Conservationists worldwide face the new year with a significant gap left by Jane Goodall’s death.
Goodall was a tireless voice for wildlife and habitat protection. She refused to see chimpanzees as objects, recognizing them instead as fellow beings. Their acceptance of her granted unparalleled access to their world.
But her impact went further. Her findings helped topple imposed boundaries between human and non-human animals. Scientists had long believed that only humans used tools. After Goodall observed chimps using sticks to fish for termites, her mentor Louis Leakey sent a telegram, stating, “Now we must redefine tool, redefine man, or accept chimpanzees as humans.”
Option 2 prevailed. After chimps’ tool use was verified, scientists proposed a new distinction: non-human animals could use tools but couldn’t make them.
It was only a matter of time until chimps were observed stripping and shaping termite sticks. Crows manufacture tools from leaves, among other examples. Claims were then made that only humans have culture (social learning across generations). But meerkats teach their young to hunt, and orca pods have regionally specific hunting strategies and social organization. The list goes on.
Language has been held up as dividing line, although efforts are continually underway to crack other creatures’ codes, from bee dances that map out pollen locations to whale songs that travel kilometres under the ocean’s surface. Language syntax and complexity may differ, but most living beings share the ability to communicate.
The claim that self-awareness is solely human has also been grudgingly discarded, after numerous species “passed” the “mirror self-recognition test” (starting with chimps in 1970).
Empathy and a sense of the future have also been disproven as human-only. Most people with pet dogs can attest to empathy during spells of sadness and have seen the excitement generated by a pending walk. The ability to problem solve, once thought a solely human domain, has been observed in rats, among other species.
Three claims elevating humans above other animals are articulated today to varying degrees: the human abilities to create art, develop technology and abstract from self.
Yet is not the nest of a bower bird or a whale song a kind of art? And while human technology is astounding (medical technology has equipped us with the ability to save lives and green technology has allowed us to capture energy from the sun and wind), some technologies — such as the polluting, climate-altering internal-combustion engine or a logging machine able to fell multiple trees in one pass — are devastating the planet we depend on. (Meanwhile, technology is also used to create vehicles to vacate the planet should we destroy it.) It can be difficult to frame our technological prowess entirely as a beacon of intelligence.
As for a species’ ability to abstract from itself, how can we possibly know what goes on in the minds of other creatures when most studies, unlike Goodall’s, involve taking animals out of their worlds, placing them in cages and measuring them against human standards?
Humans are unique. So are other animals. Goodall’s work ruptured the social construction of apex humans. We’ve been struggling to patch it ever since. How else can we justify our mass mistreatment of fellow animals?
As we move into the new year, we need more ruptures in mainstream thinking. It’s the cracks that let the light in. Science has shown that we’re kin with all living things, branches on an evolutionary tree. As Barbara Noske advocates in her book Humans and Other Animals, we must recognize the discontinuity between ourselves and other animals as horizontal, not vertical.
In 2020, the late Sen. Murray Sinclair introduced legislation — the Jane Goodall Act — to prohibit common forms of captivity for elephants and great apes. The Senate passed a version (Bill S-15) in the last session of Parliament. Unfortunately, it didn’t make it through the House of Commons before the 2025 election. It would be a fitting tribute to Goodall’s legacy for the government to reintroduce it and for Parliament to at last pass it into law.
Jane Goodall should be remembered as a scientist and an agent of change. Let’s hope that 2026 brings more compassionate voices like hers to collapse harmful systems and bring about a gentler, healthier world — for humans and all our animal relatives.
David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with David Suzuki Foundation Boreal Project Manager Rachel Plotkin.
Learn more at davidsuzuki.org.


