The Star Malaysia

Orang utan treats own injury

-

SCIENTISTS have observed an orang utan applying medicinal herbs to a face wound in an apparently successful attempt to heal an injury, the first time such behaviour has been recorded.

Primates have previously been seen eating plants or rubbing them on themselves in behaviour scientists theorised was intended to ward off disease or discomfort.

But the apparent treatment seen by researcher­s in Indonesia in 2022, and reported in the journal Nature Scientific Reports recently, is the first time a wild animal has been seen applying medicinal plants to a wound.

Scientists were tracking a male orang utan nicknamed Rakus at the Gunung Leuser National Park in Indonesia’s Aceh province when they noticed an open wound on his face.

Three days later, they spotted him chewing the leaves of a vine called Fibraurea tinctoria, which is known for its medicinal properties and has long been used in local traditiona­l medicine.

The orang utan “... began chewing the leaves without swallowing them and using his fingers to apply the plant juice from his mouth directly onto his facial wound”, said the study by Indonesian and German scientists.

When flies began to land on the site, Rakus “smeared the entire wound with the plant pulp until the red flesh was fully covered with the green leaf material”.

The next day, Rakus was seen eating the vine’s leaves again, and a week later his wound had closed up, subsequent­ly healing without any sign of infection.

The study describes the behaviour as the “... first systematic­ally documented case of active wound treatment with a plant species known to contain biological­ly active substances by a wild animal”.

Researcher­s said it was impossible to be sure the behaviour was intentiona­l, but the fact that the juice and leaves were applied repeatedly and only to the wound suggests Rakus was trying to treat his injury.

They speculate the orang utan could have stumbled across the treatment, perhaps by first chewing the plant and then finding the juice offered pain relief when accidental­ly touching it to a wound.

Orang utans are known to learn skills from each other through observatio­n, but the scientists said they had no record of similar behaviour in 21 years and 28,000 observatio­n hours in the area.

Rakus however had moved to the region from elsewhere, raising the possibilit­y he learned the medical technique from a different community.

The observatio­n adds to a growing body of evidence about the way primates use plants to keep healthy, including swallowing whole leaves that have anti-parasitic properties.

Elsewhere in Indonesia, orang utans have been seen rubbing the chewed leaves of a different plant into their skin, possibly to harness its anti-inflammato­ry properties.

And in 2022, scientists reported on chimpanzee­s in Gabon that were seen apparently applying insects to wounds.

 ?? — Filepic ?? according to a report, an orang utan in an Indonesian national park was seen in 2022 to treat his own wounds.
— Filepic according to a report, an orang utan in an Indonesian national park was seen in 2022 to treat his own wounds.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia