March 7, 2007 — Around 3.3 million years ago, gorillas gave our early hominid ancestors pubic lice, and humans have had them ever since, according to new research.
The pesky parasites, which on humans live in pubic hair and other hairy areas except the scalp, suck on blood and can only survive for a short time without a host.
"We know that humans have had close interactions with gorillas in recent times; unfortunately there is still a bushmeat trade to attest to this," lead author David Reed told Discovery News.
Reed, assistant curator of mammals at the Florida Museum of Natural History added, "However, we now can conclude that archaic humans and gorillas may have lived in close proximity 3.3 million years ago, which was not known previously."
Reed and colleagues Jessica Light, Julie Allen and Jeremy Kirchman speculate the contact could have occurred in at least three different ways: sexual contact between gorillas and early hominids, ancient humans consuming or handling gorillas, or by the sharing of sleep areas.
"We cannot rule out the first, or any of the other possibilities," Reed said.
He and his team studied lice collected from primates in Ugandan wildlife sanctuaries. Gorilla lice today represent a different species than modern human lice, since parasites evolve along with their host species.
Reed and his colleagues extracted DNA from the lice. They then used fossil data from humans and gorillas to estimate how long ago the two parasite species shared a common ancestor.
Their findings are published in the current issue of the journal BMC Biology.