Science Wounded orangutan seen using plant as medicine - Return to monke


A Sumatran orangutan in Indonesia has self-medicated using a paste made from plants to heal a large wound on his cheek, say scientists.

It is the first time a creature in the wild has been recorded treating an injury with a medicinal plant.

After researchers saw Rakus applying the plant poultice to his face, the wound closed up and healed in a month.

Scientists say the behaviour could come from a common ancestor shared by humans and great apes.

"They are our closest relatives and this again points towards the similarities we share with them. We are more similar than we are different," said biologist Dr Isabella Laumer at the Max Planck institute in Germany and lead author of the research.

A research team in the Gunung Leuser National Park, Indonesia spotted Rakus with a large wound on his cheek in June 2022.

They believe he was injured fighting with rival male orangutans because he made loud cries called "long calls" in the days before they saw the wound.

The team then saw Rakus chewing the stem and leaves of plant called Akar Kuning - an anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial plant that is also used locally to treat malaria and diabetes.

Orangutan Rakus with a medicinal leaf in his mouth
IMAGE SOURCE,ARMAS
Image caption,
Scientists saw Rakus chewing a medicinal leaf into a paste
He repeatedly applied the liquid onto his cheek for seven minutes. Rakus then smeared the chewed leaves onto his wound until it was fully covered. He continued to feed on the plant for over 30 minutes.

The paste and leaves then appear to have done their magic - the researchers saw no sign of infection and the wound closed within five days.

After a month, Rakus was fully healed.

After a month, the wound on Rakus's cheek was healed
IMAGE SOURCE,SAFRUDDIN
Image caption,
After a month, the wound on Rakus's cheek was healed
The scientists concluded that Rakus knew he was applying medicine because orangutans very rarely eat this particular plant and because of the length of the treatment.

"He repeatedly applied the paste, and he later also applied more solid plant matter. The entire process lasted really a considerable amount of time - that's why we think that he intentionally applied it," explains Dr Laumer.

The researchers also saw Rakus resting for much longer than usual - more than half of the day - suggesting he was trying to recuperate after the injury.

Scientists were already aware that great apes used medicine to try to heal themselves.

In the 1960s biologist Jane Goodall saw whole leaves in the faeces of chimpanzees, and others documented seeing great apes swallowing leaves with medicinal properties.

But they had never seen a wild animal applying a plant to a wound.

Dr Laumer says it is possible that it was the first time Rakus had done this type of treatment.

"It could be that he accidentally touched his wound with his finger that had the plant on it. And then because the plant has quite potent pain relieving substances he might have felt immediate pain relief, which made him apply it again and again," she says.

Or he could have learned the method from watching other orangutans in his group.

The researchers will now be closely watching other orangutans to see if they can spot the same medical skills that Rakus showed.

"I think in the next few years we will discover even more behaviours and more abilities that are very human-like," she suggests.

The research is published in the scientific journal Scientific Reports.
 
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He has no style,
He has no grace,
This kong has a fully-healed face.

The picture of the wound from the article (the video on the site shows it a bit more clearly) looks rough. I could easily see it getting infected out there. Glad he's doing okay.
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I have my doubts that this isn't something one of these people taught it to do. Using tools is one thing but theres no rational reason for it to think of doing this or that applying it to a wound in that manner would do anything. If anything it would eat the leaves not apply them like this. It saw a human do this or was trained to do this deliberately
 
I have my doubts that this isn't something one of these people taught it to do. Using tools is one thing but theres no rational reason for it to think of doing this or that applying it to a wound in that manner would do anything. If anything it would eat the leaves not apply them like this. It saw a human do this or was trained to do this deliberately
They have nothing better to do than sit around all day eating leaves and fucking, leaf make monke feel better isnt that preposterous
 
I have my doubts that this isn't something one of these people taught it to do. Using tools is one thing but theres no rational reason for it to think of doing this or that applying it to a wound in that manner would do anything. If anything it would eat the leaves not apply them like this. It saw a human do this or was trained to do this deliberately
Who trained human beings to develop medicine?
 
It could be that he accidentally touched his wound with his finger that had the plant on it. And then because the plant has quite potent pain relieving substances he might have felt immediate pain relief, which made him apply it again and again," she says.
Unlikely
Or he could have learned the method from watching other orangutans in his group.
More likely. Or he was told.
 
A thing that everyone overlooks is that apes are very capable of learning and adapting. This is seen with attempts to exterminate monkeys with poison and what would happen is that the monkeys who didn't eat the poison will teach others to stay away from it.

Which is kind of a grim reminder that we as a species are quite prone to retardation as seen during the Wu-Flu Vaxx blitz. Also as an added bonus, have a segment of Metokur narrating how he loves monkeys as part of a skit with Guru Larry... couldn't find the video anymore so I'm uploading it here. And this came way before AI voice was a thing.

 
They have nothing better to do than sit around all day eating leaves and fucking, leaf make monke feel better isnt that preposterous
We, of course, have much better things to do. Like fill out tax returns and argue on the internet whilst figuring how to pay the power bill.

“Man had always assumed that he was more intelligent than dolphins because he had achieved so much… the wheel, New York, wars, and so on, whilst all the dolphins had ever done was muck about in the water having a good time. But conversely the dolphins believed themselves to be more intelligent than man for precisely the same reasons.”
 
What will be more fascinating is if this ape is not only able to teach his comrades of his newfound skill, but if the ables are able to pass the knowledge onto future generations, creating history.

History is one separator of beast from man. The other is writing. If the apes can produce the former perhaps they can produce the latter. Thus the ape of yesterday can teach the ape of the future.

I think we are witnessing something beyond evolution.

Or this is just a retarded monkey copying a tourist.
 
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