Scientists have discovered a group of booze-loving apes who may hold the key to why humans enjoy drinking alcohol.

Experts say they have found the first empirical evidence of “long- term and recurrent ingestion of ethanol” among apes in nature.

They observed wild chimpanzees in the town of Bossou in Guinea, west Africa, over 17 years and watched as the primates drank fermented palm sap using a leafy tool as a sponge.

The chimpanzees consumed the alcoholic beverage, often in large quantities, despite an alcohol presence of up to 6.9 per cent ABV – the equivalent of a strong ale, according to a study published by the Royal Society.

Apes may hold key to why humans enjoy drinking alcohol

The report’s authors say the results support the idea that the last common ancestor of living African apes and modern humans were “not averse to ingesting foods containing ethanol”.

They added that the findings should also prompt further tests of the ‘drunken monkey hypothesis’, which proposes that human attraction to alcohol may derive from dependence of primate ancestors on ripe and fermenting fruit.

According to the study, called Tools To Tipple: Ethanol Ingestion By Wild Chimpanzees Using Leaf-sponges, researchers watched 51 fermented palm sap drinking events involving 13 chimpanzees between 1995 and 2012.

Drinking sessions occurred across different months at various times of the day, with no evidence of chimpanzees ingesting palm sap at night, according to the study. The amount of alcohol ingested ranged from about 2.5 to 84ml and there was no difference between males and females.

Experts said that, unlike other examples of primates ingesting alcohol, such as introduced green monkeys targeting tourist cocktails in the Caribbean, the chimpanzees’ attraction to fermented palm sap at Bossou was not a result of provisioning by local people.

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