Posts Tagged ‘jane goodall’

Mmmm, Termites Taste Like…Mustard?

Posted by in African Forest,Chimpanzees

You may have heard that last week we had a very special guest at the zoo to dedicate our new chimpanzee exhibit. One of Dr. Jane Goodall’s early discoveries at Gombe was the ability of the chimps to use tools. This was shocking and revolutionary at the time, famously prompting anthropologist Dr. Louis Leakey to say, “Now we must redefine ‘tool,’ redefine ‘man’ or accept chimpanzees as humans.”

Using this information about wild chimpanzees, many zoos have created ways for zoo chimps to display behavior. Our new chimp exhibit here at the zoo has an artificial termite mound where our chimps can use bamboo sticks to fish treats out of PVC tubs inside. Instead of termites, we used some favorite treats such as ketchup, yogurt, cereal, and yes, mustard. We tried this out for the first time last week for Dr. Goodall’s visit, and I think it was a hit.

Want to be the first to see the Houston Zoo chimpanzees fish for “termites”? Members only previews start December 2! Check out the African Forest page for details.

16 Years With Chimpanzees is Just a Start

Posted by in African Forest,Conservation,Memories

Wednesday, July 14, the day we arrived in Houston with chimpanzees, was also the 50th anniversary of the beginning of Jane Goodall’s research at Gombe. This 50 year anniversary got me thinking about my first encounters with chimpanzees years ago at Sunset Zoo. I was just an intern but I was fascinated with chimpanzees Mac, Suzy, Rachel and Sesa and wanted desperately to be a chimpanzee keeper. Eager to learn more about chimps (and to impress my boss with my knowledge), I spent my lunch breaks reading Through a Window, caught up in the lives of Fifi and David Greybeard.

Fifi and Family - Michael Nichols, National Geographic

Like many other young women interested in primates, I was inspired by the work of Jane Goodall and dreamed of traveling to Africa and to study chimpanzees in the wild. Last weekend Jane Goodall wrote an article for the Wall Street Journal about those early years at Gombe and about how much things have changed. I did make it to east Africa eventually and found it really was the magical place she described. But unlike her, I couldn’t stay, my work was here at the zoo.

Sixteen years after I first opened Jane Goodall’s book I find myself responsible for 10 chimpanzees that now make their home at the Houston Zoo, which supports chimpanzee conservation all over Africa. I hope Dr. Goodall would approve.