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Indonesia
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Wild orangutan seen using medicinal plant to treat wound, scientists say

  • An adult male named Rakus chewed a plant used by people in Southeast Asia to treat pain and inflammation, then applied it to an injury on his right cheek
  • Photographs show the animal’s wound closed within a month without any problems

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Rakus, a Sumatran orangutan, is seen two months after he started treating himself with a medicinal plant at a protected rainforest area in Indonesia. Photo:Safruddin/Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour via Reuters
Associated Press

An orangutan has apparently learned to treat wounds with medicine from a tropical plant – the latest example of how some animals attempt to soothe their own ills with remedies found in the wild, scientists reported on Thursday.

Scientists observed Rakus pluck and chew up leaves of a medicinal plant used by people throughout Southeast Asia to treat pain and inflammation. The adult male orangutan then used his fingers to apply the plant juices to an injury on the right cheek.

Afterward, he pressed the chewed plant to cover the open wound like a makeshift bandage, according to a new study in Scientific Reports.

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Previous research has documented several species of great apes foraging for medicines in forests to heal themselves, but scientists hadn’t yet seen an animal treat itself in this way.

“This is the first time that we have observed a wild animal applying a quite potent medicinal plant directly to a wound,” said co-author Isabelle Laumer, a biologist at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour in Konstanz, Germany.

A male Sumatran orangutan named Rakus is seen with a facial wound below the right eye in the Suaq Balimbing research site, a protected rainforest area in Indonesia, in June 2022. Photo: Armas/Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour via Reuters
A male Sumatran orangutan named Rakus is seen with a facial wound below the right eye in the Suaq Balimbing research site, a protected rainforest area in Indonesia, in June 2022. Photo: Armas/Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour via Reuters

The orangutan’s intriguing behaviour was recorded in 2022 by Ulil Azhari, a co-author and field researcher at the Suaq Project in Medan, Indonesia.

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