Development and Evolution of Cognition Research Group, Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, Konstanz, Germany.
Department of Biology, Graduate Program, Faculty of Biology and Agriculture, Universitas Nasional, Jakarta, 12520, Indonesia.
Sci Rep. 2024 May 2;14(1):8932. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-58988-7.
Although self-medication in non-human animals is often difficult to document systematically due to the difficulty of predicting its occurrence, there is widespread evidence of such behaviors as whole leaf swallowing, bitter pith chewing, and fur rubbing in African great apes, orangutans, white handed gibbons, and several other species of monkeys in Africa, Central and South America and Madagascar. To the best of our knowledge, there is only one report of active wound treatment in non-human animals, namely in chimpanzees. We observed a male Sumatran orangutan (Pongo abelii) who sustained a facial wound. Three days after the injury he selectively ripped off leaves of a liana with the common name Akar Kuning (Fibraurea tinctoria), chewed on them, and then repeatedly applied the resulting juice onto the facial wound. As a last step, he fully covered the wound with the chewed leaves. Found in tropical forests of Southeast Asia, this and related liana species are known for their analgesic, antipyretic, and diuretic effects and are used in traditional medicine to treat various diseases, such as dysentery, diabetes, and malaria. Previous analyses of plant chemical compounds show the presence of furanoditerpenoids and protoberberine alkaloids, which are known to have antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, anti-fungal, antioxidant, and other biological activities of relevance to wound healing. This possibly innovative behavior presents the first systematically documented case of active wound treatment with a plant species know to contain biologically active substances by a wild animal and provides new insights into the origins of human wound care.
虽然由于难以预测非人类动物自我用药的发生,因此难以系统地记录其行为,但在非洲大猿、猩猩、白掌长臂猿以及非洲、中美洲和马达加斯加的其他几种猴子中,广泛存在着吞食整叶、咀嚼苦味髓质、摩擦皮毛等行为的证据。据我们所知,仅有一份关于非人类动物主动治疗伤口的报告,即黑猩猩。我们观察到一只雄性苏门答腊猩猩(Pongo abelii)面部受伤。受伤后第三天,它选择性地撕下一种名为 Akar Kuning(Fibraurea tinctoria)的藤本植物的叶子,咀嚼后将产生的汁液反复涂抹在面部伤口上。最后,它用嚼碎的叶子完全覆盖了伤口。这种植物和相关的藤本植物分布在东南亚的热带森林中,因其具有镇痛、解热和利尿作用而闻名,并在传统医学中用于治疗各种疾病,如痢疾、糖尿病和疟疾。对植物化学化合物的分析表明,存在呋喃二萜和原小檗碱生物碱,这些化合物具有抗菌、抗炎、抗真菌、抗氧化等生物活性,与伤口愈合有关。这种可能具有创新性的行为是首例由野生动物用含有生物活性物质的植物物种进行主动治疗伤口的有系统记录案例,为人类伤口护理的起源提供了新的见解。