Posts: 5,104
Threads: 237
Likes Received: 3,608 in 1,515 posts
Likes Given: 2,992
Joined: Dec 2012
Reputation:
69
Country:
Hello all,
I'm happy to announce that Caesar xoxo has passed his trial and will be joining the administrator team. He has done very well in his trial and this promotion is long overdue.
Congratulations Caesar, I'm sure you will do great!
Pollux
Fearless Management
__________________________________________________________________
The following 15 users Like Pollux's post:
• Caesar, Ranger, TheSiphon, Boonan, Wolven, -DanTheMan-, EAGLE:), Edned, Luminess, Luna, Jessixa, ART, max., Toe Shmicki, Idea
Posts: 331
Threads: 33
Likes Received: 307 in 125 posts
Likes Given: 135
Joined: Feb 2013
Reputation:
11
Country:
The chimpanzees of the Rekambo community in Gabon, West Africa, never fail to surprise. For a start, they are known to kill and eat tortoises, which sets them apart from any other community of chimpanzees. Now they have been seen displaying another unique behavior—one which has never been seen before despite many years of painstaking research.
In a new study published in the journal Current Biology, researchers have described how they saw Rekambo chimpanzees applying insects to their own open wounds, and, even more amazingly, to the wounds of other community members too.
Even by itself, treating wounds with insects is a groundbreaking observation—but until now no other animal, apart from humans, has been seen treating the wounds of others.
Humans have been using local remedies (such as roots, leaves, bark, and other animals) as medicine for at least 5,000 years, a practice that has been passed down over generations within societies all over the world.
There is some use of invertebrates in traditional human medicine too. For example, leeches have been used to clean wounds, slugs and snails to treat inflammation, spider webs to dress wounds, and termite pincers to inject medicine under the skin.
Is it possible, perhaps, that such cultural use of plants and animals to treat injuries and illness was inherited from a common ape-like ancestor millions of years ago?