Natural-Born Doctors

Bees, sheep, and chimps are just a few of the animals known to self-medicate. Can they teach us about maintaining our own health?

Written bySabrina Richards
| 4 min read

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Wikimedia, RandyNature can sometimes be brutal, but all animals have evolved strategies to cope. Some of these strategies go well beyond building shelter to weather the storm or forming alliances to provide safety in numbers. Many animals have gone so far as to alter their diets and behavior in ways that protect them from nature’s microscopic threats—parasites.

Chimpanzees held captive often succumb to infection by a parasitic worm, which can lead to lethal intestinal blockages or secondary bacterial infections. But chimps in the wild rarely succumb to such infections. More than 30 years ago, Michael Huffman, who studies evolution of social systems at the University of Kyoto, noticed that wild chimps were treating themselves by ingesting foods with special properties that fight intestinal worm infections. Since that time, scientists have identified numerous other species that partake in similar practices, including macaques and sheep. Now, recognition that various insects also self-medicate is enabling scientists to rigorously examine the phenomenon in the laboratory, with hopes of elucidating applications in animal husbandry and even human medicine.

Rough medicine

Huffman first encountered self-medicating chimps in Africa ...

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