Dr. Jane Goodall, the trailblazing primatologist known for her groundbreaking studies of chimpanzees in Tanzania, has died at the age of 91. According to the Jane Goodall Institute, she passed away on October 1, 2025, in Los Angeles of natural causes while on a U.S. speaking tour. Goodall’s life was a testament to curiosity, courage, and compassion. Starting in 1960, at the age of 26, she began her work at Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania—living among chimpanzees, observing them in the wild, and challenging scientific norms by naming individuals rather than assigning numbers. Her decades of continuous observation revealed behaviors such as tool use, complex social relationships, emotional depth, and cultural variation among chimpanzee groups—work that has reshaped human understanding of our closest evolutionary relatives. Beyond her scientific accomplishments, Goodall was a tireless environmental advocate, founding the Jane Goodall Institute in 1977 and the youth-focused Roots & Shoots program to inspire conservation and community action globally. Throughout her life, she traveled extensively, spoke passionately for wildlife protection, and never shied from witnessing or warning about threats to ecosystems, climate, and biodiversity. Her passing leaves a profound void in science and activism. Tributes have poured in globally from environmentalists, world leaders, and everyday people who saw in her a symbol of hope, humility, and humanity’s connectedness to nature. #JaneGoodall #ConservationLegend #ChimpanzeeResearch #Environmentalism #AnimalBehavior #SciencePioneer #RootsAndShoots #LegacyOfHope #WildlifeAdvocate #NatureLover
