Chimps give each other bug band-aids

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Chimpanzee female Roxy applying an insect to a wound on the face of an adult chimpanzee male named Thea. CREDIT: Tobias Deschner
Chimpanzee female Roxy applying an insect to a wound on the face of an adult chimpanzee male named Thea. CREDIT: Tobias Deschner

Researchers are reporting the first evidence of chimpanzees tending to each other’s wounds by applying insects to them. In one instance, a mama chimp inspected the wound of her teenage son, caught an insect out of the air, put it into her mouth, and then applied it to the wound. The research team also saw several more individual chimps doing the same thing to tend to their own wounds. Researchers hadn’t seen this behaviour before in this particular group of West African chimps after seven years of observation, and they also argue it’s a clear example of prosocial behavior—behavior that acts in the best interests of others, rather than just oneself.

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From: Cell Press

For the first time, researchers observed chimpanzees in Gabon, West Africa applying insects to their wounds and the wounds of others. In a study published February 7 in the journal Current Biology, scientists describe this wound-tending behavior and argue that it is evidence that chimpanzees have the capacity for prosocial behaviors that have been linked with empathy in humans.

In November 2019, Alessandra Mascaro (@alessandra_masc), a volunteer at the Ozouga Chimpanzee Project, observed a chimpanzee named Suzee inspecting a wound on the foot of her adolescent son, Sia, catching an insect out of the air, putting it into her mouth, and then applying it onto the wound. Researchers of the Ozouga Chimpanzee Project had been studying this group of chimpanzees in Loango National Park for 7 years but hadn’t witnessed behavior like this before. Mascaro took a video of the mother and son and showed it to her supervisors, Tobias Deschner, a primatologist with the project, and Simone Pika (@Evol_of_Com), a cognitive biologist at Osnabrück University.

“In the video, you can see that Suzee is first looking at the foot of her son, and then it’s as if she is thinking, ‘What could I do?’ and then she looks up, sees the insect, and catches it for her son,’” Mascaro says. The Ozouga team started to monitor the chimpanzees for this type of wound-tending behavior, and over the next 15 months documented 76 cases of the group applying insects to wounds on themselves and others.

This wasn’t the first time that nonhuman animals had been observed self-medicating. Researchers have reported that bears, elephants, and bees do it too. What is remarkable is that so far, insect applications have never been observed and that the chimps not only treat their own, but also the wounds of others.

Pika argues that the act of applying an insect to another’s wounds is a clear example of prosocial behavior—behavior that acts in the best interests of others, rather than just oneself. “This is, for me, especially breathtaking because so many people doubt prosocial abilities in other animals,” she says. “Suddenly we have a species where we really see individuals caring for others.”

The research team doesn’t know exactly which insects the chimpanzees are using or what their medicinal properties are. “Humans use many species of insect as remedies against sickness—there have been studies showing that insects can have antibiotic, antiviral, and anthelmintic functions,” says Pika. The researchers have also theorized that the insects might have soothing properties that could provide pain relief.

The Ozouga team now aims to identify the insects being used by the chimpanzees and to document who is applying insects to whom. “Studying great apes in their natural environments is crucial to shed light on our own cognitive evolution,” says Deschner. “We need to still put much more effort into studying and protecting them and also protecting their natural habitats.”

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conference:
Current Biology
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Organisation/s: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Germany; Ozouga e.V., Germany; University of Osnabrück, Germany;
Funder: This work was supported by the Max Planck Society and the European Research Council.
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