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Tree-shrew is heavyweight boozer | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
A tiny tree-shrew that lives on alcoholic nectar could - pound for pound - drink the average human under the table, scientists have discovered. | A tiny tree-shrew that lives on alcoholic nectar could - pound for pound - drink the average human under the table, scientists have discovered. |
Malaysia's pen-tailed tree-shrew waits until nightfall to binge on fermented nectar from the bertam palm. | Malaysia's pen-tailed tree-shrew waits until nightfall to binge on fermented nectar from the bertam palm. |
The animal could give insights into how humans' alcohol tolerance first evolved, the scientists say. | The animal could give insights into how humans' alcohol tolerance first evolved, the scientists say. |
The team has published details of its work in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. | The team has published details of its work in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. |
Despite the shrews' small size, they are no lightweights when it comes to their alcohol intake. | Despite the shrews' small size, they are no lightweights when it comes to their alcohol intake. |
Nectar from the flower buds of the bertam palm is fermented to a maximum alcohol content of up to 3.8%. | Nectar from the flower buds of the bertam palm is fermented to a maximum alcohol content of up to 3.8%. |
Each bud is a miniature brewery, containing a yeast community that turns the nectar into a frothy beer-like beverage. | Each bud is a miniature brewery, containing a yeast community that turns the nectar into a frothy beer-like beverage. |
Yet the animals, which are about the size of a small rat, do not seem to get drunk at all, researchers say. | Yet the animals, which are about the size of a small rat, do not seem to get drunk at all, researchers say. |
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Tree-shrew 'boozes' on nectar | Tree-shrew 'boozes' on nectar |
Frank Wiens, from the University of Bayreuth in Germany, and colleagues confirmed the animals' high alcohol consumption by analysing their hair. | Frank Wiens, from the University of Bayreuth in Germany, and colleagues confirmed the animals' high alcohol consumption by analysing their hair. |
Chemicals in the hair samples showed that on any given night, a tree-shrew had a 36% chance of being drunk by human standards. | Chemicals in the hair samples showed that on any given night, a tree-shrew had a 36% chance of being drunk by human standards. |
The shrew's resistance to intoxication suggests its body must have an effective mechanism for breaking down alcohol. | The shrew's resistance to intoxication suggests its body must have an effective mechanism for breaking down alcohol. |
This should not come as too much of a surprise: scientists believe the animals - which are distant relatives of humans - have had 55 million years of evolution to adapt to their boozy lifestyle. | This should not come as too much of a surprise: scientists believe the animals - which are distant relatives of humans - have had 55 million years of evolution to adapt to their boozy lifestyle. |
The researchers used radio tags to track the creatures on their crawls and recorded video of their feeding sessions. | The researchers used radio tags to track the creatures on their crawls and recorded video of their feeding sessions. |
Humans may even preserve a relic of the shrews' love of alcohol that has lasted through millions of years of evolution. | Humans may even preserve a relic of the shrews' love of alcohol that has lasted through millions of years of evolution. |
In their PNAS paper, the scientists wrote that the pen-tailed tree-shrew is "a living model for extinct mammals, representing the stock from all extinct and living tree-shrews and primates radiated". | In their PNAS paper, the scientists wrote that the pen-tailed tree-shrew is "a living model for extinct mammals, representing the stock from all extinct and living tree-shrews and primates radiated". |
They added: "Therefore, we hypothesise that moderate to high alcohol intake was present early on in the evolution of these closely related lineages." | They added: "Therefore, we hypothesise that moderate to high alcohol intake was present early on in the evolution of these closely related lineages." |
The researchers also filmed a primate known as a slow loris feeding from the bertam palm. | The researchers also filmed a primate known as a slow loris feeding from the bertam palm. |
The palm produces nectar year-round on a complex schedule that appears to maximize pollination by small mammals. | The palm produces nectar year-round on a complex schedule that appears to maximize pollination by small mammals. |
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Slow loris fancies a tipple | Slow loris fancies a tipple |
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