Scientists from Cardiff University along with Danau Girang Field Centre, Kyoto University and Sabah Wildlife Department discovered a direct association between the nose size of the male monkeys and the number of females in their harems. It suggests that the big nose size really make sense.

Dr Sen Nathan, Assistant Director of Sabah Wildlife Department and PhD student at Cardiff University said, “Although the unique nature of the ‘odd-nosed’ proboscis monkey has long been admired as an extremely attractive visual feature by biologists, explanations for its evolution have so far been gleaned more from folklore than from science.”

“We show evidence supporting both male-male competition and female choice as causal factors in the evolution of enlarged male noses. We also observed that nasal enlargement modified the resonance properties of male vocalisations, which probably encode male quality. Our result, therefore,e indicate that the audiovisual contributions of enlarged male noses serve as advertisements to females in their mate selection.”

During experiments, which were carried out on free-ranging proboscis monkeys in the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, scientists recorded the vocalisations of male and female proboscis monkeys at three different zoos: Yokohama Zoo in Japan, Singapore Zoo and Low Kawi Zoo.

Dr Ikki Matsuda, from Chubu University and Kyoto University in Japan, said: “Based on the collected data, we tested the correlations between body mass, facial characteristics, testicular volume, vocalizations, and a number of harem females in captive and free-ranging proboscis monkeys.

“In addition to finding that enlarged male noses serve as advertisements to females in mate selection, we also found that males with larger noses also tended to have larger body mass and testis. This suggests that nose enlargement is a reliable predictor of social dominance and high sperm count.”

Dr Benoit Goossens, Director of Danau Girang Field Centre and Reader at Cardiff University, added: “We expect our study will shed light on the hypothesis of audiovisual coevolution of exaggerated male traits in primate lineages and provide further evidence for the evolutionary pathway of enlarged noses in proboscis monkeys.”

“Now our tour guides will be able to tell their guests that size matters, and that males with larger noses attract more females in their harem.”

This study ‘Nasalization by Nasalis larvatus: larger noses audiovisually advertise conspecifics in proboscis monkeys’ is published in Science Advances.