Lara Williams, Columnist

Without Jane Goodall, Chimps Need New Champions — Us

Goodall with the chimp Nana in the zoo in Magdeburg, Germany in 2004

Photographer: JENS SCHLUETER/DDP

There’s probably no single person who has done as much for chimpanzees as the late Jane Goodall. One of the great British exponents of conservation — the other being the esteemed 99-year-old David Attenborough — she revolutionized the way we see both great apes and ourselves. We can’t let her legacy fade away.

Goodall’s early breakthroughs came from her observations in the Gombe Stream Game Reserve in Tanzania where she discovered — with the help of an older chimp she named David Greybeard — that the primates hunt for meat and, groundbreakingly, that they make and use tools — a skill previously used to elevate humans above the rest of the animal kingdom. Now we know that we’re far from unique, sharing this talent with apes, monkeys, elephants and crows.