A genetic parasite may explain why humans and other apes lack tails

Not having a tail is one way apes differ from monkeys

Two chimpanzees hang from a rope with two hands above a grassy field. Both are facing away from the camera.

A new study suggests that apes, including chimpanzees and humans, lack tails because a genetic parasite altered a gene important for tail development when the group diverged from other primates around 25 million years ago.

Grant Faint/The Image Bank/Getty Images

A genetic parasite may have robbed humans and other apes of their tails.