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Newsgather
BackGibraltar monkeys eat soil to combat digestive issues from tourist snacks
Gibraltar monkeys eat soil to combat digestive issues from tourist snacks
Wissenschaft
BBC News22.04.2026Wissenschaft1 dk okuma

Gibraltar monkeys eat soil to combat digestive issues from tourist snacks

Cambridge University study suggests macaques use soil as a gut buffer against high-fat, high-sugar human food

Auf einen Blick

  • Research indicates that Gibraltar's macaques have learned to eat soil to soothe digestive upset caused by consuming junk food stolen from or fed by tourists.
  • The behavior appears to be a culturally learned adaptation to mitigate the negative effects of high-calorie human snacks.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

Gibraltar is home to a population of macaques that frequently interact with tourists. These interactions often involve the monkeys consuming human food, which is not part of their natural diet.

Schriftgröße

Monkeys living on Gibraltar have learned that swallowing soil can quell upset stomachs caused by eating snacks offered or stolen from tourists, research suggests.

Food such as chocolate bars, crisps and ice cream have negative digestive effects for the macaques but are "as delicious for them" as they are for humans, according to a Cambridge University study.

Eating soil may allow the primates to keep eating junk food by helping to line the gut to prevent irritation from too much sugar and fat, research indicates.

"The emergence of this behaviour in macaques is both a functional and cultural one, like nutcracking in chimps, except it is driven entirely by proximity to humans," said biological anthropologist Dr Sylvain Lemoine.

Some of the Rock's 230 monkeys in frequent contact with tourists were observed to eat more dirt, and dirt-eating rates were seen to be higher during peak holiday season.

The researchers think the behaviour is likely to have been learned socially as different troops of monkeys have preferences for certain types of soil.

Scientists believe the dirt also provides bacteria and minerals absent from junk food - which is completely unlike the monkeys' typical diet of herbs, leaves, seeds and the occasional insect.

"We think the macaques started eating soil to buffer their digestive system against the high energy, low fibre nature of these snacks and junk foods, which have been shown to cause gastric upsets in some primates," added Lemoine.

"The consumed soil acts as a barrier in the digestive tract, limiting absorption of harmful compounds."

He said tourist food eaten by macaques was "extremely rich in calories, sugar, salt and dairy" - with primates intolerant of lactose found in "hugely popular" ice-cream.

"Humans evolved to seek out and store energy-dense fats and sugars to survive periods of scarcity, leading us to crave high-calorie junk food," he added.

"Soil-eating may allow them to keep consuming food that has negative digestive effects, but is as delicious for them as it is for us."

Worauf zu achten ist

KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten

  • Increased efforts by local authorities to discourage tourists from feeding the monkeys.

    Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten

Offene Fragen

  • Are there long-term health consequences for the monkeys despite the soil consumption?
  • What specific minerals are the monkeys gaining from the soil?

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This article was originally published by BBC News.

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