When physiological adaptation is insufficient, hosts have developed behavioral responses to avoid or limit contact with parasites. One such behavior, leaf-swallowing, occurs widely among the African great apes. This behavior involves the slow and deliberate swallowing without chewing of whole bristly leaves. Folded one at a time between tongue and palate, the leaves pass through the gastro-intestinal (GI) tract visibly unchanged. Independent studies in two populations of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) showed significant correlations between the swallowing of whole leaves and the expulsion of the nodule worm Oesophagostomum stephanostomum and a species of tapeworm (Bertiella studeri). We integrate behavioral, parasitological an...
Observations of animals in the wild can result in the discovery of plants for human medicinal purpos...
276 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.In this dissertation, I exami...
Mueller-Klein N, Heistermann M, Strube C, et al. Physiological and social consequences of gastrointe...
Leaf swallowing behaviour, known as a form of self-medication for the control of nematode and tapew...
Researchers have described apparently self-medicative behaviors for a variety of nonhuman species in...
International audienceNodular worms (Oesophagostomum spp.) are common intestinal parasites found in ...
[Background]Ingestion of plant parts purportedly for their non-nutritive and/or bioactive properties...
Many major human infectious diseases are transmitted via bodily products such as feces, blood, semen...
Investigation of self-medicative behavior in the African great apes is important. for understanding ...
Le Leaf Swallowing (LS) consiste en une consommation atypiquement lente de feuilles souvent rugueuse...
Chimpanzees Pan troglodytes in Kibale National Park, Uganda occasionally swallow entire leaves of Ru...
Many primate populations are severely threatened by human activity. Illegal hunting with snares freq...
The swallowing of entire leaves by apes acrossAfricawithout chewing has been observed for over 40 pl...
International audienceCertain toxic plants are beneficial for health if small amounts are ingested i...
One of the major factors threatening chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) in Guinea-Bissau is habitat...
Observations of animals in the wild can result in the discovery of plants for human medicinal purpos...
276 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.In this dissertation, I exami...
Mueller-Klein N, Heistermann M, Strube C, et al. Physiological and social consequences of gastrointe...
Leaf swallowing behaviour, known as a form of self-medication for the control of nematode and tapew...
Researchers have described apparently self-medicative behaviors for a variety of nonhuman species in...
International audienceNodular worms (Oesophagostomum spp.) are common intestinal parasites found in ...
[Background]Ingestion of plant parts purportedly for their non-nutritive and/or bioactive properties...
Many major human infectious diseases are transmitted via bodily products such as feces, blood, semen...
Investigation of self-medicative behavior in the African great apes is important. for understanding ...
Le Leaf Swallowing (LS) consiste en une consommation atypiquement lente de feuilles souvent rugueuse...
Chimpanzees Pan troglodytes in Kibale National Park, Uganda occasionally swallow entire leaves of Ru...
Many primate populations are severely threatened by human activity. Illegal hunting with snares freq...
The swallowing of entire leaves by apes acrossAfricawithout chewing has been observed for over 40 pl...
International audienceCertain toxic plants are beneficial for health if small amounts are ingested i...
One of the major factors threatening chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) in Guinea-Bissau is habitat...
Observations of animals in the wild can result in the discovery of plants for human medicinal purpos...
276 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.In this dissertation, I exami...
Mueller-Klein N, Heistermann M, Strube C, et al. Physiological and social consequences of gastrointe...