Animals indulge in Self Medication
Animal
pharmacists! The practice of self medication in animal is lot more widespread
than previously thought, according to new research.
Animals use
medications to treat various ailments through both learned and innate behaviors,
researchers said.
The fact that
moths, ants and fruit flies are now known to self-medicate has profound
implications for the ecology and evolution of animal hosts and their parasites,
according to ecologist Mark Hunter from the University of Michigan.
Because plants
remain the most promising source of future pharmaceuticals, studies of animal
medication may lead the way in discovering new drugs to relieve human
suffering, Hunter and two colleagues wrote in a review article to be published
in the journal Science.
“When we watch
animals foraging for food in nature, we now have to ask, are they visiting the
grocery store or are they visiting the pharmacy?” Hunter, a professor in the
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and at the school of Natural
Resources and Environment, said.
“We can learn a
lot about how to treat parasites and disease by watching other animals,” he
said.
Much of the work
in this field has focused on cases in which animals such as baboons and woolly
bear caterpillars, medicate themselves.
Hunter and his
colleagues suggested that researchers in the field should “de-emphasize the
‘self’ in self-medication” and base their studies on a more inclusive
framework.
“Perhaps the
biggest surprise for us was that animals like fruit flies and butterflies can
choose food for their offspring that minimizes the impacts of disease in the
next generation.”
“There are
strong parallels with the emerging field of epigenetic in humans, where we now
understand that dietary choices made by parents influence the long-term health
of their children,” Hunter said.
Researchers
argued that animal medication has several major consequences on the ecology and
evolution of host-parasite interactions. For one when animal medication reduces
the health of parasites, there should be observable effects on parasite
transmission or virulence.
In addition,
animal-medication should affect the evolution of animal immune systems,
according to Hunter and his colleagues. Honeybees are known to incorporate
antimicrobial resins into their nests.
Analysis of the
Honeybee genome suggests that they lack many of the immune-system genes of
other insects, raising the possibility that Honeybees’ use of medicine has been
partly responsible – or has compensated – for a loss of other immune
mechanisms.
Researchers also
note that the study of animal medication will have direct relevance for human
food production.
Source: - DECCAN HERALD
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