Wild Chimps Caught on Camera Sharing Alcoholic Fruit
Remote cameras in Africa have captured the first images and video of wild chimpanzees eating and sharing fermented fruit that contains alcohol.
Bonding over alcoholic drinks is an ancient human tradition, and this exciting discovery hints it might be even older – and less unique to us – than we thought.
The intriguing similarity observed in our closest living relatives suggests our history of alcohol consumption could date back to before our species existed.
"Sharing alcohol – including through traditions such as feasting – helps to form and strengthen social bonds," says first author and primatologist Anna Bowland, from the University of Exeter in the UK.
"So, now we know that wild chimpanzees are eating and sharing ethanolic fruits, the question is: Could they be getting similar benefits?"
Bowland and her colleagues from the UK, Canada, and the US studied western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) living in Guinea-Bissau's Cantanhez National Park.
These chimps are not habituated to researchers, so the study authors set up motion-activated cameras at three locations to record their natural behavior.
The footage revealed chimps not only feeding on fermented African breadfruit (Treculia africana), but also passively sharing it with one another. Testing later confirmed the specific fruits contained ethanol.
Humans have a long history of drinking and sharing alcohol, with evidence of deliberately fermented beverages dating back at least to Neolithic times, where it may have offered benefits related to social bonding like it does today.
Even before ancient humans figured out how to make alcohol themselves, they likely capitalized on what they found in naturally fermented fruits, just as these wild chimpanzees seem to be doing.
"For humans, we know that drinking alcohol leads to a release of dopamine and endorphins, and resulting feelings of happiness and relaxation," says Bowland.
It remains unclear whether chimps purposely seek out alcohol – and, if so, why.
Chimps were filmed sharing fermented fruits on 10 separate occasions, with the sharing occurring among 17 individual chimps – including members of both sexes and every age category.
This was mostly 'passive' sharing, in which a chimp who possessed fruit let others feed from it, but there was also one case of 'active-passive' sharing, in which a chimp let another chimp take some fruit from its mouth.
Chimps with fruit showed no apprehension about sharing, and there were no observations of chimps sharing their fruit under pressure.
Testing found that 90 percent of shared fruits contained ethanol at the time of consumption, with the content ranging from 0.01 to 0.6 percent alcohol by volume (ABV).
That's pretty low by human standards – beer is typically at least 4 percent ABV, while wine commonly falls between 10 and 15 percent, and liquor may be 40 percent ABV or higher.
But fruit constitutes the vast majority of a chimpanzee's diet, and since they seem to show a preference for riper fruits, wild chimps could end up consuming a significant amount of alcohol.
"Chimps don't share food all the time, so this behaviour with fermented fruit might be important," says University of Exeter biological anthropologist Kimberley Hockings.
They probably don't usually get drunk, a vulnerable condition few wild animals can afford, and the effect of alcohol on their metabolism is unknown.
The team points to previous findings that about 10 million years ago, a molecular adaptation in a common ancestor of African great apes "endowed our ancestors with a markedly enhanced ability to metabolize ethanol."
This coincided approximately with our ancestors' shift from arboreal to terrestrial lifestyles and may have been particularly valuable for life on forest floors – where older, riper, more fermented fruit is abundant.
Alcohol consumption thus seems to be older than humanity, since the genus Homo likely evolved within the last 3 million years, and our species only dates back about 300,000 years. Booze may have ancient roots not just for us, but also for closely related apes like chimpanzees.
"We need to find out more about whether they deliberately seek out ethanolic fruits and how they metabolise it, but this behaviour could be the early evolutionary stages of 'feasting,'" Hockings says.
"If so, it suggests the human tradition of feasting may have its origins deep in our evolutionary history."
The study was published in Current Biology.
