El mandril (Mandrillus sphinx) es un gran mono que vive en las selvas y mesetas de Camerún, Gabón, Guinea Ecuatorial y el Congo. Su pelaje va del verde oliva al gris oscuro, con el vientre blanco y una coloración característica en el rostro: una larga franja rosa que recorre el hocico hasta los orificios nasales flanqueada por dos áreas azules. Tienen además una barba amarilla.
Latin Name
Mandrillus sphinx
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mandrill
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Animal Facts
The mandrill is the largest monkey species in the world.
A group of mandrills is called a 'horde'; a horde can include up to 1300 individuals. Female mandrills live in family groups and all help each other with raising infants.
Mandrills have large cheek pouches that they store food in, often hiding food from their group mates to eat it in peace later.
The bright colours of a male mandrill's face and hindquarters are caused by testosterone and indicate the male's dominance level.
In 'The Descent of Man', Charles Darwin wrote that 'no other member in the whole class of mammals is coloured in so extraordinary a manner as the adult male mandrill'.