| Literature DB >> 26543588 |
Kimberley J Hockings1, Nicola Bryson-Morrison2, Susana Carvalho3, Michiko Fujisawa4, Tatyana Humle2, William C McGrew5, Miho Nakamura6, Gaku Ohashi7, Yumi Yamanashi6, Gen Yamakoshi8, Tetsuro Matsuzawa9.
Abstract
African apes and humans share a genetic mutation that enables them to effectively metabolize ethanol. However, voluntary ethanol consumption in this evolutionary radiation is documented only in modern humans. Here, we report evidence of the long-term and recurrent ingestion of ethanol from the raffia palm (Raphia hookeri, Arecaceae) by wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) at Bossou in Guinea, West Africa, from 1995 to 2012. Chimpanzees at Bossou ingest this alcoholic beverage, often in large quantities, despite an average presence of ethanol of 3.1% alcohol by volume (ABV) and up to 6.9% ABV. Local people tap raffia palms and the sap collects in plastic containers, and chimpanzees use elementary technology-a leafy tool-to obtain this fermenting sap. These data show that ethanol does not act as a deterrent to feeding in this community of wild apes, supporting the idea that the last common ancestor of living African apes and modern humans was not averse to ingesting foods containing ethanol.Entities:
Keywords: elementary tool-use; ethanol ingestion; great apes; raffia palm
Year: 2015 PMID: 26543588 PMCID: PMC4632552 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.150150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Figure 1.Box plot (showing maximum and minimum values as whiskers above and below the central rectangle which spans the first quartile to the third quartile; the segment inside the rectangle shows the median, and outliers are open circles) for % alcohol by volume (ABV) of palm sap from 16 raffia palms, collected at 2 h intervals (i.e. 08.00–18.00 h) throughout the day. Data presented in figure 1 come from 88 samples (maximum of six samples collected daily per raffia palm; data were unavailable for only eight of 96 samples that could have been collected, see electronic supplementary material, table S1). Sap sampled at 08.00 h had accumulated overnight, about 14 h after the previous batch of fermented sap was harvested. Following the morning harvest, fresh sap accumulated in the container until the evening harvest.
Figure 2.Adult male chimpanzee (FF) uses a leaf tool to drink raffia sap from a container (see also electronic supplementary material, video S1): (a) FF inserts right hand holding the leaf tool into the fermented palm sap container, (b) retrieves the leaf tool that is soaked in fermented palm sap and (c) transfers the soaked leaf tool to his mouth to drink the palm sap it carries (photos by M. Nakamura, 28 December 1996, see electronic supplementary material, table S2, session 2).