About Mandrillus sphinx (Linnaeus, 1758)
Mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx) have stocky bodies, large heads and muzzles, and short, stumpy tails. Their limbs are evenly proportioned, and their fingers and toes are more elongated than those of baboons, with a more opposable big toe on the feet. This species is both the most sexually dimorphic primate and the largest monkey. Females are less stocky than males and have shorter, flatter snouts. For males, head-body length measures 70–95 cm (28–37 in) and body weight is 19–30 kg (42–66 lb); for females, head-body length is 55–70 cm (22–28 in) and weight is 10–15 kg (22–33 lb). Most teeth are larger in males, with canine teeth reaching up to 4.5 cm (1.8 in) long in males and 1 cm (0.39 in) long in females. Both sexes have tails 7–10 cm (2.8–3.9 in) long. The mandrill's coat is primarily grizzled or banded olive-brown, with a yellow-orange beard and sparse, light hairs on the underside. Stiff white whiskers surround the lips, and bare white skin is present behind the ears. Male mandrills grow a crest of long hairs on the head and neck; both sexes have chest glands covered by long hairs, and the face, rump and genitals have sparse hair. A red line runs down the center of the face, connecting to the red nose; the skin on either side of this line is blue and grooved. In males, the blue facial skin is supported by ridged bone swellings. Females have more subdued facial coloring, which varies between individuals, with some showing stronger red and blue hues and others being darker or almost black. In males, the rump and areas around the genitals have multi-colored red, pink, blue, and purple skin, with a red penis shaft and violet scrotum; the female's genital and anal areas are red. Mandrills are among the most colorful mammals. Charles Darwin noted in The Descent of Man that no other mammal is colored as extraordinarily as the adult male mandrill. The species' red coloration comes from blood vessels near the skin surface, while blue color is structural coloration caused by parallel arrangements of collagen fibers. The blue ridges on males contrast with both their red facial coloring and the green foliage of their environment, helping them stand out to other mandrills. The darker, subdued coloring of female faces comes from melanin. The mandrill inhabits west-central Africa, including southern Cameroon, mainland Equatorial Guinea (Río Muni), Gabon and parts of the Republic of the Congo. Its range is bounded by the Sanaga River to the north and the Ogooué and Ivindo Rivers to the east. The Sanaga River separates mandrills from drills, and the two species do not appear to share habitat. Mandrills live in tropical rainforests, and generally prefer primary forests over secondary forests. They also occupy patchy gallery forests surrounded by savanna, and travel across grass areas within their forest habitats. They have also been recorded in mountainous areas, near rivers, and in cultivated fields. They prefer thick bush dominated by perennial plants including gingers, and plants from the genera Brillantaisia and Phaulopsis. They mainly stay on the ground, but feed as high up as the canopy. Both mandrills and drills are more arboreal than baboons. Mandrills may aggregate or compete with other primates including talapoins, guenons, mangabeys, black-and-white colobuses, chimpanzees, and gorillas. Dominant (alpha) male mandrills achieve the most mating success. When a male gains alpha status, he develops larger testicles, redder faces and posteriors, more chest gland secretion, and fatter sides and rumps; these physiological changes are at least partially reversed when a male loses dominance. A male's blue facial skin maintains more consistent brightness after losing dominance. Higher-ranking males tend to have greater contrast between red and blue facial coloring. Dominant males are called "fatted" males due to their fat distribution, while subordinate males are called "non-fatted" males. Canine length correlates with dominance, and males are less likely to sire offspring if their canines are under 30 mm (1.2 in) long. Competition from other males can suppress the development of secondary sexual characteristics in some individuals. Male mandrills typically establish dominance through vocalizations and facial expressions, rather than fighting. Most mating occurs during the dry season, and female ovulation peaks between June and September. Receptive females develop sexual swellings on their posteriors, and red facial coloration can communicate a female's age and fertility. Males appear to detect a female's reproductive state using the vomeronasal organ via the flehmen response. Dominant males attempt to monopolize access to females through mate guarding, where they stay with and copulate with a female for days. Dominant males sire most offspring, but cannot monopolize access as easily when many females enter estrus at the same time. Subordinate males are more likely to achieve reproductive success if they are closely related to an alpha male. Ovulating females tend to allow the brightest colored males to approach and touch their perineum, and are more likely to groom and solicit these males. Females signal willingness to mate by positioning their posterior toward the male. Intercourse lasts no more than 60 seconds, with the male mounting the female and making pelvic thrusts. Mandrill gestation averages 175 days, and most births occur between January and March, during the wet season. Interbirth intervals range from 184 to 1,159 days, with an average of 405 days, and tend to be shorter for higher-ranking females. Infants are born with an average weight of 640 g (23 oz). They are mostly bare-skinned at birth, with some white hair and a tuft of dark hair on the head and along the spine. Over the following two to three months, they develop their adult hair color on the body, limbs, and head, while their flesh-colored face and snout darken. Dependent infants are carried on their mother's belly. Young mandrills are typically weaned at around 230 days old. Males develop increased sexual dimorphism between four and eight years old, by which point females have already started giving birth. Males begin leaving their horde once they reach six years old. Females reach adult size around seven years old, while males reach adult size at ten years old.