Authors
Frank Wiens, Annette Zitzmann, Marc-André Lachance, Michel Yegles, Fritz Pragst, Friedrich M Wurst, Dietrich von Holst, Saw Leng Guan, Rainer Spanagel
Publication date
2008/7/29
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
105
Issue
30
Pages
10426-10431
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
For humans alcohol consumption often has devastating consequences. Wild mammals may also be behaviorally and physiologically challenged by alcohol in their food. Here, we provide a detailed account of chronic alcohol intake by mammals as part of a coevolved relationship with a plant. We discovered that seven mammalian species in a West Malaysian rainforest consume alcoholic nectar daily from flower buds of the bertam palm (Eugeissona tristis), which they pollinate. The 3.8% maximum alcohol concentration (mean: 0.6%; median: 0.5%) that we recorded is among the highest ever reported in a natural food. Nectar high in alcohol is facilitated by specialized flower buds that harbor a fermenting yeast community, including several species new to science. Pentailed treeshrews (Ptilocercus lowii) frequently consume alcohol doses from the inflorescences that would intoxicate humans. Yet, the flower-visiting …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
F Wiens, A Zitzmann, MA Lachance, M Yegles, F Pragst… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008