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  • When I first got to Gombe, it was 1960 At that time, there was forest all the way along the lake

  • and you could climb up to the top of the rift

  • escarpment and look down, It was chimp habitat forest everywhere.

  • I had notebooks and pencils or pens and I had one pair of second hand binoculars.

  • And I think they hurt my eyes actually cause I was always trying to see just a little bit

  • more than I actually could

  • Fortunately, just before the money ran out, I saw one of the chimpanzees, the first to

  • begin to lose his fear of me and he was actually picking leafy twigs and stripping the leaves

  • to fish for termites, which was making a tool. So that was the breakthrough.

  • Some friends of mine really cared about the research and they started the Jane Goodall

  • Institute. And today there are so many Jane Goodall Institutes

  • dedicated to chimpanzee conservation, research and education.

  • We are working in Gombe since 1960s and we have been watching what's happening

  • to the forests since then But it took Jane to take a small plane to

  • actually have that aerial perspective

  • I saw Gombe from space through the high resolution maps from Google Earth and I was looking at

  • them with Lilian Pintea and it was a shock because it showed so clearly what I had seen

  • which shocked me back in the early 90s that around Gombe, the first pictures, it was literally

  • bare hills. And it should have been forest and it once

  • was forest and it was very clear that the land was becoming increasingly infertile due

  • to over farming and erosion as the forest cover was cleared.

  • And thats when it came to me, you know, how can we even try to save these chimpanzees

  • if people are having such a tough life

  • So that led to working with the villagers in the early 90s to improve their lives so

  • that in turn they can come around and be our partners in conservation

  • Our strategy is that communities are absolutely essential for the survival of chimpanzees

  • When we go to a village, we first meet the village government

  • Usually we like to share the status of the work which we do together

  • And that gives you that extra sense of connection, that feeling that you are actually part of

  • the same team, you are just working from different perspectives.

  • We worked with villages around the Gombe national park to make a meaningful and contiguous forest

  • conservation. So we came up with an idea to have the forest

  • monitor...

  • My duties as a forest monitor Are to inspect, patrol and guard the forest

  • to look out for threats to the forest and animals

  • and to educate the village on environmental issues

  • to preserve the forest for the next generation.

  • The Jane Goodall Institute is putting the technology in the hands of the people at the

  • local level and they are empowered to make the decisions about what is right for their

  • own environment.

  • The forest monitor is equipped with an android smartphone or tablet.

  • By being able to use simple tools such as Open Data Kit we are trying to empower local

  • communities in doing the work which in the past only specialists could do

  • The new technology is very helpful. Before we used paper and pen

  • to take data. Now, the tablet records accurate location

  • because it shows all the places I have been.

  • After the forest monitors collect the field data, they upload it into the Google cloud.

  • Its not just useful for that village, its actually contributing towards a global effort

  • of monitoring forests and national resources around the world

  • The Jane Goodall Institute is not only using Open Data Kit to collect all their field data

  • but they are also using Google's entire suite of mapping technologies.

  • So they are really at the cutting edge of using technologies to save chimps and their

  • habitat.

  • We are using geospatial technology to bring on the same maps science knowledge and indigenous

  • knowledge to understand how we are achieving our mission.

  • We looked over the chimpanzee range and we figured out that by working with nine countries

  • we can save up to 85% of chimpanzees; and this is our focus.

  • They've used gombe as their laboratory and now we're together scaling it up.

  • We want to scale it up across the entire congo basin, which is where so many of the remaining

  • chimpanzees live. And because we have the Google scale technology we can have thousands

  • of people submitting data and it can be immediately shared with billions of people around the

  • world

  • This all started with Jane Goodall in the 1960s, just a pencil a paper her notebook

  • and her binoculars observing things that no one had ever seen before.

  • Now, we can all see what's going on in these landscapes with satellite imagery thats coming

  • in every day, the data that local communities are collecting on the ground,

  • and it creates this real time picture of a place that can transform conservation

  • All the Jane Goodall Institutes working together are really trying to do whatever they can

  • to conserve forests and if you conserve forested area in order to protect chimpanzees of course

  • you protect everything else

  • Every single individual makes a difference every single day and we have a choice as to

  • what sort of difference we are going to make.

When I first got to Gombe, it was 1960 At that time, there was forest all the way along the lake

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