In the midst of 30 years of primate research in Madagascar, CU Boulder anthropology professor Michelle Sauther and her colleagues had continual encounters with another animal: Cats.
She wondered how these cats, which have tabby-like coloration, could wind up in Madagascar, an island with no native felines.
“When I first started working in Madagascar, I noticed that these cats all seemed to look the same,” said Sauther, who has researched primates in the area for 30 years. “They were big, and they were always the same color.”
The results of the team’s DNA test on 30 of the animals — published in the journal Conservation Genetics — revealed they were
Felis catus, the same species as the beloved house pets we own today.
“The real worry is: What are these cats doing?” said Sauther, who is particularly concerned for the highly endangered lemurs unique to Madagascar. “Are they posing a threat to animals in Madagascar?
Maybe they’re just part of the local ecology.”
The team traced their origins to the Arabian Sea trade routes originating in places like modern-day Dubai, Oman and Kuwait that have existed for as long as 1,000 years. The cats most likely traveled with the people on the ships, Sauther said.
“Cats have essentially gone with us everywhere we’ve gone,” Sauther said. “We can see that journey of humans and their pets going back pretty deep in time.”
More must be known about the cats’ origins and biology to know their true threat to native species. But for now, the reason for the cats’ puzzling appearances are answered.
Said Sauther: “We now know that these mysterious cats are domestic cats with a really interesting backstory.”
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Photo courtesy Michelle Sauther