Where Do Gorillas Get Their Protein?

Gorillas and People Can Get Scurvy, Rats Can’t

Citrus fruits prevent and cure scurvy because they contain vitamin C.

All Species’ Nutritional Needs Are Not Created Equal

Back in the Age of Explo­ration, the sailors on long sea voy­ages often died of scurvy. Yet the rats on the ship stayed per­fect­ly healthy. So did the ship’s cat. The sailors quick­ly recov­ered their health if they could get some fresh fruit or veg­eta­bles to eat. The hard part was find­ing some form of fresh fruit or veg­etable that could be stored on board with­out spoil­ing. Even­tu­al­ly, the British Roy­al Navy fig­ured out that cit­rus fruit worked well, which is why British sailors came to be called “limeys.” Bean sprouts or alfal­fa sprouts would also have worked, but nobody thought to try them.

The mys­tery of why peo­ple can get scurvy, and rats can’t, wasn’t solved until the 20th cen­tu­ry, with the dis­cov­ery of vit­a­min C, which is found in fresh fruit and veg­eta­bles but not in the bread (“hard­tack”) that the sailors were being fed. Human beings, along with goril­las and oth­er apes and mon­keys, have lost the abil­i­ty to make their own vit­a­min C. Guinea pigs have the same prob­lem. In nature, pri­mates and guinea pigs rarely get scurvy, because their nat­ur­al diet includes plen­ty of fresh plant mate­r­i­al.

Although rats need to have vit­a­min C in their bod­ies, they can make their own sup­ply. They don’t have to get it from their food, as peo­ple, oth­er pri­mates, and guinea pigs must. That’s why vit­a­min C is con­sid­ered to be an essen­tial nutri­ent for human beings—and for gorillas—but not for rats.