Jane Goodall’s Parting Gift to Earth? A One Way Ticket for Musk and Trump

Her final words called out power in space and on Earth.

©Image license via Wikimedia Commons/Simon Fraser University

Jane Goodall didn’t leave behind a manifesto or a list of regrets. What she left was a single conversation, recorded quietly in March 2025, in which she sat under soft studio lights and said something only she could get away with: she’d like to send Elon Musk and President Donald Trump on a spaceship and “leave them there.” It wasn’t said in bitterness, but with that dry British humor that always landed halfway between grace and warning. In her last words to the world, she wasn’t mocking. She was reminding us who holds the keys to the planet’s future, and asking, gently but unmistakably, if they still deserve them.

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Eco-Nightmare Unfolds as Florida Faces Burmese Pythons and an Army of Invaders

The Sunshine State is turning into a survival zone.

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Florida’s wild landscape is being eaten alive, literally. A wave of invasive species, led by the infamous Burmese python, is rewriting the state’s ecosystem in real time. From backyard canals to the heart of the Everglades, predators and pests not native to North America are spreading faster than experts can stop them. Each one seems to open a new ecological front, from snakes swallowing deer to lizards overrunning neighborhoods. The balance of Florida’s wilderness isn’t tipping, it’s collapsing, and scientists are scrambling to understand how deep the damage already runs.

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A Rare Water Frog Survived Dinosaurs, But Now Battles Climate Threats

An ancient survivor faces a modern crisis.

©Image license via Wikimedia Commons/José Grau de Puerto Montt

A frog that once shared the planet with dinosaurs still clings to life today, quietly enduring in the highland waters of Chile. This ancient amphibian, known as the Helmeted Water Toad (Calyptocephalella), has seen the rise and fall of continents and climates. Yet the one force it never evolved to survive is humanity. Habitat loss, pollution, and global warming now press on it harder than any prehistoric cataclysm. The species is a living time capsule, but even relics of deep time can crumble under the pressures of a rapidly changing world.

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The First Mammal Lost to Climate Change Has Finally Been Officially Declared Extinct

A small island rodent disappears forever.

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The Bramble Cay melomys, a tiny rodent that once lived on a remote coral cay in the Torres Strait, has now been officially declared extinct. Scientists had long warned that rising seas and stronger storms were destroying its only habitat, a low island barely above water. When exhaustive surveys failed to find a single surviving animal, it became clear the species was gone for good.

This marks a grim first in the modern era. It is the only mammal known to have vanished primarily because of climate change, and its loss has become a symbol of how fast warming seas can erase isolated life.

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Scientists Unearth a Giant River Dolphin That Roamed Amazon Rivers Millions of Years Ago

A colossal freshwater dolphin emerges from the past.

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Paleontologists have uncovered the skull of a newly described river dolphin species in the Peruvian Amazon, believed to have swum those waters around 16 million years ago. The creature, named Pebanista yacuruna, is considered the largest known freshwater dolphin ever found, measuring between 3 and 3.5 meters in length. The surprise is that it’s more closely related to South Asian river dolphins than to modern Amazonian ones, suggesting a long and unexpected evolutionary path.

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