HomeScience‘Scrumping’ apes may have sparked our taste for alcohol — But how? Study finds

‘Scrumping’ apes may have sparked our taste for alcohol — But how? Study finds

The team analysed dietary data from chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans in the wild. They compared feeding activity with the height of fruit in the forest.

August 01, 2025 / 12:39 IST
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The researchers suggest that the ability to metabolise ethanol may have allowed African apes to safely consume ripe, fermented fruit found on the ground. This adaptation likely helped them avoid competing with monkeys for unripe fruit in trees and reduced the danger of climbing and potential falls. (Image: Catherine Hobaiter/University of St Andrews)
The researchers suggest that the ability to metabolise ethanol may have allowed African apes to safely consume ripe, fermented fruit found on the ground. This adaptation likely helped them avoid competing with monkeys for unripe fruit in trees and reduced the danger of climbing and potential falls. (Image: Catherine Hobaiter/University of St Andrews)

If you’ve ever enjoyed a glass of cider on a warm day, your taste for fermented fruit might go back much further than you think. A new study suggests our ancient relatives may have shared that liking and scientists now have a name for it.

Researchers from Dartmouth and the University of St Andrews have introduced the term "scrumping" to describe the act of apes foraging for fermented fruit fallen to the forest floor. The study, published in BioScience, explores how this behaviour may be linked to human evolution and our surprising efficiency at digesting alcohol.

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Why apes eat fermented fruit
The team analysed dietary data from chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans in the wild. They compared feeding activity with the height of fruit in the forest. If an ape on the ground ate fruit that typically grows high in the trees, it was classed as scrumping.

Their analysis showed that African apes like chimpanzees and gorillas regularly eat fermented fruit from the ground. Orangutans, in contrast, showed little to no such behaviour. This difference supports earlier genetic findings from 2015, which revealed African apes have a genetic variation that boosts alcohol metabolism by up to 40 times.