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020 _a9780691239248
_cRM 162.00
_qhardback
040 _aPPAK
_beng
_cPPAK
_erda
082 0 4 _223
_a591.5
090 0 0 _a591.5
_bDER
_dG
100 1 _aDe Roode, Jaap,
_d1977-
_eauthor.
245 1 0 _aDOCTORS BY NATURE :
_bHow Ants, Apes, and Other Animals Heal Themselves /
_cJAAP DE ROODE
264 1 _aPrinceton :
_bPrinceton University Press,
_c[2025]
264 4 _c©2025
300 _aix, 251 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c23 cm
336 _atext
_2rdacontent
337 _aunmediated
_2rdamedia
338 _avolume
_2rdacarrier
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 _aBirds, bees, and butterflies -- Chimp Chausiku -- Parasites and pathogens -- Beetles and bulldogs -- Birds and butts -- Ants and aliens -- Poisons and proteins -- Living and learning -- Woolly wisdom -- Sticky bee business -- Dogs are dogs -- Elephant educators -- Cat and catnip -- Plants and pollinators.
520 _a"What happens when animals get sick? Do they rely exclusively on their bodies own defense systems to protect them, or are there other behaviors they can use to heal themselves? Humans have been using plants, fungi, and other natural mechanisms to treat ailments and disease for millennia--why not animals too? It turns out they do! In 1987, primatologist Michael Huffman noticed an ill chimpanzee collecting shoots of a plant called Vernonia amygdalina, which humans in the area used to treat stomach upset and fever. The ill chimpanzee removed the plant's outer bark and sucked on the soft inner branches. Within 24 hours, she appeared to have largely recovered. Although there have been stories about animals medicating themselves, and traditional healers have looked to animals to help develop treatments for years, Huffman's observations are widely considered the first official scientific evidence of an animal actively medicating itself to treat disease. Since then, scientists have found conclusive evidence for medication in all manner of species--including bees, ants and butterflies, as well as monkeys, birds, apes, and elephants. Self-medication behaviors (for which scientists have developed a rigorous field definition) range from prophylactic consumption of anti-parasitic berries by monkeys and therapeutic use of alkaloids by woolly bear caterpillars, to blue jays' use of ant-produced formic acid as bug-repellent. In Animal Doctors, Professor of Biology and science communicator Jaap de Roode will provide an overview of the scientific study of animal self-medication, drawing on both the scientific literature and first-person interviews with key contributors to the field to ask how animals use medication against the parasites and pathogens that ail them."
650 1 0 _aHealth behavior in animals
650 2 0 _aAnimals
_xDrug use
942 _2ddc
_cB
999 _c203361
_d203361