WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:04.060 Narrator: At NASA Earth Science, we wake up every day 2 00:00:04.080 --> 00:00:08.090 looking for new ways to expand our understanding 3 00:00:08.110 --> 00:00:12.250 about the Earth, to push the frontiers of science, and to share what 4 00:00:12.270 --> 00:00:16.340 we're learning to benefit people worldwide. 5 00:00:16.360 --> 00:00:20.410 Together with our partners, we put science into action. 6 00:00:20.430 --> 00:00:24.560 One of our partners, the Jane Goodall Institute, 7 00:00:24.580 --> 00:00:28.660 has a mission to protect chimpanzees and the 8 00:00:28.680 --> 00:00:32.760 world we all share. In 1960, 9 00:00:32.780 --> 00:00:36.860 Jane Goodall arrived on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in 10 00:00:36.880 --> 00:00:40.900 Gombe National Park, Tanzania. 11 00:00:40.920 --> 00:00:44.960 Goodall: I think of those early days when it was just me and the forest 12 00:00:44.980 --> 00:00:49.000 and the chimpanzees. It was so magic. 13 00:00:49.020 --> 00:00:53.090 Narrator: As her work studying chimpanzees progress, the land around the park was 14 00:00:53.110 --> 00:00:57.110 steadily deforested for timber and agriculture, severing the connection 15 00:00:57.130 --> 00:01:01.120 between chimpanzees inside and outside the park, 16 00:01:01.140 --> 00:01:05.160 a connection they need to survive. 17 00:01:05.180 --> 00:01:09.200 Deforestation is a problem for people, also. 18 00:01:09.220 --> 00:01:13.250 Goodall: It was clear there were more people living there than the land could support, 19 00:01:13.270 --> 00:01:17.310 they had overfarmed the land, which was 20 00:01:17.330 --> 00:01:21.410 infertile. Terrible soil erosion, little streams getting silted up. 21 00:01:21.430 --> 00:01:25.540 People clearly struggling to survive. 22 00:01:25.560 --> 00:01:29.560 And that's when I realized, unless we improved the lives of the people, 23 00:01:29.580 --> 00:01:33.600 we can't even start to try and save the chimpanzees. 24 00:01:33.620 --> 00:01:37.640 Narrator: People in the communities and 25 00:01:37.660 --> 00:01:41.670 at the Jane Goodall Institute needed a new perspective to 26 00:01:41.690 --> 00:01:45.810 see how changes had taken place over time. 27 00:01:45.830 --> 00:01:49.910 That's when the partnership began between the institute and NASA. 28 00:01:49.930 --> 00:01:54.040 They looked to space, using NASA's satellites that observe the Earth to gain 29 00:01:54.060 --> 00:01:58.070 a higher vantage point. 30 00:01:58.090 --> 00:02:02.110 Pintea: When we first got our Landsat satellite images from '72 and '99 we 31 00:02:02.130 --> 00:02:06.160 made a natural color composite of Gombe and area outside Gombe. 32 00:02:06.180 --> 00:02:10.200 And put them side-by-side and realized that lots of 33 00:02:10.220 --> 00:02:14.300 deforestation happened. You can see it. The villages lost maybe 90 percent 34 00:02:14.320 --> 00:02:18.400 80 percent of the forest cover. And they will tell 35 00:02:18.420 --> 00:02:22.420 stories about how the hills were covered 36 00:02:22.440 --> 00:02:26.540 in forest. But then when you show them a picture, it's very 37 00:02:26.560 --> 00:02:30.680 shocking to everybody, realizing what has been lost. 38 00:02:30.700 --> 00:02:34.860 Villagers were motivated to find new ways 39 00:02:34.880 --> 00:02:38.880 for sustainably managing their land and to protect 40 00:02:38.900 --> 00:02:42.950 the health of the area. The institute and communities 41 00:02:42.970 --> 00:02:46.970 started a forest monitoring program to provide training 42 00:02:46.990 --> 00:02:51.030 and equip community members with GPS-enabled devices 43 00:02:51.050 --> 00:02:55.100 to document forest activities. 44 00:02:55.120 --> 00:02:59.180 Together with the institute, villages developed land use plans 45 00:02:59.200 --> 00:03:03.370 for mapping where to build homes, what areas could support 46 00:03:03.390 --> 00:03:07.540 agriculture, and where it was best to harvest the forest sustainably. 47 00:03:07.560 --> 00:03:11.680 Goodall: Really really exciting to see the 48 00:03:11.700 --> 00:03:15.750 impact of these images on the villagers. 49 00:03:15.770 --> 00:03:19.810 And to see them sitting around and identifying sacred places, 50 00:03:19.830 --> 00:03:23.860 and that enabled them to do these land use management plans. 51 00:03:23.880 --> 00:03:27.880 And that's made all the difference. 52 00:03:27.900 --> 00:03:31.980 Narrator: Tree cover is returning, and Earth observations are 53 00:03:32.000 --> 00:03:36.090 now being used to show progress and inspire 54 00:03:36.110 --> 00:03:40.140 continued action. This helps protect soil needed for 55 00:03:40.160 --> 00:03:44.330 agriculture and clean drinking water, and safeguards 56 00:03:44.350 --> 00:03:48.440 forest health. It also ensures the long-term survival 57 00:03:48.460 --> 00:03:52.460 of Gombe's famous chimpanzees and those 58 00:03:52.480 --> 00:03:56.490 across western Tanzania. 59 00:03:56.510 --> 00:04:00.590 Goodall: I think that there's no question but that NASA with its satellite imagery 60 00:04:00.610 --> 00:04:04.620 used in the right way, it can really be really helpful for conservation. 61 00:04:04.640 --> 00:04:08.730 Narrator: At NASA, we continue to observe, 62 00:04:08.750 --> 00:04:12.830 examine, and advance the understanding of our home planet. 63 00:04:12.850 --> 00:04:16.930 We team with partners who use our science 64 00:04:16.950 --> 00:04:39.780 and solutions for improving life on Earth.