
Jane Goodall (Dame Valerie Jane Morris-Goodall) passed away on October 1, 2025, in Los Angeles while on a speaking tour, of natural causes at age 91. Her death marks the closing of a chapter on one of the most influential figures in modern zoology and primatology. Over a career spanning more than six decades, she revolutionised how we think about chimpanzees, nature, and humanity’s relationship with other species.
Jane Goodall’s story begins with a little girl in London who carried a stuffed toy chimpanzee named Jubilee everywhere she went. Born on April 3, 1934, she grew up fascinated by animals and dreamed of one day living in Africa. Without formal scientific training, she pursued secretarial work and then travelled to Kenya in the late 1950s, where she met the anthropologist Louis Leakey. Recognising her determination and unique observational skills, Leakey encouraged her to study wild chimpanzees, believing her fresh perspective could yield insights missed by traditionally trained scientists.
In 1960, Goodall arrived at Gombe Stream on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania. It was an isolated, rugged forest, and her research permit required that she be accompanied by her mother for safety in the early months. Armed with binoculars, a notebook, and endless patience, she began what would become one of the most extraordinary long-term field studies in history.
At first, the chimpanzees fled at the sight of her. But gradually, through persistence and quiet observation, they allowed her into their world. Among them, one chimpanzee in particular, named David Greybeard, became the breakthrough. He was the first to accept her presence and would calmly eat fruit near her. In time, David showed her something that changed science forever: he stripped a twig of leaves, inserted it into a termite mound, and licked off the insects that clung to it. This was tool use—something, until then, considered a uniquely human trait.
When she reported the discovery, the scientific establishment was stunned. If chimpanzees could use tools, then the definition of humanity itself needed to be reconsidered. As Goodall later put it, “We must redefine tool, redefine man, or accept chimpanzees as human.”
Over the years, her close study of Gombe’s chimpanzees revealed behaviours both heartwarming and shocking. She observed maternal tenderness in chimpanzees like Flo, a female who raised several infants and showed clear affection, patience, and teaching behaviours. Flo’s family line, which included Fifi and her offspring, became one of the most studied and celebrated in primatology.
But Goodall also discovered a darker side. She documented aggressive territorial battles and a prolonged period of intergroup conflict known as the “Gombe Chimpanzee War” in the 1970s, where one community systematically attacked and eliminated another. This forced science to confront the reality that violence and organised warfare were not uniquely human either.
Through her work, Goodall revealed that chimpanzees have individual personalities, emotions, and rich social lives. They form lifelong bonds, display jealousy, grieve for the dead, and engage in reconciliation after conflict. Her observations dismantled the rigid boundary between “humans” and “animals” and brought empathy into zoology.
Her methods also broke scientific convention. Instead of assigning numbers, she gave names—like Goliath, Passion, and Goblin—to the chimps she studied. Critics at first dismissed this as unscientific, but her records were meticulous, and her approach produced data so rich that it reshaped the discipline. She later earned her Ph.D. in ethology from Cambridge University in 1965, becoming one of the few researchers admitted without a bachelor’s degree. Her thesis, based on her Gombe fieldwork, cemented her place in scientific history.
Today, the Gombe research project continues more than six decades after it began, making it the longest continuous wildlife study on record. It remains a cornerstone of primatology, building on Goodall’s pioneering legacy.
While her discoveries about chimpanzees transformed science, Jane Goodall recognised that research alone could not save them. By the 1970s and 80s, forests were being cleared, and chimpanzee populations were threatened by habitat loss, poaching, and disease. Goodall shifted her focus from pure research to advocacy, determined to fight for the survival of the species she had come to know so intimately.
In 1977, she founded the Jane Goodall Institute, dedicated to wildlife conservation, habitat preservation, and community-led approaches to sustainability. One of its most influential programmes, TACARE, worked with local Tanzanian villages to create sustainable livelihoods while protecting forests, showing that conservation succeeds only when human communities thrive as well.
Goodall also worked tirelessly to improve conditions for chimpanzees in captivity. She campaigned against the use of chimps in medical research and entertainment, helping to inspire legal reforms and sanctuaries around the world. Her Institute went on to support chimpanzee sanctuaries in Africa and rehabilitation programmes that provided rescued primates with safe, enriched environments.
In 1991, recognising that long-term change depended on young people, she launched Roots & Shoots, a global youth movement. What started with a dozen students in Tanzania grew into a worldwide network of thousands of groups in over 75 countries. The programme encouraged children and young adults to take on projects that help people, animals, and the environment in their communities. It embodied her lifelong message of hope and empowerment—that individual actions add up to global impact.
Even as she aged, Goodall refused to slow down. Into her nineties, she spent more than 300 days a year travelling the globe, speaking at conferences, schools, and grassroots gatherings. She met world leaders, addressed the United Nations, and inspired millions with her gentle but urgent call for environmental stewardship. Her tireless work earned her countless honours, including knighthood, major international science and peace awards, and recognition as one of the most influential women of the modern era.
Goodall’s voice was distinctive—calm, deliberate, and imbued with compassion. She often ended her talks with the sound of her signature chimpanzee greeting, a pant-hoot, bridging the worlds of humans and chimpanzees with a reminder of our shared kinship.
With her passing away recently, she left behind not only decades of scientific discovery but also an enduring movement for conservation and peace. Her son, Hugo, her grandchildren, and the global family of scientists, activists, and students she inspired survive her legacy.
More than anything, Jane Goodall redefined what it means to be human. She showed that intelligence, emotion, and morality are not ours alone, and that with empathy and humility, we can repair our relationship with the natural world. The forests she fought to protect, the chimpanzees she brought into the global conscience, and the young people she inspired to act are living memorials to her life’s work.
Her legacy is both scientific and moral: a reminder that humanity is not above nature but a part of it. As she often said, “Every individual matters. Every individual has a role to play. Every individual makes a difference.”
Q1. Who was Jane Goodall and why is she famous?
A1. Jane Goodall (1934–2025) was a British primatologist and conservationist whose groundbreaking research on wild chimpanzees in Tanzania revealed their tool use, emotions, and complex social lives. Her work transformed zoology and inspired global conservation efforts.
Q2. What did Jane Goodall discover about chimpanzees?
A2. Jane Goodall discovered that chimpanzees can make and use tools—previously thought to be a uniquely human trait. She also revealed their emotional bonds, maternal care, and even instances of conflict, showing striking similarities to human behaviour.
Q3. What is the Jane Goodall Institute?
A3. Founded in 1977, the Jane Goodall Institute is a global nonprofit dedicated to wildlife conservation, community-led development, and youth empowerment. It supports habitat preservation, chimpanzee sanctuaries, and the Roots & Shoots youth program.
Q4. What is Jane Goodall’s Roots & Shoots program?
A4. Roots & Shoots, launched in 1991, is a global youth movement started by Jane Goodall. It empowers young people in more than 75 countries to take action on projects that protect animals, the environment, and local communities.
Q5. How did Jane Goodall influence science and conservation?
A5. Jane Goodall redefined the way scientists study animals by focusing on empathy and long-term observation. Her discoveries about chimpanzees challenged human exceptionalism, while her conservation activism inspired laws, sanctuaries, and a worldwide movement to protect nature.