Gombe National Park

Overview

Jane Goodall, a local primatologist who spent many years in its forests researching the behavior of the endangered chimpanzees, is the most well-known inhabitant of Gombe Stream National Park, which is situated on the western edge of Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Gombe Stream is an untamed area with beautiful trees and unobstructed lake vistas that is located on the wild beaches of Lake Tanganyika. After the day’s visit to the chimpanzees is finished, people sometimes spend time here hiking and swimming.

The chimpanzee families that reside safely within the confines of Gombe Stream Park are without a doubt the site’s biggest draw. The highlight of many visitors’ journeys to Africa is to go on one of the guided excursions that takes them deep into the forest where they may spend the entire morning observing and sitting with the magnificent primates. The tropical woodlands of Gombe Stream are home to numerous other primate species in addition to chimpanzees. The deep forest is home to baboons, vervet and colobus monkeys, forest pigs, small antelopes, and a variety of tropical birds.

Deep in the jungle, a whoop of excitement breaks out. It is quickly joined by a dozen additional voices and grows in volume, tempo, and tone to a frenzied screeching crescendo. It is the well-known “pant-hoot” call, a bonding ritual that enables the participants to recognize one another by means of their distinctive vocal tics. Walking through the ancient woodlands of Gombe Stream causes the human listener to experience a spine-tingling eruption that also serves as a warning of impending visual encounter with man’s closest living relative, the chimpanzee.

The smallest of Tanzania’s national parks, Gombe is a precarious chimpanzee habitat strip that spans the rocky northern shore of Lake Tanganyika and the deep river valleys that surround it. 

The chimpanzees there are accustomed to human visits thanks to the groundbreaking work of Jane Goodall, who established the world’s longest-running behavioral research program in 1960. The matriarch of the original community, Fifi, who is the only surviving member and was only three years old when Goodall first set foot in Gombe, is still frequently viewed by tourists.

Since chimpanzees and humans share 98% of the same genes, it is not necessary to be a scientist to distinguish between the distinctive repertoires of pants, hoots, and screams that characterize the celebrities, the power brokers, and the supporting cast. 

When you gaze into a chimpanzee’s eyes and they glance back at you, perhaps you will notice a spark of comprehension – a look of apparent recognition across the thinnest of species borders.

The other mammals that live in Gombe are mostly primates. While red-tailed and red colobus monkeys—the latter of which are frequently hunted by chimpanzees—stick to the forest canopy, a population of beachcomber olive baboons, which has been studied since the 1960s, is particularly accustomed.
Around 200 different bird species can be found in the park, from the famous fish eagle to the jewel-like Peter’s twin spots that tamely hop around the visitor center.

As night falls after dark, a brilliant night sky is enhanced by the lamps of hundreds of little wooden boats that are bobbing on the lake in the style of a vast city