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What Flaco the Owl’s Death Teaches Us About Making Cities Safer for Birds

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Wednesday, April 17, 2024

On March 3, on what felt like the first lovely Sunday afternoon of the year, hundreds of humans gathered at an oak tree in New York City’s Central Park to remember an owl. They carried musical instruments, television cameras, speeches and verse. One speaker took the microphone and read the crowd a rewrite of Frank O’Hara’s piece “Poem [Lana Turner Has Collapsed!],” with adjusted lines to address the departed bird: “Oh Flaco we love you get up.” Many of the mourners had been expecting the grim news that brought them to the park for a long time. Flaco, the Eurasian eagle-owl who escaped from his Central Park Zoo enclosure at the southern end of the park and lived free in the city for more than a year, had died just over a week earlier, after apparently striking a residential building. Ornithologists and conservationists say his remarkable life as a voluntary New Yorker—and the tragic way it ended—should change the way humans think about the birds that live among us. Hatched in captivity in North Carolina and raised at New York City’s Central Park Zoo, Flaco chose his own location for the first time on February 2, 2023, after someone created a hole in his enclosure that allowed him to escape. The 12-year-old owl eluded the humans who tried to recapture him and quickly began to behave as his wild counterparts in Europe and Asia do, hunting, hooting and swooping through the city. Zoo officials eventually suspended their efforts to bring him back to his cage and announced that they would monitor him instead. Many human New Yorkers delighted in their non-native avian neighbor: His success as a newly wild bird was proof, perhaps, that theirs was a city where anything could happen. Flaco’s former enclosure at the Central Park Zoo has remained empty for the past year. Lauren Oster Even as a year passed and the owl’s admirers celebrated his “Flaco-versary” of freedom, experts were cleareyed about the dangers he continued to face in the city before he died. “He’s not in the wild, born to natural parents, living in his natural habitat; that’s the only good situation for him, and it’s never going to happen,” said Christopher D. Soucy, executive director of the Raptor Trust, a New Jersey wildlife rehabilitation center that admitted 89 owls in 2023. “He’s most assuredly going to live a far shorter life than if he stayed in captivity,” noted Karla Bloem, executive director of the International Owl Center in Minnesota. One particular hazard came up in every conversation: “There’s a war on rats in New York City, and they don’t do it all with traps,” said Kevin McGowan, an associate at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. “There’s always a chance that he’ll pick one up somewhere that’s loaded with poison, and we know that secondary poisoning does kill raptors.” The tragedy they had foreseen struck on February 23, when a building supervisor found Flaco lying in a residential courtyard on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. His improbable year had ended with his death. When veterinary pathologists performed an initial necropsy on Flaco, their findings were “consistent with death due to acute traumatic injury.” The Wildlife Conservation Society, the zoo’s parent nonprofit, noted that “Flaco’s tragic and untimely death highlights the issue of bird strikes and their devastating effects on wild bird populations.” Flaco favored high perches such as scaffolding and water towers as he explored Manhattan’s Upper West Side. David Lei That issue is especially deserving of local attention, as New York City is notorious for bird fatalities. Millions of migrating birds navigate among its disorienting skyscrapers in the spring and fall as they follow the Atlantic Flyway, and each year an estimated 90,000 to 230,000 die trying. To reduce that number, humans have to mitigate the twin hazards of reflective glass windows and artificial lighting. Glass is invisible to birds, which perceive images reflected in it as food, shelter, open air and even other birds. Humans can make it visible to them with barriers in front of it or markings on its surface. Artificial lighting, in turn, attracts and disorients birds that are accustomed to navigating after dark with natural cues such as moonlight and starlight—and can precipitate fatal crashes into buildings and other obstacles. In the wake of the zoo’s report and an uptick in public attention to avian welfare, New York lawmakers renewed local pushes to pass legislation for birds’ sake. Senate Bill