Kate Detwiler, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Anthropology

  • Boca Raton FL UNITED STATES
  • SO173
  • Department of Anthropology

Kate Detwiler's research focus is on the evolution and conservation of African forest monkeys.

Contact

Social

Biography

Kate Detwiler is an associate professor of anthropology at Florida Atlantic University, where her research focus is on the evolution and conservation of African forest monkeys. Her primatology lab is based in the Biological Sciences Department and represents an interdisciplinary collaboration between the Anthropology Department in the College of Arts and Letters and the Biological Sciences Department and Environmental Sciences Program in the College of Science. Her lab specializes in studying rare and endangered primate species in the Congo Basin rainforests in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, hybrid monkeys in Gombe National Park in Western Tanzania, and a local population of introduced African monkeys living in the mangrove swamps near Fort Lauderdale airport. Detwiler completed her bachelor’s degree in biology at Bates College (1995), where she received the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship upon graduation, later earning her doctoral degree in anthropology at New York University (2010). Prior to arriving at FAU, she was a postdoctoral science fellow at Columbia University in the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology. She teaches biological anthropology courses to undergraduate and graduate students at FAU, and her work on the discovery of the new monkey species Cercopithecus lomamiensis received wide scale media coverage, including National Geographic, Science Magazine and Nature.

Areas of Expertise

Anthropology
Conservation of African Monkeys
Molecular Primatology
Primate Hybridization
Primate Speciation
Primate Behavioral Ecology
African Monkeys

Education

New York University

Ph.D.

2010

New York University

M.A.

2002

Bates College

B.S.

1995

Selected Media Appearances

Decades-Long Mystery Of Monkeys Living At Fort Lauderdale Airport Now Solved

Forbes  online

2021-05-21

“Data from our study lays the groundwork for future studies to address new questions about the status of the population and how the monkeys have adapted to the urban and industrial environment of South Florida,” said Kate Detwiler, Ph.D., senior author and an associate professor in FAU’s department of anthropology.

View More

Origin of Florida's wild colony of Vervet monkeys is traced to an escape from a local chimpanzee farm in 1948

Daily Mail  online

2021-05-19

No one was quite sure where the Vervet monkeys came from. Until now.

Researchers at Florida Atlantic University say they have traced the colony's origins to the Dania Chimpanzee Farm.

View More

Famed anthropologist Dr. Jane Goodall speaks at Florida Atlantic University

WPTV  online

2020-03-20

BOCA RATON, Fla. — Iconic scientist and conservationist Dr. Jane Goodall was in Boca Raton on Tuesday to speak on the importance of protecting species and the environment, while encouraging everyone to do their part.

View More

Show All +

Selected Articles

Mitochondrial DNA Analyses of Cercopithecus Monkeys Reveal a Localized Hybrid Origin for C. mitis doggetti in Gombe National Park, Tanzania

International Journal of Primatology

Kate M. Detwiler

2018

In recent years, hybridization has gained recognition as an important creative force in primate evolution. The exchange of genetic material between species provides genetic novelty on which evolutionary forces, such as natural selection, may act. The guenon radiation (Tribe Cercopithecini) is known for numerous cases of contemporary hybridization—in the wild and captivity—between broadly sympatric species. Interspecific hybrids are viable, and field studies report fertile hybrid females. Despite being a well-documented phenomenon, hybridization among wild guenons is relatively rare and sporadic. An exception is the long-standing hybridization between Cercopithecus mitis doggetti and C. ascanius schmidti in Gombe National Park, Tanzania, where hybrids comprise a significant proportion of the breeding population. Here, I used mitochondrial loci to conduct a genetic survey of the Gombe population and examine the extent and direction of gene flow between the parental species. I extracted DNA from noninvasive fecal samples of unhabituated individuals (N = 144 individuals) with known phenotype and provenance. All parental phenotypes and hybrid individuals were identified in the field based on species specific pelage colors and patterns. Phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequences from inside and outside the hybrid zone show Gombe’s population of C. mitis doggetti is distinct from neighboring conspecific populations in having mitochondrial DNA of C. ascanius schmidti. All animals surveyed from the hybrid zone have one of two haplotypes of C. ascanius schmidti unique to Gombe. These results provide evidence of asymmetric introgressive hybridization between sympatric guenon species, a likely consequence of colonization patterns of the parental species during range expansions. The spatial distribution patterns of the two haplotypes imply that Gombe is a site of both historic and contemporary hybridization between sympatric guenons. The discovery of gene flow and ongoing hybridization between clearly defined species, ecologically distinct enough to coexist in broad sympatry, provides an ideal system to investigate speciation mechanisms in primate adaptive radiations.

View more

Bat Predation by Cercopithecus Monkeys: Implications for Zoonotic Disease Transmission

EcoHealth

Elizabeth Tapanes, Kate M. Detwiler, Marina Cords

2016

The relationship between bats and primates, which may contribute to zoonotic disease transmission, is poorly documented. We provide the first behavioral accounts of predation on bats by Cercopithecus monkeys, both of which are known to harbor zoonotic disease. We witnessed 13 bat predation events over 6.5 years in two forests in Kenya and Tanzania. Monkeys sometimes had prolonged contact with the bat carcass, consuming it entirely. All predation events occurred in forest-edge or plantation habitat. Predator–prey relations between bats and primates are little considered by disease ecologists, but may contribute to transmission of zoonotic disease, including Ebolavirus.

View more

The Efficacy of Sex‐chromosomal Markers in Studies of Cercopithecus hybridization: Discovery of a Captive Hybrid and Applications in Wild Populations

Zoo Biology

Anthony J Tosi, Kate M Detwiler

2016

We demonstrate the utility of previously described molecular methods for identifying hybrid Cercopithecus monkeys. Using phylogenetic analyses and DNA sequence comparisons at X‐chromosomal and Y‐chromosomal loci, we have identified a hybrid animal in the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo (USA)—an identification that was not known a priori but was later confirmed by review of zoo records. The molecular techniques employed here are of great use to studies of the genus Cercopithecus because, unlike most mammals, these monkeys frequently form polyspecific associations, and recent deforestation is likely to have driven otherwise low‐level hybridization to higher frequencies which may reduce the fitness of threatened populations. Y‐chromosomal markers are especially informative because they provide working hypotheses for (1) the primary mechanism of hybridization (i.e., species A males × species B females) and, by extension; (2) the major direction of gene flow. Zoo Biol. 35:61–64, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

View more