Wolves are carnivores. Monkeys are made of meat. Monkeys, therefore, would seem to be a pretty good choice of prey for hungry wolves, right?
Not so fast.
It turns out that some monkeys make better hunting partners than prey. That’s the case on the Ethiopian highlands, where two unusual species have developed an equally unusual co-dependency. The relationship benefits both canine and primate, although at least one or two nearby rodent species might regret it.
Here’s how it all works. According to research published recently in the , critically endangered () and a rare monkey species called the () work extremely well together by just letting each other be. The gelada (which look like and are closely related to baboons) are herbivorous grazers; they walk around mountainous fields eating tasty grasses. Ethiopian wolves, meanwhile, carefully walk amongst the gelada herd. The gelada barely blinked an eye at the nearby predators because they knew the wolves aren’t interested in them.
“I believe these interactions between geladas and wolves were once more widespread and common, as the historical range of these species was larger,” Venkataraman says. “In that sense it's a vanishing behavior. I think it is too uncommon now to find populations of wolves and geladas that overlap, and are habituated to the presence of people and researchers.” Even the Gaussa region is heavily studied; a team of researchers has been studying gelada there for .
Understanding this behavior could help to conserve both species. Ethiopian wolves are , with a highly fragmented population that remains heavily persecuted by livestock owners who fear for their flocks. Gelada, meanwhile, are currently listed as of “least concern” on the IUCN Red List, but Venkataraman says they may actually be closer to endangered. They, too, have highly fragmented and isolated populations, he says, thanks to agricultural development in the Afroalpine habitat.
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