S7098A, which was renamed “the Flaco Act” after the owl’s death, would require some state-owned buildings to incorporate practices to reduce bird death. Senate Bill S7663, the Dark Skies Protection Act, would require that non-essential outdoor lighting be shielded, motion-activated or turned off between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. That said, researchers have found that between 365 million and 988 million birds die hitting buildings across the United States each year, and fewer than 1 percent of those fatalities involve high-rises. Products and practices to reduce strikes at low-rises (roughly 56 percent of deaths) and residences (roughly 44 percent) are as just as crucial to conserving birds. Bloem notes that common equipment and barriers can also be lethal obstacles for owls and other birds. She says hockey and soccer nets, for example, should be taken down when not in active use, as owls that fly into and become entangled in them can incur life-threatening injuries as they struggle to escape. Barbed wire is a particularly grisly hazard: “Owls fly into barbed wire fences and they get impaled,” she explains. “They thrash around, they rip the muscle off their bones, [and] it’s hideous, absolutely hideous.” Adhesive pest control like glue boards intended to catch rodents and tape for lanternflies, in turn, is woefully indiscriminate. “All kinds of things get stuck on them,” Bloem says. “Anything sticky outside: bad.” Flaco spent the majority of his first months of freedom exploring Central Park. At least 11 species of owls had been spotted there prior to his escape from the zoo. David Lei American lawmakers are taking steps to prohibit that form of pest control, as their counterparts have already done in England, Iceland, Ireland and New Zealand. This January, Representative Ted Lieu, a Democrat from California, introduced a bill to ban the possession and use of glue traps nationwide. Bloem’s colleague Marjon Savelsberg, a Dutch researcher who studies wild eagle-owls’ vocalizations in the quarry near her home in Maastricht, likens Flaco’s experience in Manhattan to that of the local members of his species she hears and sees on a regular basis. The rats, pigeons and crows attracted to litter in and around Maastricht’s city park create an area of high prey density that she says is like McDonald’s for eagle-owls. “They hunt in town, and we know they do because they’ve been fitted with transmitters—but I also know it because people [in town] send me recorded sound files,” she says. “Because I know the individuals, I can tell, ‘Oh, that’s Female No. 1 calling for food.’” She also likens Flaco’s fate to the owls’ deaths near her home. “The last year of his life, Flaco lived the life of his wild family over here—and, sad to say, also died the way a lot of his family members here die,” she says. “We are their biggest threat: rodenticides, pesticides, PCBs, building collisions, barbed wire entanglements, habitat loss, bird flu … you name it.” After further study of his tissues and organs, several of those threats were found to have affected Flaco. When Wildlife Conservation Society updated its initial necropsy findings after weeks of additional analyses, the new details painted an even more devastating picture of the city’s effect on Flaco. Post-mortem testing revealed that he had a severe case of pigeon herpesvirus, a disease he contracted from eating feral pigeons, and four different anticoagulant rodenticides in his system. Both the disease and the rat poisons “would have been debilitating and ultimately fatal,” and experts say they likely weakened and disoriented him, causing him to topple from his perch high in the air and sustain traumatic injury on impact with the ground rather than with the building. Testing also revealed trace amounts of DDE, a breakdown product of DDT, an insecticide banned in the United States in 1972. Though the level in Flaco’s body was clinically insignificant, it was a grim reminder of the agricultural chemical’s long shadow. “It is a general truth that being compromised by a toxin like rodenticide or DDE makes an animal more susceptible to an opportunistic disease, whether bacterial, viral or parasitic,” says Rita McMahon, the director of the Wild Bird Fund, the Manhattan wildlife rehabilitation center that initially retrieved Flaco’s body. The organization brought him to its hospital a few blocks away, where veterinary staff pronounced him dead. Research has demonstrated rodenticides’ deadly effect on wild animals’ immune systems in California, where scientists found that bobcats exposed to multiple types of anticoagulant rat poison were more than seven times more likely to die of mange, a skin parasite