Scientists find tree shrew species is born to drink
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Monday, July 28th, 2008

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CHRONIC BOOZER The pentailed tree shrew of Malaysia spends several hours a night licking fermented nectar off the buds of a kind of palm. A. Zitzmann
Out boozing for several hours every night — that would be
drinking like a tree shrew. Except the
tree shrews can scurry a straight line afterward.
The pentailed tree shrews (Ptilocercus lowii) of Malaysia average more than two hours each
night sipping palm nectar that has naturally fermented, report Frank Wiens of the
University of Bayreuth in Germany and his colleagues in the July 29 Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
“This is the first recorded case of chronic alcohol
consumption by a wild mammal,” Wiens says.

MMM MMM … A close-up of the brown buds of the individual flowers on a palm spike reveals drips of fermenting nectar. The buds release the nectar during the weeks before sexual organs mature.
If tree shrews’ metabolism worked like humans’, they would
reach or exceed the legal European driving limit of 0.05 percent blood alcohol content
every third night,” Wiens says. Licking this much fermented nectar would put
them in about the same condition as a European woman drinking nine small
glasses of wine over the course of 12 hours.
But tree shrews may not have the same metabolism as humans
when it comes to detoxifying alcohol. Tree shrews and the palms both belong to
ancient lineages, so the animals could have evolved an efficient detoxifying
pathway, Wiens suggests.
Telling whether another animal is feeling slap-happy has its
challenges. But in the wild, the tippling tree shrews didn’t wobble, lose their
grip or show other obvious signs of inebriation, the researchers report.
The study grew out of fieldwork tracking the tree shrews in
the dense growth of spiny palms. Starting in 1996, Wiens and his colleagues followed
the tree shrews on their nightly palm crawls and tested hair samples for
alcohol metabolites typical of chronic drinking. The researchers also measured
palm fermentation and combined the results in a mathematical model to predict
the shrews’ probable alcohol intake.
Bertam palms (Eugeissona
tristis) don’t observe a strict season, so at any given time plants will be
flowering somewhere in the forest. The stemless palms send up a tall spike with
more than 1,000 flowers, some with just male sexual organs and the others
hermaphroditic. For weeks before a particular sexual phase, the flower buds dribble
nectar. Yeasts inside the buds typically raise the nectar’s alcohol content
mildly, to around 0.06 percent, but can punch it up to as high as 3.8 percent.
“This is an astonishing story,” says John Dransfield, a palm
specialist at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in Richmond, England.
He says he doesn’t know of another palm offering such a beer bash, but perhaps the
other species secreting abundant nectar just haven’t been studied yet.
Tree shrews, not ground-burrowing shrews but pointy-nosed
tree-climbers with tails, are close cousins to primates. The tree shrew lineage
could be the second-closest living relatives to primates (after a group called
flying lemurs or colugos).
Found in: Life
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