BillTre said:
The
platypus, although drab, is a poisonous mammal (fang-like spur on its back leg).
Thanks for pointing that out! I think I may have heard about this previously, but I'd completely forgotten. Even better, the wikipedia article has a link to a more general one on
venomous mammals, which further include the vampire bat (including anticoagulants under the umbrella term "venom"), the common mole (thus able to incapacitate worms without killing them, for the purposes of building up a food stash - another bit of information I think I may already have come across at some point but didn't retain), and some shrews and similar small insectivores.
More startlingly, there's this:
"[Some species of loris] are considered indirectly or secondarily venomous, because their venom is produced in the brachial gland on the inside of the elbows, licked, and injected into the victim by a specialized tooth comb. A protein in the secretion, which is similar to the allergen protein isolated from the domestic cat, may be introduced by the bites of these lorises, resulting in anaphylaxis."
All that being said, I think it doesn't substantially counter my earlier argument, because the prominent colouration seen as a warning sign in non-mammals usually means "don't bite me, I'm poisonous" rather than "don't make me bite you, I'm venomous".
BillTre said:
Another thing birds can do is turn their displays on and off by doing things like spreading their wings or fanning out their feathers or bunching them together on top of each other. This can make flashy displays less of an adaptive downer when it comes to survival.
True. But, again, no reason this technique couldn't by utilized by hypothetical brightly-coloured mammals just the same.
BillTre said:
Baboons come to mind as being rather colorful at times (but only at the ends (head and butt)), probably for mating purposes or maybe as a group status display.
Ohhhh, yes, another exception I'd not considered. And aren't there other monkeys which employ even more lurid colours? ... Yes, there are indeed, a wikipedia search for "monkeys with colourful faces" pointed me straight to the article on
mandrills, which describes them as having
"an olive green or dark grey pelage with yellow and black bands and a white belly", "[a] hairless face [...] with distinctive characteristics, such as a red stripe down the middle and protruding blue ridges on the sides[,] red nostrils and lips, a yellow beard and white tufts", "areas around the genitals and the anus [which] are multi-colored, being red, pink, blue, scarlet, and purple", and
"pale pink ischial callosities". "Drab" indeed, heh.
That find prompted me to run a second search for simply "colorful mammal", but that one failed to produce any more such outliers.
So, it looks like we keep coming back to primates, which, I'd say, strongly supports the notion that the prevailing drabness outside of that taxon may indeed be closely linked to the lack of full colour vision.
That answers my question more fully than I'd really hoped, on that front - but don't let that stop you from contributing additional information, needless to say. :)
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Now, as for the physiological angle, anyone know anything about how Mandrills are able to put on such a spectacular display?
It sounds to me as though the really unusual colours are those of areas of naked skin, though the "olive-green pelage" by itself invalidates (or at least somewhat extends) my original "redwards of yellow" characterization.
If I ever thought about it at all, I suppose I took the red buttocks of baboons to be simply the result of a more pronounced form of the sort of reddening of skin that occurs in humans as well, as the result of blood(flow) closely beneath the skin, or irritation of that skin, or some such. But it seems quite clear to me that that's insufficient in this case. I suppose blood by itself can produce quite a range of colours, ultimately (think aging bruises), but many of the tones seen in the photos in the article seem to me to be far too saturated to be accounted for that way. So it has to be "genuine" skin pigmentation, I suppose? And if so, are those pigments something that other mammals could quite easily produce as well, had they a reason to, or is that ability something mandrills had to "re-invent" from scratch?