Earth's Rotation Is Slowing Down, And It Could Explain Why We Have Oxygen
This Single-Celled Microbe Can Transform Into a Multicellular Creature
Scientists Spotted Signs of a Hidden Structure Inside Earth's Core

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Miami Herald
8 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Hobbyists dig up 4,500-year-old blade, lead archaeologists to sensational find
A group of amateur archaeologists made a surprising Neolithic discovery at a construction site in northwestern Germany that stunned even professionals. They had unearthed a 4,500-year-old flint blade fragment — a rare Stone Age find — in the Kernmünsterland region, along access roads to an area under development, according to a June 10 news release from the Regional Association of Westphalia-Lippe. Flint blades, or knives, were ancient cutting tools made from flint stones, according to Cotswold Archaeology. Experts said the heavy clay soils in the Kernmünsterland are not ideal for artifact preservation, and as a result, they have discovered hardly any Stone Age sites in the region. When staff of the Archaeology Center for Westphalia were shown the find, they decided to investigate the site themselves, according to the release. While conducting their own search, they found an even older artifact associated with the creation of small arrowheads dated to the Middle Stone Age between 9650 and 4900 B.C., officials said, calling it a sensational discovery. Experts said the layer of soil where the artifacts were discovered has been severely disturbed by years of cultivation, making a full-scale excavation of the site unnecessary. Officials said they expect to find more individual artifacts that could shed light on the ancient history of the region. The Regional Association of Westphalia-Lippe Archaeology Department is now monitoring the construction project, according to the release. Google Translate was used to translate the news release from the Regional Association of Westphalia-Lippe.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Oxford University to host global climate and human rights summit launch event
A panel of speakers from global climate leadership has been announced for a launch event in Oxford ahead of a climate summit. The University of Oxford will host the launch of the Right Here, Right Now Global Climate Summit 2025 at the Sheldonian Theatre on Wednesday, June 4. Featuring keynote speeches, panel discussions, and performances, the event will bring together leading voices from policy, activism, business, and academia to explore the relationship between climate change and human rights. The launch event will take place ahead of a 24-hour global online plenary extending into World Environment Day on June 5. The evening will begin with introductory remarks from Professor Irene Tracey, vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford, and Volker Türk, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. Professor Irene Tracey, vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford (Image: Contributed) The event will be hosted by Justin Rowlatt, climate editor at the BBC, and will include a rotation of speakers discussing how climate change impacts human rights and how these rights can inform responses to the climate crisis. The panel of speakers will include Lord Alok Sharma, a former COP26 president known for leading international negotiations resulting in the Glasgow Climate Pact. Vanessa Nakate, a climate justice activist and founder of the Rise Up Movement, who advocates for equitable climate solutions focusing on African communities, will also speak. Kate Raworth, an economist and co-founder of the Doughnut Economics Action Lab, whose work explores sustainable development within planetary boundaries, and Paul Polman, a business leader and former CEO of Unilever, known for championing responsible corporate climate action, will speak too. The audience will also hear from Professor Lavanya Rajamani, professor of international environmental law at Oxford, whose research and legal work supports climate-vulnerable nations in international negotiations, Emma Pinchbeck, chief executive of the Climate Change Committee, who leads the UK's independent advisory body on reaching net zero, and Dr Omnia El Omrani, a medical doctor and climate-health policy advocate, who has represented youth voices at recent UN climate summits and focuses on the health impacts of climate change. The event will be livestreamed and will conclude with a handover to partners at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji to begin the global programme at 10pm. The 24-hour plenary will include contributions from university hubs around the world, partners at UN Human Rights, and the International Universities Climate Alliance. The Oxford Mail and Oxford City Council are looking to find Oxford's climate heroes with this year's Oxford Climate Awards. Rose Hill and Iffley Low Carbon at the Oxford Climate Awards 2024 (Image: Joe Baker) They are looking for individuals or groups who champion environmental sustainability across categories including innovation in climate action, sustainable business, and green transport.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
What dinosaur has 500 teeth? Inside the conveyer belt jaw of Nigersaurus
