At the moment, money from Gombe tourism goes into one pot for Tanzania National Parks and it has to pay for the whole infrastructure of everything. But through our TACARE [community development] programme, we’ve benefited local people hugely.The thing is about tourism and research is that they can both focus attention on the place and help to preserve it. It’s tourism involvement with the mountain gorillas that saved them.During the genocide in Rwanda in the 1990s, people on both sides were being told, Don’t touch the gorillas, as it was the second biggest foreign exchange earner after tea in the country. So both sides hoped to win and continue exploiting gorillas.So the government can see the value of tourism, but the danger is they over-exploit it. They say, We’re getting all this money for [gorilla-tracking groups of] six people, now we’ll let it be 12, and they get more money for tours, so they make it 20. That’s the danger; that they end up killing what people have come to see.
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About Jane Goodall
Jane Goodall was a 20th-century English zoologist. Dame Valerie Jane Morris Goodall was an English primatologist and anthropologist. Regarded as a pioneer in primate ethology, and described by many publications as "the world's preeminent chimpanzee expert", she was best known for more than six decades of field research on the social and family life of wild chimpanzees in the Kasakela chimpanzee community at Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania. Read more on Wikipedia →