Jane Goodall Institute

The Jane Goodall Institute promotes understanding and protection of great apes and their habitat and builds on the legacy of Dr. Jane Goodall, its founder, to inspire individual action by people of all ages to help animals, other people and to protect the world we all share.

Operation Size

Large

Sector

Environment and Animals

Objectives

Fundraise

Raise Awareness

Visualise data on a map

Product

Photo Credit

Jane Goodall Institute

Website

https://www.janegoodall.org

Challenge

The goal of the Jane Goodall Institute is to preserve African great apes and their habitats, with an emphasis on chimpanzees. To be effective, conservation projects require the best science and data available in order to design, implement, measure and monitor the success of conservation actions. They also must engage stakeholders in participatory and transparent ways – from local communities to government authorities.

Story

In 2006, the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI) began sharing daily updates online that provided a glimpse of chimpanzee field research and an ongoing view of the research programme begun by Jane Goodall in 1960.

By adding Google Earth tools to their outreach, they’ve been able to capture, visualise and share information about forest loss with local communities, government representatives and potential donors. These mapping tools go beyond data to provide a canvas on which JGI can vividly illustrate disappearing habitats and the effects of poverty, including deforestation and unsustainable farming.

The information that the forest monitors are collecting is not just useful for the village. It's actually contributing toward a global effort of monitoring forests and natural resources around the world.'

Dr. Lilian Pintea, Vice President of Conservation Science, JGI

Impact

Following the interest and excitement of JGI’s initial online outreach, they’ve been using Google Earth Engine, Open Data Kit (ODK), smartphones, tablets and cloud technology since 2009 to empower local communities to better manage and monitor their forests.

They’ve used these tools to manage land use and forest reserves in western Tanzania, to monitor biomass and carbon in dry tropical forests and Miombo woodlands and to model potential distribution of chimpanzees across Tanzania’s National Parks.

In addition, JGL has built a Forest Watcher app that makes it easier to download, locate, verify and report on forest loss alerts, and developed an online course for their youth action programme with Google’s Coursebuilder software that uses My Maps and other Google mapping tools to bring conservation efforts to life.

In Uganda and Tanzania, JGI is using ODK and Android tablets to conduct detailed inventory and mapping of private forest owners and village forest monitoring to support country's preparedness for REDD.

A partnership with Woods Hole Research Center and support of Norwegian Government, JGI has been applying Google Earth Engine technology to build capacity in Tanzania for monitoring biomass and carbon in dry tropical forests and Miombo woodlands.

Discover how other organisations use Google for Nonprofits to make an impact.