Animals Self-Medicate With Plants − Behavior People Have Observed And Emulated For Millennia

The term zoopharmacognosy – “animal medicine knowledge” – was invented in 1987.

goat-with-arrow-wound-nibbling-on-plant
(Credit: O. Dapper, CC BY) A goat with an arrow wound nibbles the medicinal herb dittany.

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When a wild orangutan in Sumatra recently suffered a facial wound, apparently after fighting with another male, he did something that caught the attention of the scientists observing him.

The animal chewed the leaves of a liana vine—a plant not normally eaten by apes. Over several days, the orangutan carefully applied the juice to its wound, then covered it with a paste of chewed-up liana. The wound healed with only a faint scar. The tropical plant he selected has antibacterial and antioxidant properties and is known to alleviate pain, fever, bleeding, and inflammation.

The striking story was picked up by media worldwide. In interviews and in their research paper, the scientists stated that this is “the first systematically documented case of active wound treatment by a wild animal” with a biologically active plant. The discovery will “provide new insights into the origins of human wound care.”

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