“…However, unlike hamadryas baboons or bottlenose dolphins, male mandrills rarely, if ever, use overt physical restraint, sequestering or 'herding' behaviors toward females; but they rather coerce females using milder aggressive tactics. 47 While directional grooming of females toward males may be less easily enforced by males than spatial proximity, a recent study in sexually coercive chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) 7 indicates that females may regularly groom males as an appeasement strategy. 56 In mandrills, females have been occasionally observed to groom males after receiving aggression from them (NS personal observation), suggesting that a similar appeasement strategy might explain our results.…”