Are some animals consuming alcohol on purpose?

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Julia Casorso
Julia Casorso

Humans may not be the only species that deliberately consumes alcohol, according to international researchers. The team review growing evidence of how commonly ethanol naturally occurs in fruits and nectar that are commonly food for wild animals. The researchers say most animals that eat sugary fruits are likely to be exposed to at least some ethanol, and while most naturally fermented fruits only reach about 1-2% ABV, concentrations as high as 10.2% ABVhave been found before. The researchers say there's not much we know about why animals might choose to consume ethanol, as being drunk is generally a bad idea when living in the wild. They say it's possible that while humans like the effect of alcohol but not the calories, some animals may be risking the effect specifically to consume the calories.

Media release

From: Cell Press

Peer-reviewed           Literature review
Alcohol consumption among non-human animals may not be as rare as previously thought, say ecologists

Anecdotes abound of wildlife behaving “drunk” after eating fermented fruits, but despite this, nonhuman consumption of ethanol has been assumed to be rare and accidental. Ecologists challenge this assumption in a review publishing October 30 in the Cell Press journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution. They argue that since ethanol is naturally present in nearly every ecosystem, it is likely consumed on a regular basis by most fruit- and nectar-eating animals.

“We're moving away from this anthropocentric view that ethanol is just something that humans use,” says behavioral ecologist and senior author Kimberley Hockings (@KJHockings) of the University of Exeter. “It's much more abundant in the natural world than we previously thought, and most animals that eat sugary fruits are going to be exposed to some level of ethanol.”

Ethanol first became abundant around 100 million years ago, when flowering plants began producing sugary nectar and fruits that yeast could ferment. Now, it’s present naturally in nearly every ecosystem, though concentrations are higher, and production occurs year-round in lower-latitude and humid tropical environments compared to temperate regions. Most of the time, naturally fermented fruits only reach 1%-2% alcohol by volume (ABV), but concentrations as high as 10.2% ABV have been found in over-ripe palm fruit in Panama.

Animals already harbored genes that could degrade ethanol before yeasts began producing it, but there is evidence that evolution fine-tuned this ability for mammals and birds that consume fruit and nectar. In particular, primates and treeshrews have adapted to efficiently metabolize ethanol.

“From an ecological perspective, it is not advantageous to be inebriated as you're climbing around in the trees or surrounded by predators at night—that's a recipe for not having your genes passed on,” says molecular ecologist and senior author Matthew Carrigan of the College of Central Florida. “It’s the opposite of humans who want to get intoxicated but don’t really want the calories—from the non-human perspective, the animals want the calories but not the inebriation.”

It’s unclear whether animals intentionally consume ethanol for ethanol’s sake, and more research is needed to understand its impact on animal physiology and evolution. However, the researchers say that ethanol consumption could carry several benefits for wild animals. First and foremost, it’s a source of calories, and the odorous compounds produced during fermentation could guide animals to food sources, though the researchers say it’s unlikely that animals can detect ethanol itself. Ethanol could also have medicinal benefits: fruit flies intentionally lay their eggs in substances containing ethanol, which protects their eggs from parasites, and fruit fly larvae increase their ethanol intake when they become parasitized by wasps.

“On the cognitive side, ideas have been put forward that ethanol can trigger the endorphin and dopamine system, which leads to feelings of relaxation that could have benefits in terms of sociality,” says behavioral ecologist and first author Anna Bowland of the University of Exeter. “To test that, we'd really need to know if ethanol is producing a physiological response in the wild.”

There are a lot of unanswered questions regarding the significance of ethanol consumption to wild animals. In their future research, the team plans to investigate the behavioral and social implication of ethanol consumption in primates and to more deeply examine the enzymes involved in alcohol metabolism.

Multimedia

A capuchin eating fruits
A capuchin eating fruits
A chimpanzee feeding on ripe fruits terrestrially
A chimpanzee feeding on ripe fruits terrestrially
A spider monkey feedings on fruits of spondia mombin
A spider monkey feedings on fruits of spondia mombin
Adult female chimpanzee feeding on ripe spondias mombin
Adult female chimpanzee feeding on ripe spondias mombin
An adult female chimpanzee feeding on ripe fig fruits
An adult female chimpanzee feeding on ripe fig fruits
Chimpanzee feeding on ripe fig fruits
Chimpanzee feeding on ripe fig fruits

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Research Cell Press, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
Journal/
conference:
Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Exeter, UK
Funder: For funding support, A.C.B. would like to thank the Primate Society of Great Britain, and A.D.M. would like to thank the Wenner-Gren Foundation: Evolutionary and Ecological Underpinnings of Human Ethanol Metabolism Grant (8065659441), Canada Research Chairs program (950-231257), and Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (RGPIN-2017- 03782).
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