What dinosaur has 500 teeth and replaced each and every one of them every 14 days? With 15 times more teeth than the human set of 32, Nigersaurus taqueti hacked through low-lying vegetation with choppers like a lawn mower, paleontologist and National Geographic Explorer Paul Sereno told National Geographic just years after he and colleagues first described and named the dinosaur. About as heavy as an adult African forest elephant, this dinosaur would have weighed about two tons and stretched about 30 feet long from nose to the tip of its tail. The herbivore wandered lowlands of western Africa about 105 million years ago in what's now the Republic of Niger. Nigersaurus was one of the most effective plant-eating creatures to have ever evolved. Here's what you need to know about Nigersaurus and its toothy way of life. The bones of Nigersaurus first came to the attention of paleontologists in the middle of the 20th century. Between 1965 and 1972, French paleontologist Philippe Taquet used previous fossil reports to confirm the suspected bonebeds in Niger. His search turned up multiple prehistoric species new to science, such as the sail-backed, duckbilled dinosaur Ouranosaurus and the gharial-like crocodile Sarcosuchus. One site, Gadofaoua, was especially promising and brimming with the bones of large dinosaurs. Taquet did not describe them in detail or name them, as there were so many other fossils in the area to study. The bones would wait 30 years for another team of paleontologists to dig in further. (Was there a dino the size of a hummingbird?) In 1997, a field team organized by Sereno, who is also a National Geographic Explorer, rediscovered the bones at Gadofaoua. 'The locality is quite remote, and the temperatures and shifting sands mean that it can be a challenging place to work,' says University of Michigan paleontologist Jeff Wilson Mantilla, who helped name Nigersaurus. Each piece of bone was extremely delicate. Some were so thin, light could shine through them. But after careful excavation, preparation, and study, it was clear that Taquet's sauropod was a new dinosaur unlike any seen before. In 1999, Sereno, Wilson Mantilla, and colleagues presented a scientific description of the plant-eater and named it Nigersaurus taqueti in honor of its country of origin and Taquet. Further finds made the following year filled even more of the skeleton, which showed that Nigersaurus was a very unusual relative of dinosaurs like Diplodocus. Experts found multiple Nigersaurus bones at the site, including neck bones still connected to each other and a jumble of several skull bones.'The skull bones were so strange looking that it was challenging to identify which element we were looking at,' Wilson Mantilla says. Paleontologists have continued studying Nigersaurus and how the dinosaur lived. Its eyes were positioned high on its skull, which may have given the herbivore overlapping visual fields to better watch out for stalking carnivores. A study of the dinosaur's limb bones further indicated that Nigersaurus had thin walls compared to the limb bones of large mammals. (See how these fierce dinos evolved.) Air sacs that invaded and surrounded some of the bones of Nigersaurus, like those found in birds that make their bones hollow, helped keep the dinosaur light enough that the animal did not need bulky bones to support its weight like large mammals do. Having hollow bones supported by air sacs was one of the key traits that allowed dinosaurs like Nigersaurus to get big. While all dinosaurs replace their teeth throughout their lives, Nigersaurus' process was unique. As dino teeth form, they are marked with tiny lines that form each day. 'Counting those lines tells you how old the teeth are,' Wilson Mantilla says. The count on Nigersaurusindicated that each of its teeth was replaced every two weeks, he notes, with seven replacements forming behind the exposed tooth at any one time. The shape of the dinosaur's jaws offered a clue to its dental overachieving. The muzzle of Nigersaurus was square, like a vacuum. Square muzzle shapes are common among animals that graze low to the ground, a hint that Nigersaurus did so too. "Its mouth appears designed for nipping rather than chomping or chewing," Sereno said in a 2007 interview with National Geographic. Wear patterns suggest Nigersaurus' teeth slid by one another like a pair of shears. Such low-growing plants are often tough to eat. Plants like horsetails contain tough, crystal-like material called silica, and vegetation that grew low to the ground would also have a lot of sand or other grit in it Wilson Mantilla says. Feeding on such roughage would have worn down the dinosaur's teeth very quickly, and so Nigersaurus evolved to replace its teeth fast. (Scientists find a new titanosaur dinosaur species in Patagonia.) Experts still have a lot to learn about Nigersaurus and how it evolved to be different from other plant-eating dinosaurs. Studying the unusual herbivore might help experts better understand how such dinosaurs spread all over the planet and thrived for so many millions of years. In time, bones that started as mysteries in the desert may unlock new paleo puzzles. Paleontologists uncovered the bones of many individual Nigersaurus from Gadofaoua, but no single complete skeleton. Thanks to cutting-edge technology, however, Wilson Mantilla and colleagues were able to make digital scans of the collected Nigersaurus bones in 2007 and adjust them to the same scale to create a reconstruction of the dinosaur. It was one of the first times paleontologists had used CT scans to reconstruct the skull anatomy of a dinosaur. (These ancient fish swam with the dinosaurs, but may not survive humans.) The CT scans also revealed the anatomy and position of the dinosaur's inner ear, which shows us how animals hold their heads and balance their bodies. For Nigersaurus, the digital scan indicated that the herbivore kept its muzzle tilted down toward the ground. Researchers also found that the brain cavity of Nigersaurus showed relatively small parts of the brain relating to smell. From this discovery, researchers can assume Nigersaurus probably wasn't very good at sniffing out approaching carnivores or where the tastiest plants might be. But that doesn't seem to have been a problem for a dinosaur that grazed all day.