Anne E. Pusey

Anne Elizabeth Pusey is director of the Jane Goodall Institute Research Center and [1] a professor of evolutionary anthropology at Duke University.

The collection housed at Duke University consists of a computerized database that Pusey oversees.

[3] Pusey graduated from Oxford University in 1970 with a degree in zoology and became a field assistant to Jane Goodall at the Gombe research facility in Tanzania in August 1970.

One area that she collaborates on is the study of the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVcpz) also known as the chimpanzee version of aids, and its effects on the subjects .

[4] Pusey has authored or co-authored 21 book selections, 114 journal entries, and 6 conference papers.

The documentary shows Pusey and Packer's research on examining the social hierarchy of lion prides and outlines why they are the only big cats who live in groups.

The documentary was filmed in Serengeti National Park in East Africa and shows the couple with their children, Jonathan and Catherine Packer.