow.
Hair colour in primates is controlled by melanin. It comes in two forms: eumelanin, which is responsible for brown and black hues, and pheomelanin, which produces yellow and red tones.
The mix of melanin in an animalâs skin and hair is determined by DNA, so the natural hair colour of individuals belonging to the same species should remain relatively fixed.
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Thatâs why Ismael GalvĂĄn at the DoĂąana Biological Station in Spain and his colleagues were so surprised when they spotted several mantled howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) in Costa Rica that have patches of blonde hair on their limbs and tails. Normally, these monkeys have a fully black coat.
Pigment change
To find out what happened, the team collected samples of black hair and blonde hair from a mantled howler monkey. GalvĂĄn found its blonde hair contains pheomelanin instead of the eumelanin that the monkeys usually produce.
âI donât know any precedent example of a conspicuous colour change in a given population of a wild animal,â says GalvĂĄn.
Back in 2001, none of the mantled howler monkeys in Costa Rica had blonde hair. In 2013, a dozen mantled howler monkeys were spotted with yellow hair on the tip of their limbs and tails. The most recent observation suggests that there are at least 21 individuals with the yellow colouration. Moreover, the patches are increasing in size â and two of the monkeys have a fully yellow coat with no black hair.
Tainted diet?
âThe real number of animals with anomalous coloration is probably higher than 21,â GalvĂĄn says. âBut in any case, the relative proportion of the yellow ones in the entire population is low.â
Itâs unclear what is driving the shift in melanin and thus the change in monkeyâs coat colour â it is too fast to be explained by natural selection, and in any case yellow fur should make the monkeys more conspicuous to predators and so less likely to survive.
But because pheomelanins contain sulphur and eumelanin doesnât, the team suspects these monkeys may have ingested sulphur from the environment.
Most monkeys with blonde hair are found in forests surrounding plantations, where farmers use sulphurous pesticides extensively. Therefore, GalvĂĄn suggests that the leaves and fruits from the farms may be the source.
âThis is the mechanism that we hypothesise, but it will have to be confirmed by future studies,â GalvĂĄn says.
Journal reference: Mammalian Biology