Barelli Claudia, Huffman Michael A
Tropical Biodiversity Section, MUSE-Museo delle Scienze, Corso del Lavoro e della Scienza 3, Trento, Italy.
Reproductive Biology Unit, German Primate Centre (DPZ), Göttingen, Germany.
Am J Primatol. 2017 Mar;79(3):1-7. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22610. Epub 2016 Oct 24.
Leaf swallowing behavior, known as a form of self-medication for the control of nematode and tapeworm infection, occurs widely in all the African great apes (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii, P. t. troglodytes, P. t. verus, P. t. vellerosus, Pan paniscus, Gorilla gorilla graueri), except mountain gorillas. It is also reported to occur in a similar context across a wide array of other animal taxa including, domestic dogs, wolves, brown bears, and civets. Despite long-term research on Asian great and small apes, this is the first report of leaf swallowing in an Asian species, the white-handed gibbon (Hylobates lar) in Khao Yai National Park, central Thailand. We present the first evidence of leaf swallowing (Gironniera nervosa Planch CANNABACEA) behavior (N = 5 cases) and parasite (Streptopharagus pigmentatus) expulsion (N = 4 cases), recorded during 4,300 hr of direct animal observations during two distinct research projects. We recovered 4-18 rough, hairy, and hispid surfaced leaves from each sample, undigested and folded, from the freshly evacuated feces of five different individuals (2 males, 3 females, 5 to 34+ years old) living in three different social groups, between the hours of 06:00 to 10:30. Based on close inspection of the leaves, as observed in chimpanzees, it was clear that they were taken into the mouth, one at a time, folded and detached from the stem with the teeth before swallowing them whole. All instances occurred during the rainy season, the time when nematode worms were also found in the feces, although they were not found together with leaves in the same feces. These striking similarities in the details of leaf swallowing between white-handed gibbons and African great apes, and other animal species, suggest a similar self-medicative function.
吞叶行为作为一种控制线虫和绦虫感染的自我治疗方式,在除山地大猩猩外的所有非洲大型猿类(东非黑猩猩、西非黑猩猩、指名亚种黑猩猩、克罗斯河大猩猩、倭黑猩猩、克氏大猩猩)中广泛存在。据报道,在包括家犬、狼、棕熊和灵猫在内的众多其他动物类群中,也存在类似背景下的吞叶行为。尽管对亚洲大型和小型猿类进行了长期研究,但这是关于亚洲物种——泰国中部考艾国家公园的白掌长臂猿(白眉长臂猿)吞叶行为的首次报道。我们提供了首次关于吞叶(水黄皮)行为(N = 5例)和寄生虫(色素链宫绦虫)排出(N = 4例)的证据,这些是在两个不同研究项目中对动物进行4300小时直接观察期间记录到的。我们从生活在三个不同社会群体中的五个不同个体(2只雄性,3只雌性,年龄在5至34岁以上)刚排出的粪便中,每个样本回收了4至18片粗糙、有毛且表面具糙硬毛的叶子,这些叶子未被消化且呈折叠状。在06:00至10:30之间,基于对这些叶子的仔细观察,如同在黑猩猩身上观察到的那样,很明显它们是一次一片地被放入口中,折叠后用牙齿从茎上撕下,然后整个吞下。所有这些情况都发生在雨季,此时粪便中也发现了线虫,但未在同一粪便中与叶子同时发现。白掌长臂猿与非洲大型猿类以及其他动物物种在吞叶细节上的这些惊人相似之处,表明了类似的自我治疗功能。