Sheep self-medicate when challenged with illness-inducing foods

[1]  S. Levine,et al.  Stress and behavior. , 1971, Scientific American.

[2]  D. Bauman,et al.  Evaluation of polyethylene glycol method in determining rumen fluid volume in dairy cows fed different diets. , 1971, Journal of dairy science.

[3]  J. L. Mangan,et al.  Complexes of the condensed tannins of sainfoin (Onobrychis viciifolia scop.) with fraction 1 leaf protein and with submaxillary mucoprotein, and their reversal by polyethylene glycol and pH , 1977 .

[4]  T. Alloway,et al.  Food Aversion Learning , 1977 .

[5]  G. Montgomery The ecology of arboreal folivores. , 1978 .

[6]  H. Maturana,et al.  Autopoiesis and Cognition : The Realization of the Living (Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Scie , 1980 .

[7]  Gary D. Osweiler,et al.  Clinical and Diagnostic Veterinary Toxicology , 1984 .

[8]  E. Khantzian,et al.  The Self-Medication Hypothesis of Addictive Disorders: Focus on Heroin and Cocaine Dependence , 1985 .

[9]  F. Provenza,et al.  Food aversion learning: ability of lambs to distinguish safe from harmful foods. , 1989, Journal of animal science.

[10]  F. Provenza,et al.  Preference of the Mother Affects Selection and Avoidance of Foods by Lambs Differing in Age , 1990 .

[11]  C. T. Robbins,et al.  Variation in Mammalian Physiological Responses to a Condensed Tannin and Its Ecological Implications , 1991 .

[12]  N D Wolfe,et al.  The adaptive significance of self-medication. , 1993, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[13]  R. Hughes,et al.  Diet selection : an interdisciplinary approach to foraging behaviour , 1993 .

[14]  P. V. Soest Nutritional Ecology of the Ruminant , 1994 .

[15]  F. Provenza Postingestive Feedback as an Elementary Determinant of Food Preference and Intake in Ruminants , 1995 .

[16]  K. Becker,et al.  Degradation of condensed tannins by rumen microbes exposed to quebracho tannins (QT) in rumen simulation technique (RUSITEC) and effects of QT on fermentative processes in the RUSITEC , 1995 .

[17]  F. Provenza,et al.  Preference for flavored wheat straw by lambs conditioned with intraruminal administrations of sodium propionate. , 1996, Journal of animal science.

[18]  F. Provenza Utah State University From the SelectedWorks of Frederick D Provenza 1996 Acquired aversions as the basis for varied diets of ruminants foraging on rangelands , 2018 .

[19]  F. Provenza,et al.  Preference for flavoured foods by lambs conditioned with intraruminal administration of nitrogen , 1997, British Journal of Nutrition.

[20]  F. Provenza,et al.  Preference for wheat straw by lambs conditioned with intraruminal infusions of starch , 1997, British Journal of Nutrition.

[21]  F. Provenza,et al.  Preference for flavored wheat straw by lambs conditioned with intraruminal infusions of acetate and propionate. , 1997, Journal of animal science.

[22]  G. Lozano Parasitic Stress and Self-Medication in Wild Animals , 1998 .

[23]  P. Cheeke,et al.  Natural toxicants in feeds, forages, and poisonous plants. , 1998 .

[24]  F. Provenza,et al.  Sheep fed grain prefer foods and solutions that attenuate acidosis. , 1998, Journal of animal science.

[25]  T. Robbins,et al.  Drug addiction: bad habits add up , 1999, Nature.

[26]  J. Diamond Evolutionary biology: Dirty eating for healthy living , 1999, Nature.

[27]  F. Provenza,et al.  Nutrient-specific preferences by lambs conditioned with intraruminal infusions of starch, casein, and water. , 1999, Journal of animal science.

[28]  C. Wood,et al.  Effects of dietary quebracho tannin on nutrient utilisation and tissue metabolism in sheep and rats , 1999 .

[29]  F. Provenza,et al.  Self-regulation of intake of polyethylene glycol by sheep fed diets varying in tannin concentrations. , 2000, Journal of animal science.

[30]  J. McElnay,et al.  Benefits and Risks of Self Medication , 2001, Drug safety.

[31]  D. Houston,et al.  Soil consumption by Elephants might help to minimize the toxic effects of plant secondary compounds in forest browse , 2001 .

[32]  F. Provenza,et al.  Preference for polyethylene glycol by sheep fed a quebracho tannin diet. , 2001, Journal of animal science.

[33]  M. Huffman Self-Medicative Behavior in the African Great Apes: An Evolutionary Perspective into the Origins of Human Traditional Medicine , 2001 .

[34]  P. Sah Neurobiology: Never fear, cannabinoids are here , 2002, Nature.

[35]  F. Provenza,et al.  Polyethylene glycol influences selection of foraging location by sheep consuming quebracho tannin. , 2002, Journal of animal science.

[36]  M. Huffman,et al.  Animal self-medication and ethno-medicine: exploration and exploitation of the medicinal properties of plants , 2003, Proceedings of the Nutrition Society.

[37]  S. Hirata,et al.  An experimental study of leaf swallowing in captive chimpanzees: insights into the origin of a self-medicative behavior and the role of social learning , 2004, Primates.

[38]  W. Deressa,et al.  Self-treatment of malaria in rural communities, Butajira, southern Ethiopia. , 2003, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[39]  I. Gordon,et al.  Can animals use foraging behaviour to combat parasites? , 2003, Proceedings of the Nutrition Society.

[40]  C. Munn,et al.  Biochemical Functions of Geophagy in Parrots: Detoxification of Dietary Toxins and Cytoprotective Effects , 1999, Journal of Chemical Ecology.

[41]  R. Sodhi,et al.  The Adaptive Significance of Geophagy for Japanese Macaques (Macaca fuscata) at Arashiyama, Japan , 2001, International Journal of Primatology.

[42]  P. Garber,et al.  Seed Swallowing in Tamarins: Evidence of a Curative Function or Enhanced Foraging Efficiency? , 1997, International Journal of Primatology.

[43]  M. Huffman,et al.  Self-induced Increase of Gut Motility and the Control of Parasitic Infections in Wild Chimpanzees , 2001, International Journal of Primatology.

[44]  W. Mahaney,et al.  Geochemistry and clay mineralogy of termite mound soil and the role of geophagy in chimpanzees of the Mahale Mountains, Tanzania , 1996, Primates.