8 de Dezembro de 2025

 
 

EARA News Digest 2025 - Week 50


Welcome to your Monday morning update, from EARA, on the latest news in biomedical science, policy and openness on animal research. 

This week: Wild chimps prefer alcoholic fruits – a glimpse into human addictionPetition to end primate research presented to German ParliamentBird flu survives fever in mice2025 UAR Openness Awards celebrate openness in animal research; lecture explores vaccine development challenges.
 

Wild chimps prefer alcoholic fruits – a glimpse into human addiction 

A US study has discovered that African chimpanzees routinely consume alcohol naturally present in overripe fruit that, given the size of their bodies, would be equivalent to having two drinks a day, suggesting that human addiction to alcohol has an evolutionary root.  

Scientists from UC Berkeley visited Uganda’s Kibale National Park and Taï National Park in Côte d‘Ivoire to study chimpanzees’ regular diet. There, they recorded how often chimpanzees eat each type of fruit and collected fallen fruit at sites where they had been foraging to analyse their ethanol content. In both parks, chimps preferred the fruit with the highest amount of ethanol, suggesting that alcohol is a regular part of their diets. 

“Human attraction to alcohol probably arose from this dietary heritage of our common ancestor with chimpanzees,” said Aleksey Maro from UC Berkeley, first author of the study.  

Lead author, Robert Dudley from UC Berkeley, added, “One of the reasons this has been a tempting target but no one’s gone after it is because it’s so hard to do in a field site where there are wild primates eating known fruits. 

This research, published in Science Advances, provides a foundation for studying primates’ natural behaviour and their preferences for alcohol.  

 

 

 

Petition to end primate research presented to German Parliament 

Representatives from PETA and Doctors Against Animal Experiments presented to the petition committee of the German Parliament on 1 December, calling for a phased EU-wide end to primate research.  

The petition, which gathered 40,000 signatures, demands a full ban on great ape studies, revisions to EU law, use of IUCN Red List criteria for primate protection, and a 10% annual increase in funding for non-animal research methods. 

EARA briefed MPs ahead of the hearing, stressing that primate studies remain vital for developing treatments and vaccines for diseases such as HIV/AIDS (observing World AIDS Day on 1 December) and COVID-19, and warning against politically driven restrictions before alternatives are ready. The German Research Foundation (DFG) also rejected the petition’s claims, noting that primate studies make up just 0.1% of all animal procedures and are essential for fields such as transplantation, neuroscience and infectious diseases. 

During the committee hearing, the Federal Ministry of Education and Research and MPs from the CDU/CSU and SPD defended the continued use of primates, arguing that a ban would hinder biomedical progress and push research abroad. Only one MP, from Die Linke, backed the petition, questioning the scientific value of primate research. 

The petition committee is expected to issue their recommendation for the plenary vote in the German Parliament soon. 

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