Wilson Michael L, Lonsdorf Elizabeth V, Mjungu Deus C, Kamenya Shadrack, Kimaro Elihuruma Wilson, Collins D Anthony, Gillespie Thomas R, Travis Dominic A, Lipende Iddi, Mwacha Dismas, Ndimuligo Sood A, Pintea Lilian, Raphael Jane, Mtiti Emmanuel R, Hahn Beatrice H, Pusey Anne E, Goodall Jane
Department of Anthropology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108 USA.
Biol Conserv. 2020 Dec;252. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108853. Epub 2020 Nov 16.
The study of chimpanzees in Gombe National Park, Tanzania, started by Jane Goodall in 1960, provided pioneering accounts of chimpanzee behavior and ecology. With funding from multiple sources, including the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI) and grants from private foundations and federal programs, the project has continued for sixty years, providing a wealth of information about our evolutionary cousins. These chimpanzees face two main challenges to their survival: infectious disease - including simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVcpz), which can cause Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) in chimpanzees - and the deforestation of land outside the park. A health monitoring program has increased understanding of the pathogens affecting chimpanzees and has promoted measures to characterize and reduce disease risk. Deforestation reduces connections between Gombe and other chimpanzee populations, which can cause loss of genetic diversity. To promote habitat restoration, JGI facilitated participatory village land use planning, in which communities voluntarily allocated land to a network of Village Land Forest Reserves. Expected benefits to people include stabilizing watersheds, improving water supplies, and ensuring a supply of forest resources. Surveys and genetic analyses confirm that chimpanzees persist on village lands and remain connected to the Gombe population. Many challenges remain, but the regeneration of natural forest on previously degraded lands provides hope that conservation solutions can be found that benefit both people and wildlife. Conservation work in the Greater Gombe Ecosystem has helped promote broader efforts to plan and work for conservation elsewhere in Tanzania and across Africa.
1960年,简·古道尔在坦桑尼亚的贡贝国家公园开始了对黑猩猩的研究,提供了关于黑猩猩行为和生态的开创性记录。在包括简·古道尔研究所(JGI)以及私人基金会和联邦项目的资助在内的多个来源的资金支持下,该项目持续了60年,提供了大量关于我们进化近亲的信息。这些黑猩猩的生存面临两个主要挑战:传染病——包括猿猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIVcpz),它可在黑猩猩中引发获得性免疫缺陷综合征(艾滋病)——以及公园外土地的森林砍伐。一个健康监测项目增进了对影响黑猩猩的病原体的了解,并推动了表征和降低疾病风险的措施。森林砍伐减少了贡贝与其他黑猩猩种群之间的联系,这可能导致遗传多样性丧失。为促进栖息地恢复,JGI推动了参与式村庄土地利用规划,社区在其中自愿将土地分配给村庄土地森林保护区网络。对人类预期的益处包括稳定流域、改善供水以及确保森林资源供应。调查和基因分析证实,黑猩猩在村庄土地上持续生存,并与贡贝种群保持联系。许多挑战依然存在,但在先前退化土地上天然森林的再生带来了希望,即能找到使人类和野生动物都受益的保护解决方案。大贡贝生态系统的保护工作有助于推动在坦桑尼亚其他地区乃至整个非洲进行更广泛的保护规划和工作。