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Chimpanzees Observed Applying Insects to Wounds – A Potential Case of Medication?

Roxy and Thea from the community of about 45 chimpanzees living in Loango national park in Gabon, being investigated by the Ozouga chimpanzee project led by cognitive biologist Prof. Dr. Simone Pika and primatologist Dr. Tobias Deschner. Credit: (c) Tobias Deschner/ Ozouga chimpanzee project

Researchers from Osnabrück University now examine a possible pharmaceutical function.

A research team from Osnabrück University and the Ozouga Chimpanzee Project has, for the first time, observed chimpanzees applying insects to their own wounds and the wounds of conspecifics. The new findings have been published under the title “Application of insects to wounds of self and others in chimpanzees in the wild” in the journal Current Biology.

Chimpanzees are found across equatorial Africa including the Loango National Park in Gabon which has been home to the Ozouga Chimpanzee Project, led by Dr. Tobias Deschner (Primatologist) and Prof. Dr. Simone Pika (Cognitive biologist) at Osnabrück University. In Loango, the researchers investigate the behavior of a community of about 45 chimpanzees with a special focus on their social relationships, interactions and disputes with other groups, their hunting behavior, tool-use, and their cognitive and communicative skills.

“Self-medication — where individuals use plant-parts or non-nutritional substances to combat pathogens or parasites — has been observed across multiple animal species including insects, reptiles, birds, and mammals,” says cognitive biologist Simone Pika. “Our two closest living relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos, for instance, swallow leaves of plants with anthelmintic properties and chew bitter leaves that have chemical properties to kill intestinal parasites.”

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This video shows a chimp named Suzee inspecting a wound on the foot of her adolescent son, Sia, then catching an insect out of the air, putting it in her mouth, pressing it between her lips, and applying it to the wound while her daughter, Sassandra, observes her. Credit: Alessandra Mascaro

However, despite research spanning decades from other long-term field sites in west and east Africa, external application of animal matter on open wounds has, until now, never been documented. “Our observations provide the first evidence that chimpanzees regularly capture insects and apply them onto open wounds. We now aim to investigate the potential beneficial consequences of such a surprising behavior,” says primatologist Tobias Deschner.

But what exactly happened? Alessandra Mascaro, at the time a volunteer at the project, recalls her first observation: “In 2019, I was following a female chimpanzee named Suzee, and watched as she tended to the injured foot of her adolescent son, Sia. I noticed that she appeared to have something between her lips that she then applied to the wound on Sia’s foot. Later that evening, I re-watched my videos and saw that Suzee had first reached out to catch something which she put between her lips and then directly onto the open wound on Sia’s foot. Discussing these observations and the possible function of the behavior with the team members, we realized that we had never seen such a behavior and that it had also never been documented before.”

Three Chimpanzees Live in Loango National Park in Gabon

The three chimpanzees Suzee, Sassandra and Olive live in Loango national parc in Gabon. Here, the Ozouga chimpanzee project led by cognitive biologist Prof. Dr. Simone Pika, Osnabrück University, has observed, for the first time, how chimpanzees apply insects to their wounds. Credit: (c) Tobias Deschner/ Ozouga chimpanzee project

A week later, PhD student Lara Southern observed an adult male, Freddy, demonstrating a similar behavior. The team worked out that the tiny objects were most likely flying insects, given where and how they were caught. During the following year, the researchers began to diligently watch and film all individuals with injuries. They gradually built up a record of 22 events, mostly involving individuals applying insects to their own wounds. Almost a year after Mascaro’s observation of the first insect application to another individual’s wound, Southern observed another event. “An adult male, Littlegrey, had a deep open wound on his shin and Carol, an adult female, who had been grooming him, suddenly reached out to catch an insect,” says Southern recalling the event. “What struck me most was that she handed it to Littlegrey, he applied it to his wound and subsequently Carol and two other adult chimpanzees also touched the wound and moved the insect on it. The three unrelated chimpanzees seemed to perform these behaviors solely for the benefit of their group member.”

The authors from the Ozouga Chimpanzee Project and Osnabrück suggest that the applied insects might have anti-inflammatory or antiseptic properties. The use of insects for therapeutic purposes has been dated back in humans to 1,400 BCE and is still popular across human populations covering a variety of insect species with scientifically proven antibiotic and anti-viral effects. Alternatively, another explanation may be that such a behavior does not have any beneficial consequences but is part of the local chimpanzee culture, just as a large number of medical treatments are in human societies.

“For me, being interested in the cognitive skills of chimpanzees, it was particularly striking to witness that individuals not only treat their own but also the wounds of other non-related individuals. Such examples of clear prosocial behaviors are rarely observed in nonhuman species, but these observations may now also convince the skeptics,” says Pika.

As a next step, the researchers aim to recover remaining insect parts to identify the species and to subsequently carry out bioassays investigating the potential pharmaceutical properties. Furthermore, the team will also focus on the social dimension of the behavior, such as who are the main actors and who are the main receivers of the “treatment,” as well as the social learning processes that allow for its transmission.

“It is just fascinating to see that after decades of research on wild chimpanzees they still surprise us with unexpected new behaviors,” says Deschner. “Our study shows that there is still a lot to explore and discover about our closest living relatives, and we therefore need to still put much more effort into protecting them in their natural habitat.”

Reference: “Application of insects to wounds of self and others by chimpanzees in the wild” by Alessandra Mascaro and Lara M. Sout, 7 February 2022, Current Biology.
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.12.045

Source: SciTechDaily