Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Studying animal milk’s powers

National Zoo’s big stockpile could ensure survival

- By Sarah Kaplan

WASHINGTON — To milk an ape requires patience and peanuts.

Fortunatel­y, National Zoo primate keeper Erin Stromberg has plenty of both as she approaches Batang, a 21-year-old Bornean orangutan, on a recent morning.

Stromberg is there to retrieve a breast milk sample for the zoo’s exotic animal milk collection, the largest U.S. repository of its kind.

“Hello!” she calls, singsong, as the auburnhair­ed primate presses herself against the metal grate of her enclosure. Batang’s mouth is open, her lower jaw protruding; she knows what time it is. Stromberg hands her a peanut, then another, and Batang munches happily as shells accumulate on the floor. Her 2-year-old son, a bouncing ball of fur named Redd, clambers over his mother’s back to beg a treat for himself.

“Hello, you go away,” the keeper says dismissive­ly before giving him a nut. “Bye! See ya.”

She unscrews the cap of a small vial, then turns her attention to her charge. But Batang appears to have changed her mind, swinging away from the grate.

“You can do it,” Stromberg says, her voice low and soothing. “You’ll be fine.”

Batang returns, slowly this time. She accepts several more nuts from her keeper, then pushes her chest forward, finally presenting Stromberg with her breast.

“That’s good, that’s good.” Stromberg holds her vial below Batang’s nipple and tugs gently until milk comes out. The orangutan continues to grab treats with one hand while gripping the side of the enclosure with the other.

There is something powerfully familiar about her wrinkled knuckles, opposable thumbs, and the intent gaze of her black eyes.

“Good, good girl,” Stromberg says.

After 15 minutes, there are just a few dribbles of milk in the vial. But Batang is looking antsy, and it’s important to Stromberg that this experiment be entirely voluntary. If the ape doesn’t feel like participat­ing today, there’s always next time, and the time after that. Batang has been donating small amounts of her breast milk every week for the last two years.

Each vial goes up the hill to the zoo’s nutrition lab, where it is stored in a massive deep freezer alongside samples from hundreds of other species: zebra, gorilla, black bear, African elephant, marmoset, armadillo, two-toed sloth.

Milk, explains Mike Power, the Smithsonia­n scientist who curates this collection, is mammals’ superpower.

It’s full of nutritious fats and sugars that turn wobbly, helpless newborns into selfsuffic­ient adults. It contains antibodies that increase infants’ chances of survival and hormones that help them grow. This powerful biochemica­l concoction carries clues to animals’ evolutiona­ry past and hints about how they live today. Understand­ing what it’s made of may be the key to securing some species’ futures.

Yet even though milk is (or was) produced by all 6,495 members of the class Mammalia, scientists rarely study the substance except when it comes from cows, goats and humans.

Power and his colleagues aim to change that.

On the same morning that Stromberg and Batang struggle with milking, scientists in the zoo’s nutrition lab are preparing a vial of bottlenose dolphin milk for analysis. The substance inside the test tube is bright orange and weirdly solid.

“It’s very high fat,” Power explains, because a newborn dolphin’s first priority is to quickly grow a blubber layer. “More like butter than milk.”

Apparently, the dolphin milk also smells of fish, but the subtler scent is masked by the powerful fecal stench suffusing the lab.

“Sorry about that,” Power says, grimacing. Milk is not the only bodily substance he and his colleagues study.

With a centrifuge, a mass spectromet­er, and other instrument­s, the zoo scientists separate each milk sample into its component parts. Their first objective is to determine the basic compositio­n of milk from each species, which can reveal aspects of animals’ lifestyles and diets. Whereas dolphins and other marine mammals produce milk that is as much as 60 percent fat, carnivores such as African lions give milk that is high in protein. Animals that subsist on a diet of carbohydra­te-rich plants feed their young milk that’s full of sugar.

Though humans eat plenty of meat, we fall into the latter category, a sign of our membership in the mostly herbivorou­s primate family. Our mothers’ milk is about 7 percent sugar, 1 percent protein, 4 percent fat, and half a percent minerals such as iron and calcium. The remainder is water.

Even though Power has studied milk from scores of species, the substance still has the capacity to surprise. When he collected his first samples from nine-banded armadillos, he was startled to discover the animals’ milk was 11 percent protein and as much as 3.6 percent minerals. These proportion­s seemed oddly high for a small insectivor­e — until he realized that infant armadillos likely used the nutrients to build their bony carapaces.

But milk compositio­n isn’t only about a baby’s needs. Sometimes, it’s a function of what a mother can provide.

“People say that milk is the perfect food,” Power says. “But really, it’s a compromise.” Young animals would like the most nutrient dense milk imaginable, but their mothers can only afford to devote so much energy to nurturing a child.

Stromberg and Power hope to track the way Batang’s milk changes throughout this period — a defining time in mammalian developmen­t.

“There’s a whole set of biochemica­l communicat­ion in the placenta,” Power said. During nursing, “it becomes two-way.”

“Large parts of the mammalian babies’ developmen­t is coming from biochemica­l signals that are being produced in the milk,” he continued. Tracking these signals might reveal how mothers’ bodies respond to babies’ illnesses and other needs.

Understand­ing the inner workings of animals’ breasts is more than just a fun biology question. For animals in captivity, zookeepers’ ability to replicate their mothers’ milk could secure their survival.

When Fiona, the Cincinnati Zoo’s celebrated infant hippopotam­us, was born 30 pounds too light and six weeks premature last year, she was so weak she couldn’t even stand to suckle.

So her keepers sent Power a sample of her mother’s milk to analyze, and he came up with a formula — lots of protein, a sprinkling of fat and sugar. Within a month she was drinking 20 bottles a day and had more than doubled her weight.

 ?? DAVE JORGENSON/WASHINGTON POST ?? Primate keeper Erin Stromberg milks 21-year-old Bornean orangutan Batang at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C.
DAVE JORGENSON/WASHINGTON POST Primate keeper Erin Stromberg milks 21-year-old Bornean orangutan Batang at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C.

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