Intersexual relationships in mandrills: dominance, sexual conflict and the influence of social integration

The conflict of evolutionary interests between the sexes is commonly imprinted in social dynamics and physical asymmetries between the sexes. In species that live in polygynandrous groups, male-biased sexual size dimorphism often allows males to socially dominate and sexually coerce females. Yet, sm...

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Main Author: Nikolaos Smit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Société Francophone de Primatologie 2024-07-01
Series:Revue de Primatologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/18340
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author Nikolaos Smit
author_facet Nikolaos Smit
author_sort Nikolaos Smit
collection DOAJ
description The conflict of evolutionary interests between the sexes is commonly imprinted in social dynamics and physical asymmetries between the sexes. In species that live in polygynandrous groups, male-biased sexual size dimorphism often allows males to socially dominate and sexually coerce females. Yet, smaller female size might allow females to escape from males and female philopatry might promote female-female social support allowing females to resist or retaliate against males. The study of such intersexual conflicts is highly relevant in mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx) as they form large polygynandrous groups and exhibit extreme male-biased sexual dimorphism in size and ornaments, higher social integration of females than males, and female coalitions against males. The set up of Mandrillus Project over a decade ago has offered a unique opportunity to study intersexual relationships of mandrills in their natural habitat. Here, I present a synthesis of some recent studies that used the long-term behavioural and life-history dataset of Mandrillus Project and documented patterns of sexual coercion and intersexual dominance in mandrills. These studies show that male mandrills are generally dominant over females and use sexual coercion to increase their mating success. However, female social bonds and social integration permit females to occasionally outrank certain males. Finally, and surprisingly, higher-ranking and more socially integrated females receive higher rates of male sexual coercion, highlighting the need for future research to shed light on the trade-offs between costs and benefits of mandrill sociality.
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spelling doaj-art-9ae89df9a41442d8b4a5b2d388186eee2025-01-30T10:01:35ZengSociété Francophone de PrimatologieRevue de Primatologie2077-37572024-07-011510.4000/121oyIntersexual relationships in mandrills: dominance, sexual conflict and the influence of social integrationNikolaos SmitThe conflict of evolutionary interests between the sexes is commonly imprinted in social dynamics and physical asymmetries between the sexes. In species that live in polygynandrous groups, male-biased sexual size dimorphism often allows males to socially dominate and sexually coerce females. Yet, smaller female size might allow females to escape from males and female philopatry might promote female-female social support allowing females to resist or retaliate against males. The study of such intersexual conflicts is highly relevant in mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx) as they form large polygynandrous groups and exhibit extreme male-biased sexual dimorphism in size and ornaments, higher social integration of females than males, and female coalitions against males. The set up of Mandrillus Project over a decade ago has offered a unique opportunity to study intersexual relationships of mandrills in their natural habitat. Here, I present a synthesis of some recent studies that used the long-term behavioural and life-history dataset of Mandrillus Project and documented patterns of sexual coercion and intersexual dominance in mandrills. These studies show that male mandrills are generally dominant over females and use sexual coercion to increase their mating success. However, female social bonds and social integration permit females to occasionally outrank certain males. Finally, and surprisingly, higher-ranking and more socially integrated females receive higher rates of male sexual coercion, highlighting the need for future research to shed light on the trade-offs between costs and benefits of mandrill sociality.https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/18340Sexual conflictintersexual dominancesexual coercionsocial integrationsocial bondsmandrills
spellingShingle Nikolaos Smit
Intersexual relationships in mandrills: dominance, sexual conflict and the influence of social integration
Revue de Primatologie
Sexual conflict
intersexual dominance
sexual coercion
social integration
social bonds
mandrills
title Intersexual relationships in mandrills: dominance, sexual conflict and the influence of social integration
title_full Intersexual relationships in mandrills: dominance, sexual conflict and the influence of social integration
title_fullStr Intersexual relationships in mandrills: dominance, sexual conflict and the influence of social integration
title_full_unstemmed Intersexual relationships in mandrills: dominance, sexual conflict and the influence of social integration
title_short Intersexual relationships in mandrills: dominance, sexual conflict and the influence of social integration
title_sort intersexual relationships in mandrills dominance sexual conflict and the influence of social integration
topic Sexual conflict
intersexual dominance
sexual coercion
social integration
social bonds
mandrills
url https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/18340
work_keys_str_mv AT nikolaossmit intersexualrelationshipsinmandrillsdominancesexualconflictandtheinfluenceofsocialintegration