Why
Chimps Eat Dirt
By
Clara Moskowitz, LiveScience Staff Writer
posted:
11 January 2008 09:11 am ET
Chimps
eat dirt. This has been known for years.
And
while chimp cuisine might look more gritty than gourmet to us, it turns out our
closest animal relations have a good reason for feasting on soil: It improves
their health.
By
studying samples of soil eaten by chimpanzees in Kibale National Park in Uganda,
a research team led by Sabrina Krief of the Muséum National dHistoire
Naturelle in Paris found that eating soil with their meals boosts the anti-malarial
properties of plants the chimps eat.
Krief
collected the dirt along with leaves from one of the chimps' favorite foods, the
Trichilia rubescens plant. She found that when eaten alone, the leaves had no
pharmacological effect, but when combined with soil, the mixture had clear anti-malarial
properties.
Scientists
previously suspected that animals might eat dirt when stressed or as a source
of missing minerals. This new result is the first suggestion that the combination
of soil and other foods could have health benefits, Krief said.
"Here
we show by eating plants and soil shortly after, the properties of the plants
may be revealed or enhanced," she told LiveScience. "Its this
association of items which provide potential benefits which is new."
The
study will be published online this week in the journal Naturwissenschaften.
Krief
also compared the dirt chimps eat to that used by nearby human healers to treat
diarrhea. The samples shared many similarities, including a high concentration
of the mineral kaolinite, the main ingredient of some anti-diarrheal medicines.
"Local
people around Kibale use soil in traditional medicine, associated to different
plant parts," Krief said. "It may potentialize the properties of plant
or attenuate their toxicity by adsorbing noxious compounds."
This
discovery could help reinforce the idea that conservation benefits humans and
animals alike, Krief said.
"This
overlapping use by humans and apes is interesting from both evolutionary and conservation
perspectives," she said. "Saving apes and their forests is also important
for human health."