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Daily Record
Daily Record
Science
Neil Shaw & Lucy Farrell

Scientists try to discover why people pick their nose and eat it

Scientists are one step closer to figuring out why people like to pick their nose and eat it.

While considered a disgusting habit by humans, researchers have discovered that one primate has fingers specially evolved to do the job. In a first, an aye-aye lemur has been recorded shoving its especially long digits into the nostrils then licking its fingers clean.

With this research, the aye-aye is the thirteenth primate species, including humans, to be documented for picking their nose and eating the mucus. So far, there is no proven explanation as to why it is done.

Scientific studies have shown picking the nose can lead to staph infections in humans, while others have suggested those who eat snot have fewer dental cavities.

The findings, published in the Journal of Zoology, could help scientists shed some light the possible functional role of nose picking across all these species, reports Wales Online.

Lead author Anne-Claire Fabre, a scientific associate at the Natural History Museum in London, said: "There is very little evidence about why we, and other animals, pick our nose.

"Nearly all the papers that you can find were written as jokes. Of the serious studies, there are a few in the field of psychology, but for biology there’s hardly anything.

Researchers hope to shed light on why some primate species pick their noses - including humans (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

"One study shows that picking your nose can spread bacteria such as Staphylococcus, while another shows that people who eat their own snot have fewer dental cavities."

The aye-aye belongs to a category of species known as strepsirrhine primates and is native to Madagascar. Also known as the world's largest nocturnal primate, this lemur has rodent-like teeth and a specialised long and thin middle finger.

The aye-aye's fingers make up about 65% of the length of the hand – which the creature uses to locate food inside wood by tapping on it and then extracting small grubs.

But researchers also observed something else about the aye-aye: the lemur uses its longest finger to pick its nose.

Humans consider it a gross habit - so why do people still do it? (Getty Images)

Ms Fabre said: "It was impossible not to notice this aye-aye picking its nose. This was not just a one-off behaviour but something that it was fully engaged in, inserting its extremely long finger a surprisingly long way down its nose and then sampling whatever it dug up by licking its finger clean!"

To better understand this behaviour, the research team used an imaging technique known as a CT scan – usually used by medical professionals to obtain internal images of the body – to look inside the skull and hand of an aye-aye specimen at the museum.

Their aim was to reconstruct the position of the middle finger inside the nasal cavity. Findings suggested that the finger is likely to descend all the way into the throat.

Previous scientific research has suggested there may be health benefits to eating snot, but the researchers believe that in this case there is a chance that the animal ingesting its own mucus may simply be down to its texture, crunchiness and saltiness.

Roberto Portela Miguez, senior curator in charge, Mammals at the Museum, and a co-author on the new paper said: "It is great to see how museum specimens and digital methods can help us elucidate behaviours that are generally quite difficult to observe in their natural habitat.

"We hope that future studies will build on this work and help us understand why we and our closest relatives insist on picking our noses!"

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