Another example of orangutans self-medicating

The following article from New Scientist provides another example of orangutans self medicating.

Willie Smits has previously documented in Thinkers of the Jungle examples of orangutans eating plants which kill parasites and which are a remedy against malaria.  He has also watched an orangutan eating the blossoms of Fordia splendissima to cure what seemed to be a severe headache. Having found himself in the rainforest with the same affliction some months later, Smits followed Tuti’s lead, ate some blossoms and promptly the pain in his head disappeared.

Wild orangutans treat pain with natural anti-inflammatory


28 July 2008 (NewScientist.com news service:  Matt Walker)

Wild orangutans have been spotted using naturally occurring anti-inflammatory drugs.

Four individuals have been seen rubbing a soothing balm onto their limbs, the first known examples of orangutans self medicating. Great apes have never before been seen using drugs in this way. Remarkably though, local people use the same balm, administering it in a similar way to treat aches and pains.

Primatologist Helen Morrogh-Bernard, of the University of Cambridge, UK, made the discovery while studying Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) in the Sabangau Peat Swamp Forest in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia.

In 2005, she witnessed an adult female pick a handful of leaves from a plant and then chew them, mixing the leaves with her saliva to produce a green-white lather. The female then scooped up some of the lather with her right hand and applied it up and down the back of her left arm, from the base of the shoulder to the wrist, just as a person would apply sunscreen.

“She was concentrating on her arm only and was methodical in the way she was applying the soapy foam,” says Morrogh-Bernard. “I knew this must be some form of self-medication.”

After using the leaves, the orangutan dropped them, allowing Morrogh-Bernard and her assistant to find out what they were. The leaves belong to a genus called Commelina, a group of plants that orangutans do not eat as part of their normal diet. However, local indigenous people know the plant well, grinding it into a balm and applying it to their skin to treat muscular pain, sore bones and swellings.

Chimpanzees and gorillas are thought to self medicate, mainly by swallowing rough leaves or chewed plant pith to help flush out intestinal parasites. A few monkey species and one species of lemur are known to rub concoctions, such as tobacco, onion or garlic onto their fur to repel insects or parasites. But wild great apes have never before been seen rubbing ointments onto their fur.

Morrogh-Bernard, who has since seen three other orangutans using the plant in the same way, says the finding “links apes and humans directly”.

The apes may not have learnt how to apply the anti-inflammatory ointment from local people, she says, but perhaps ancestors of the indigenous population learnt about the drug from the apes.

Journal Reference: International Journal of Primatology (DOI:10.1007/s10764-008-9266-5)

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