Wildlife advocate, primate expert Goodall dies at 91

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Jane Goodall, a conservationist renowned for her chimpanzee field research, has died.
Jane Goodall, a conservationist renowned for her chimpanzee field research, has died.

Scientist and global activist Jane Goodall, who turned her childhood love of primates into a lifelong quest for protecting the environment, has died at the age of 91, the institute she founded says.

Goodall died of natural causes, the Jane Goodall Institute said in a social media post.

“Dr. Goodall’s discoveries as an ethologist revolutionised science, and she was a tireless advocate for the protection and restoration of our natural world,” it said.

The primatologist-turned-conservationist spun her love of wildlife into a life-long campaign that took her from a seaside English village to Africa and then across the globe in a quest to better understand chimpanzees as well as the role that humans play in safeguarding their habitat and the planet’s health overall.

Goodall was a pioneer in her field, both as a female scientist in the 1960s and for her work studying the behaviour of primates.

Jane Goodall
Jane Goodall founded her institute in 1977, which supports projects aimed at benefiting animals. (Julian Smith/AAP PHOTOS)

She also drew the public into the wild, partnering with the National Geographic Society to bring her beloved chimps into their lives through film, TV and magazines.

She upended scientific norms of the time, giving chimpanzees names instead of numbers, observing their distinct personalities and incorporating their family relationships and emotions into her work.

She also found that, like humans, they use tools.

“We have found that after all there isn’t a sharp line dividing humans from the rest of the animal kingdom,” she said in a 2002 TED Talk.

Jane Goodall
Jane Goodall was in California as part of her speaking tour in the United States when she died. (AP PHOTO)

As her career evolved, she shifted her focus from primatology to climate advocacy after witnessing widespread habitat devastation, urging the world to take quick and urgent action on climate change.

“We’re forgetting that were part of the natural world,” she told CNN in 2020.

“There’s still a window of time.”

In 2003, she was appointed a Dame of the British Empire and, in 2025, she received the US Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Reuters