LOS ANGELES — Jane Goodall, whose lifelong work as a primatologist helped broaden the world’s understanding of animal behavior and emotions, has died, her institute said Wednesday. She was 91.
Her field studies with chimpanzees not only broke barriers for women and changed the way scientists study animals, but documented emotions and personality traits within these primates that blurred the line between humans and the animal kingdom.
Born in London, Goodall says her fascination with animal behavior was sparked when her mother took her to visit a country farm when she was four and a half years old.
“It was really exciting, I can still remember meeting cows and pigs and sheep face to face,” Goodall recalled in 2019 on Chopra’s Infinite Potential podcast.
At the farm, she wandered off to an empty henhouse where she waited patiently to observe a hen laying an egg.
“Mom had been desperately looking for me, nobody knew where I was, they’d called the police,” Goodall said.
“You can imagine how worried she was, but when ... she saw my shining eyes (she) sat down to hear the wonderful story of how a hen lays an egg.”
She credited her mother’s support at that moment – and later in life – for paving the way for her career.
“A different kind of mother might have crushed that scientific curiosity – and I might not have done what I have done.”
Goodall spent much of her childhood outside, at the top of her favorite tree reading “in my own private world ... daydreaming about life in the forest with Tarzan.”
That’s when she decided she wanted to go to Africa to live with the animals and write about them.
She never wavered from her dream and, as a young woman, she worked and “saved every penny I could” to travel to Africa.
“Everybody laughed at me because I was just a girl, we didn’t have any money (and) World War Two was raging,” she recalled.
She was always encouraged by her mother, who told her to “work hard, take advantage of opportunity, but above all, never give up.”
Jane Goodall’s original mission in Gombe was to learn everything she could about chimpanzees – humans’ closest living relatives – in the hopes that their behavior “might provide us with a window on our past,” she said.
“I always am amazed at how similar we are to chimpanzees and, for that matter, other animals, too – sharing emotions like fear and pain and anger and things like that,” Goodall said.
“Chimpanzees learn by observing ... but (humans) can with words discuss the past and tell stories about it, and perhaps make use of it. Chimpanzees can certainly make plans for the immediate future – but we can make plans for what we’re going to do 10 years ahead.”
And she said that ability to communicate verbally gives humans a unique responsibility to preserve the planet.
“Isn’t it bizarre that the most intellectual creatures to ever walk the planet is destroying its only home? It seems to me there’s a disconnect between this extremely intellectual mind and the human heart, which is love and compassion.”
Goodall started focusing her efforts on environmental preservation after attending a conference on conservation in Africa in 1986.
“It was shocking to see right across Africa, wherever chimps were being studied, forests were disappearing,” she said.
“That’s when I realized that ... the role that I must play was to make sure the next generation was better stewards than we’d been. And I needed to take that message to the world.”
“I went to the conference as a scientist. I left as an activist.”
Today, the Jane Goodall Institute that she founded in 1977 devotes a huge portion of its efforts to wildlife conservation, working closely with Gombe National Park’s surrounding communities to advance human prospects and guard its natural treasures.
In 2017, the Institute partnered with Google Earth, using the state-of-the-art satellite technology to closely monitor the park and its chimps.
Goodall showed no signs of slowing down in her 80s, traveling some 300 days a year to meet with world leaders about climate change, visit conservation projects, and support her Roots & Shoots youth environmental program.
The Covid-19 outbreak brought her travel to a halt in 2020, but Goodall continued spreading her message virtually, speaking out about climate change as well as her thoughts on what led to the coronavirus pandemic.
“Our too close relationship with wild animals in the markets or when we use them for entertainment has unleashed the terror and misery of new viruses,” she said on Anderson Cooper Full Circle.
When asked what she thought her legacy should be, Goodall told CNN’s Becky Anderson that she hoped it would be “giving young people hope and ... a sense of empowerment.” — CNN