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Research and the Jane Goodall Institute

Gombe Stream Research Center :

In 1960 Jane Goodall began her pioneering research at the Kakombe Valley in Tanzania. In 1967 the Gombe Stream Research Center (GSRC) was founded to coordinate the study of the wild chimpanzee populations. Gombe National Park was not established until 1968. GSRC is located on the eastern shore of Lake Tanganyika, 15km north of the town of Kigoma and is accessible only by boat.

Field research at GSRC has focused on the behavior of two communities of eastern chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii); the Kakombe community and the Mitumba community which was habituated much later in the early 1990s. Studies of several troops of baboons (Papio anubis) also began at GSRC in the early 1970s as well as much shorter studies of red colobus monkeys (Colobus badius tephrosceles).

Research has been concentrated in both the central and more recently northern portions of Gombe National Park, although it is also known that there is at least one unhabituated community of chimpanzees currently living in the southern area of the park. The total population of chimpanzees within the boundary of the park has been estimated at roughly 150, although no official census has been conducted to date.

An endeavor that many predicted would last only a few months has now become the longest running field study of any animal species in their natural surroundings; over 40 years. Research at GSRC continues to this day, mostly by a trained team of Tanzanians and with tremendous moral support from the Tanzanian government.

Jane Goodall Institute's Center for Primate Studies At the University of Minnesota

Jane Goodall Institute's Center for Primate Studies was established at the University of Minnesota in 199 5 by Dr. Anne Pusey, Distinguished McKnight Professor in the College of Biological Sciences Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior.

Pusey, who earned a B.S. in zoology from Oxford University and Ph.D. in behavioral biology from Stanford University, worked in Gombe under D r. Goodall's direction in the 1970s. During the 1980s, as Goodall's focus shifted from analysis of data to conservation and education, Pusey became more involved in research and data analysis. At the time the data, nearly 40 years of Goodall's journals, photos, and slides, was st ored on open shelves in Goodal's home in Dar es Salaam. In 1995, Goodall, Pusey, and Donald Buford, Director of the Jane Goodall Institute, decided to move the records to the College of Biological Sciences at the University of Minnesota for safekeeping.

Dr. Pusey's goal is to digitize the journals and photos to preserve them and to make them available though the Internet to scholars as well as school children and the lay public. Work is under way on the journals, and a fundraising effort has been launched to cover the costs. Mea nwhile, the Imaging Center at the College of Biological Sciences has scanned all of Goodall's color slides and has begun work on thousands o f black and white photos. In addition, staff members are copying 600 hours of videotape shot in Gombe since 1993. All of this material will become part of an online database.

The goals of the Center for Primate Studies are to:

  1. Preserve, organize, and digitize all the paper data (about 320,000 pages);
  2. Collect and digitize slides, black and white photographs, and video of the Gombe chimpanzees
  3. Create a relational database of all of these materials
  4. Analyze this data to advance knowledge about the complex lives of chimpanzees.


Field research projects undertaken by members of the center include:

  1. An investigation of meat-sharing and male mating strategies
  2. A four-year study of the development and acquisition of termite-fishing skills in infant to ten-year-old chimpanzees
  3. A study of vegetation change in and around Gombe National Park over the last 60 years
  4. A study of social relationships between females
  5. A study of paternity and genetic relationships among the chimpanzees using DNA extracted from feces and hair shed in nests.


Current projects utilizing the long-term data include:

  1. Female dispersal and inbreeding avoidance
  2. Sex differences in diet
  3. Group and individual ranging patterns


At any one time, the staff of the Center consists of Director Anne Pusey, Research Administrator Joann Schumacher-Stankey, and a number of g raduate students and post-docs and assistants.

ChimpanZoo
Founded in 1984, ChimpanZoo is an international research program dedicated to the study of chimpanzees in zoos and other captive settings. Approximately 130 chimpanzees are involved in ChimpanZoo, making it the largest ape research program ever undertaken. Trained by participating zoos and the Jane Goodall Institute, students, caretakers and volunteers record behavioral observations and work with zoo keepers to improve the lives of captive chimpanzees and compare their behavior to that of chimps in the wild.

The results of the studies are presented at an annual, week-long ChimpanZoo conference, the location of which changes each year. It serves as a forum for discussing and exchanging new information and ideas. The conference attracts the academic and zoological communities, as well as the public. Guest lecturers are also invited to speak about their latest research, and findings are published in scholarly journals. The database is also accessible to zoos, students and instructors.

ChimpanZoo Goals:

  1. To increase public awareness about the plight of chimpanzees and to increase understanding of chimpanzee behavior.
  2. To assist zoos in their efforts to improve the habitats and conditions for captive chimpanzees.
  3. To facilitate the exchange of information on ways to enrich the lives of captive chimpanzees.
  4. To compile behavioral data for an international database. For more information about ChimpanZoo, please visit the ChimpanZoo web site.