A DRUNKEN troop of booze-loving chimps has been discovered by scientists.

Researchers found a group in West Africa that spends their day drinking fermented sap from raffia palms.

6 Adult male chimpanzee uses a leaf tool to drink raffia sap from a container

And the primates are so keen on the alcohol – or ethanol – that they have developed “leaf sponge” tools to get it out.

The academics, from Oxford Brookes University, witnessed “all age and sex classes” downing the wine, with some consuming “significant quantities”.

This left them displaying “behavioural signs of inebriation”, similar to humans.

6 Could this be the future? Credit: The Sun

Some became “dozy” and others “agitated”, with one seen swinging from tree to tree in a bid to continue the party, the journal Royal Society Open Science reports.

Dr Kimberley Hockings, an expert in animal behaviour, said: “There are numerous anecdotes about wild non-human primates ingesting ethanol, although almost all remain non-validated.

RELATED STORIES Sun Snaps Cheeky monkey bags snapper £150 prize in our weekly photo contest KENYA BELIEVE IT? Monkey costs country billions after causing a NATIONWIDE blackout when it wandered into power plant Jeremy Clarkson So animals are clever? Try emailing one and see if it replies out-scammed Dad gets revenge on conman by stringing him and getting him to agree to date in hilarious messages Revealed The Jacko Story ‘Sleepovers’ with child pals and recipes for 'Jesus Juice': The scandals that dogged Michael Jackson’s life

“The consumption of ethanol by modern-day human beings is nearly universal, being found in every society with fermentable raw materials.

“However, aside from enforced ingestion in captive experiments or anecdotal observations in wild apes, the habitual and voluntary consumption of ethanol has been documented until now only in humans.”

A recent study found that both apes and humans have a common ancestor who experienced a genetic mutation that hugely helped with metabolising ethanol.

6 The consumption of the alcohol left the chimps displaying behavioural signs of inebriation, similar to humans

6 They become noticeably lairy in the afternoon – knocking over tables, getting into fights and stumbling around on the beach

A theory known as the “drunken monkey hypothesis” argues there is some survival benefit for primates to being attracted to ethanol.

It may be that it helps in finding partially fermented fruit or stimulates the appetite.

There seemed to be a strong attraction to alcohol in troop studied by Dr Hockings.

The closest biologists have come to recording such behaviour is on the island of St Kitts, where green monkeys have taken to targeting tourists’ cocktails in the morning.

6 According to the researchers, the consumption of ethanol by modern-day human beings is nearly universal, being found in every society with fermentable raw materials Credit: Getty Images

They become noticeably lairy in the afternoon – knocking over tables, getting into fights and stumbling around on the beach.

Dr Hockings said that her chimpanzees were generally better at holding their drink.

She said: “On one occasion that I observed, the chimpanzees rested immediately after drinking the palm wine, which struck us at the time as a likely effect of the wine.”

On another occasion, one wanted to extend the party.

6 Dr Hockings said that her chimpanzees were generally better at holding their drink Credit: Getty Images

Dr Hockings said: “He spent an hour moving from tree to tree in an agitated manner.”

There have been several examples of boozy primates including Happy Jerry who learned bad habits on his trip over on a 19th-century slave ship.

The monkey gained notoriety as a hard-drinking, hard smoking staple of London society and was invited by King George IV to join him for venison, gin and a pipe.

Cheeta – Johnny Weissmuller’s chimpanzee co-star in Tarzan – was notably partial to a drink.

And, in Russia a chimpanzee croupier had to go into rehab when his casino keepers realised that he was an alcoholic.