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Birutė Galdikas, the primatologist whose five-decade fieldwork in Borneo transformed understanding of orangutans and helped drive conservation efforts, has died at 79, news outlets reported March 25–26, 2026.
Recruited by Louis Leakey as one of the famed “Trimates,” Galdikas established Camp Leakey in 1971 and led one of the longest-running studies of any wild mammal.
Her research documented orangutan behavior, solitary social structures and slow reproductive rates, and she combined science with hands-on rehabilitation, returning more than 450 orphaned and confiscated orangutans to the forest.
In 1986 she founded Orangutan Foundation International and shifted into advocacy, working with local communities to protect fragmented peat-swamp and lowland forests amid logging, agricultural conversion and fires.
Her interventionist rehabilitation methods drew some scientific debate over the line between research and rescue, but her influence on policy, public awareness and habitat protection was wide-ranging.
Galdikas’s passing renews focus on the ongoing threats to Borneo’s forests and the species she championed.







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