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Ape-tastic: How a wounded orangutan used medicinal plants to treat himself
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  • Ape-tastic: How a wounded orangutan used medicinal plants to treat himself

Ape-tastic: How a wounded orangutan used medicinal plants to treat himself

FP Explainers • May 3, 2024, 13:35:58 IST
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In June 2022, a male Sumatran orangutan named Rakus suffered a facial wound below the right eye, most likely during a fight with another male orangutan at the Suaq Balimbing research site in Indonesia’s protected rainforest. What Rakus did three days later piqued the interest of scientists. He treated his wound using a medicinal plant

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Ape-tastic: How a wounded orangutan used medicinal plants to treat himself
A male Sumatran orangutan named Rakus, with a facial wound below the right eye, is seen in the Suaq Balimbing research site, a protected rainforest area in Indonesia, two days before the orangutan administered treatment to it using a medicinal plant. Reuters

For the first time, an orangutan named Rakus was found treating his wound with medicine from a tropical plant in Indonesia. Scientists observed Rakus plucking and chewing leaves from a medicinal plant used to treat pain and inflammation throughout Southeast Asia.

The adult male orangutan then used his fingers to apply the plant juices to an injury on his right cheek. According to a new study published in Scientific Reports, he then used the chewed plant as a makeshift bandage to cover the open wound. And the wound closed within a month without any problems.

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Previous research has shown that several species of great apes forage for medicines in forests to heal themselves, but scientists had never seen an animal treat itself in this manner.

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Here’s what we know so far.

Treated the wound using medicinal plant

Ulil Azhari, a co-author and field researcher at the Suaq Project in Medan, Indonesia, observed the orangutan’s unusual behaviour in 2022, in which a wild animal applied a highly potent medicinal plant directly to a wound.

In June 2022, a male Sumatran orangutan named Rakus suffered a facial wound below the right eye, most likely during a fight with another male orangutan at the Suaq Balimbing research site in Indonesia’s protected rainforest. What Rakus did three days later piqued the interest of scientists.

Researchers on Thursday described observing how Rakus appeared to treat the wound using a plant known for its pain-relieving properties and for supporting wound healing due to its antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, anti-fungal and antioxidant qualities.

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The orangutan chewed the plant’s leaves to produce a liquid that Rakus repeatedly smeared on the wound and then applied the chewed-up plant material directly to the injury, much like a wound plaster administered by doctors, according to primatologist and cognitive biologist Isabelle Laumer of the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour in Germany.

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Rakus also ate the plant, an evergreen vine commonly called Akar Kuning — scientific name Fibraurea tinctoria, added Laumer, lead author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports. This plant is rarely eaten by orangutans in this peat swamp forest area, home to about 150 critically endangered Sumatran orangutans.

“To our knowledge, this is the first documented case of active wound treatment with a plant species with medical properties by a wild animal,” said study senior author Caroline Schuppli, an evolutionary biologist at the institute.

Making a selection

Rakus, believed to have been born in 1989, is a flanged male, with large cheek pads on both sides of the face — secondary male sexual characteristics. Rakus was one of the area’s dominant males.

The researchers said the orangutan’s wound self-treatment did not appear to be happenstance.

A male Sumatran orangutan named Rakus is seen two months after self-treating a wound using a medicinal plant in the Suaq Balimbing research site, a protected rainforest area in Indonesia, with the facial wound below the right eye barely visible anymore. Reuters

“His behaviour appeared to be intentional. He selectively treated his facial wound on his right flange with the plant juice, and no other body parts. The behaviour was repeated several times, not only plant juice but later also more-solid plant material was applied until the wound was fully covered. The entire process took a considerable amount of time,” Laumer said.

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The wound never showed signs of infection and closed within five days, the researchers said.

“The observation suggests that the cognitive capacities that are needed for the behaviour — active wound treatment with plants — may be as old as the last common ancestor of orangutans and humans,” Schuppli said. “However, what these cognitive capacities exactly are remains to be investigated. Whereas this observation shows that orangutans are capable of treating their wounds with plants, we don’t know to what extent they understand the process.”

The last common ancestor of orangutans and humans lived about 13 million years ago.

Orangutans: Excellent problem-solvers

Orangutans are one of the world’s great apes — the closest living relatives of humans — alongside chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas. Orangutans are the least closely related to humans of them but still share approximately 97 per cent of our DNA.

“It is possible that wound treatment with Fibraurea tinctoria emerges through accidental individual innovation. Individuals may accidentally touch their wounds while feeding on Fibraurea tinctoria and thus unintentionally apply the plant’s juice to their wounds,” Laumer said.

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“But it may also be,” Laumer added, “that Rakus has learned this behaviour from other orangutans in his birth area.”

This plant, widely distributed across China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and other parts of Southeast Asia, is used in traditional medicine to treat conditions such as malaria.

Orangutan means “person of the forest” in the Indonesian and Malay languages, and these apes are the world’s biggest arboreal mammal. Orangutans, adapted to living in trees, live more solitary lives than other great apes, sleeping and eating fruit in the forest canopy and swinging from branch to branch.

“Orangutans have high cognitive abilities, in particular in the area of physical cognition,” Schuppli said. “They are known to be excellent problem-solvers. Wild orangutans acquire their skill sets via observational social learning, and skills get passed on from generation to generation. The population where this observation was made is known for its rich cultural repertoire, including tool use in different contexts.”

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With inputs from Reuters

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