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Female Reproductive Seasonality and Male Influxes in Wild Mandrills (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Mandrillus sphinx</Emphasis>)
Authors:Shun Hongo  Yoshihiro Nakashima  Etienne François Akomo-Okoue  Fred Loïque Mindonga-Nguelet
Institution:1.Laboratory of Human Evolution Studies, Department of Zoology,Kyoto University,Kyoto,Japan;2.College of Bioresource Science,Nihon University,Fujisawa,Japan;3.Institut de Recherche en écologie Tropicale (IRET/CENAREST),Libreville,Gabon;4.Faculté des Sciences,Université des Sciences et Techniques de Masuku,Franceville,Gabon
Abstract:The correlates of variation in the number of males in primate groups form a long-standing question in primatology. We investigated female reproductive seasonality and the numbers of males in groups of wild mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx) in a 25-month camera-trap survey with 160 camera locations in Moukalaba-Doudou National Park, Gabon. We used 1760 videos to analyze group composition, including the presence of females with newborn infants and with sexual swellings, the number of males present in groups, and male spatial positioning in groups. Female reproduction was seasonal, with a peak in the number of newborns in the mid-rainy season and a peak in the number of females with sexual swellings in the early dry season. The number of males in the group increased in the dry season, with a much greater increase in the number of mature males (sevenfold) than in submature males (twofold). The peak number of mature males, but not submature males, in the group lagged significantly behind the peak in the number of females with sexual swellings, suggesting that submature males enter groups before mature males and/or that mature males stay in the group longer after the peak of females with sexual swellings. Mature, but not submature, males appeared frequently near females with sexual swellings. In conclusion, we found a clear relationship between the presence of receptive females and the number of males in the group, and evidence that male competitive ability influences male strategies.
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