what is the story with mandrills in Australia? ISIS says there are 1.5 at Adelaide and 2.2 at Melbourne. I'm assuming that they are all closely related? This is one of those species that Australian (and NZ) zoos could use so well for display because they are large (sort of an ape substitute almost, which would work well for zoos that don't or can't display real apes), popular with the public for various reasons (visible, group-dwelling, funny-looking, featured in a movie cartoon, etc), and they are endangered so can be used for promoting conservation. Is it yet another case of missed opportunities?