Key Takeaways
- Human alcohol preference originates from primate ancestors who consumed fermented fruit 50 million years ago
- A key enzyme mutation 10 million years ago allowed African apes to metabolize alcohol 40x more efficiently
- Wild chimpanzees consume the equivalent of 1.4-1.5 alcoholic drinks daily through fermented fruit
- Alcohol-seeking behavior may have shaped social bonding and risk-taking in primates, similar to humans
Our attraction to alcohol dates back 50 million years to primate ancestors who sought out fermented fruits containing natural ethanol, according to scientific research. This evolutionary preference became embedded in our biology through a digestive enzyme mutation that made alcohol consumption significantly more beneficial.
The Ancient Origins of Alcohol Consumption
Long before humans brewed beer or fermented wine, our primate ancestors were already consuming alcohol through naturally fermented fruits. Scientists say primates who could detect ethanol’s distinct odor were rewarded with calorie-rich nutrition from plant carbohydrates and alcohol.
All primates can metabolize ethanol for energy, but around 10 million years ago, a crucial mutation gave African apes—including the common ancestor of humans, gorillas and chimpanzees—the ability to process alcohol 40 times more efficiently than other primates.
“Our brains are wired to like it,” said Nathaniel Dominy, anthropology professor at Dartmouth College. “It’s been argued that the whole reason we domesticated cereals in the first place was to make beer, not bread.”
The Drunken Monkey Hypothesis
Robert Dudley, a professor at UC Berkeley, developed the “drunken monkey hypothesis” 25 years ago to explain our modern relationship with alcohol. He describes today’s alcohol-related health issues as “diseases of nutritional excess” stemming from evolutionary adaptations.
“Our livers, and our physiology, are sort of like an evolutionary hangover from that time,” Dominy explained. “We evolved to be attracted to alcohol, to recognize it in our environment, and then to process it efficiently.”
Primate Drinking Habits in the Wild
Research shows wild chimpanzees consume substantial amounts of alcohol through fermented fruit. Studies in Côte d’Ivoire and Uganda found chimpanzees consume the equivalent of 1.4 to 1.5 drinks daily by international standards.
These chimpanzees routinely eat about 10 pounds of ripe fruit containing 14-15 grams of alcohol daily—approximately one-tenth of their body weight. By body mass, this equals “a couple glasses of wine over the course of breakfast, lunch and dinner,” according to researcher Aleksey Maro.
Despite this consumption, scientists note there’s no evidence of actual drunkenness in wild primates. Their diets don’t expose them to enough alcohol to cause obvious impairment.
Social Behavior and Alcohol Seeking
Primates engage in “scrumping”—purposefully seeking ethanol-heavy ripened fruit—which researchers compare to human social drinking. This behavior often occurs in groups and resembles human feasting or nights out at pubs.
“I spent about 10 of the last 20 years hanging out with wild apes in rainforests in Africa. I have seen them sometimes gather a whole bunch of fruit up, and get a little rowdy,” said Catherine Hobaiter, primatologist at the University of St Andrews.
Chimpanzees in Guinea-Bissau sometimes share fermented fruits, suggesting ethanol shapes ape social bonds similarly to humans. Abundant fermented fruit attracts larger ape groups, leading to more social interaction but also increased competition for resources.
“Alcohol is a fantastic way to lower some inhibitions, and that might mean more time spent hanging out and bonding with each other,” Hobaiter said. “But as a result, chimpanzees may do some slightly more risky behaviors, like patrol the boundaries of their territory or be more likely to pick a fight, as they get bolder—something our species is very familiar with.”



