“…In ungulate species, several studies described anthropogenically caused hybridization between native red deer ( Cervus elaphus ) and introduced Japanese sika deer ( Cervus nippon ) in the UK (Abernethy, 1994; Goodman, Barton, Swanson, Abernethy, & Pemberton, 1999; McDevitt et al., 2009; Pérez‐Espona, Pemberton, & Putman, 2009; Senn & Pemberton, 2009), and hybridization was also reported between black wildebeest ( Connochaetes gnou ) and blue wildebeest ( Connochaetes taurinus ) in forced sympatry (Ackermann, Brink, Vrahimis, & De Klerk, 2010; Grobler et al., 2005, 2011), as well as between giant sable antelope ( Hippotragus niger variani ) and roan antelope ( Hippotragus equinus ) in southern Africa in an area where both species were extremely rare (Vaz Pinto et al., 2016). In the genus Gazella , the only record of hybridization until now is the introgression of mitochondrial DNA between G. marica and G. subgutturosa in eastern Turkey (Murtskhvaladze, Gurielidze, Kopaliani, & Tarkhnishvili, 2012). Morphologically, intermediate individuals, probably natural hybrids between the two nominal forms (Groves, 1997; Groves & Harrison, 1967; Mallon & Kingswood, 2001), occur in a vast area between the Tigris/Euphrates valley and the Zagros Mountains, but the only molecular study that included samples from this region (five captive individuals from the Rutba region in Iraq — Wacher et al., 2010) only detected mitochondrial sequences of G. subgutturosa .…”