that was previously rarely fatal to them, than of any other cause. Street art celebrating Flaco on Manhattan’s Lower East Side appeared after he visited the neighborhood in November 2023. Lauren Oster Wildlife rehabilitators and other experts say bacterial and viral diseases that affect pigeons—and can spread quickly in dense urban populations—also threatened Flaco. “From our very recent readings on the subject of pigeon herpesvirus, apparently the Eurasian eagle-owl is particularly susceptible to the virus,” McMahon says. “We sure make living rough for wildlife.” Anticoagulant rodenticides, like those detected in Flaco, interfere with the activation of vitamin K, which produces blood-clotting factors in the liver. In animals without those factors, bruising, bleeding into body cavities and hemorrhaging can culminate in shock and death. It can take up to ten days for a rat that has ingested lethal levels of anticoagulant rodenticide to die from internal bleeding, and the toxins can stay in their bodies for up to 100 days. A predator consuming that rat, then, experiences the rodenticide’s effects on its own system. No matter how sheltered a source of poison might seem, its deadly impact can travel far and wide. New York City’s best-known birds have demonstrated rodenticide’s devastating effects on their species time and time again. Pale Male, the city’s most celebrated red-tailed hawk, lost his mate to rodenticide poisoning in 2012; when he mated again later that year, rodenticide sickened two of his chicks and is thought to have killed another. In 2022, a paper in Ecotoxicology reported that 68 percent of red-tailed hawks in New York State have anticoagulant rodenticide toxins in their systems. Barry, a barred owl who captured New Yorkers’ hearts in 2021, had two anticoagulant rodenticides (bromadiolone and difethialone) in her system when she was struck and killed by a vehicle in Central Park. She was at risk for a fatal hemorrhage long before that blunt-force trauma occurred. “What [many pest-control companies do is use] four or five different poisons, not just one, and if you’re adding a blood thinner to a blood thinner to a blood thinner to a blood thinner, you’re going to end up with water for blood, which is exactly what happens to these animals,” says Lisa Owens Viani, director of Raptors Are the Solution, a California-based nonprofit focused on eliminating toxic rodenticides from the food web. In Flaco’s case, the rodenticides in his system could have turned a nonlethal injury into a fatal one. “This happened to an owl in San Luis Obispo a couple years ago; she had a small wound that ended up bleeding out. When they necropsy these animals, the body cavity is often just filled with blood. The photos are very hard to look at,” Viani says. Furthermore, “If you’re flying around with thinned-out blood, you’re anemic, you’re weak, you’re not going to be able to dodge the normal kinds of things you would have to dodge.” Eagle-owl researchers in Europe speculate that Flaco used Manhattan’s massive buildings to amplify the sound of his hoots. David Lei Citizens and conservation groups are pushing lawmakers to curb rodenticides. New Yorkers took a stand on birds’ behalf in 2014, when six nonprofits filed a petition with the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation to regulate the use of second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs). It was denied that fall, a move that the pest-control industry celebrated by commending colleagues who had lobbied against the bill in Albany. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency stopped licensing SGARs for sale to general consumers nationwide in 2015. That said, retail customers in many parts of the country can still buy the first-generation poisons, which act more slowly but are just as harmful. Furthermore, pest-control professionals can still use SGARs in all U.S. states except California, where loopholes exist for industrial uses. Already-purchased products or those that weren’t removed from store shelves are also still deployed. “People are still somehow using them,” veterinarian Cynthia Hopf-Dennis, the lead researcher on the Ecotoxicology study on rodenticide in red-tailed hawks, told the Cornell Chronicle. On the legislative level, Viani and her fellow conservationists in California were able to push for the passage of rodenticide-regulation bills such as 2020’s California Ecosystems Protection Act (AB 1788) and 2023’s AB 1322. They filed lawsuits to force the state to investigate the wide-ranging impacts and cumulative effects of those poisons and presented groundbreaking research—such as the aforementioned study on bobcats—and stated that moratoriums shouldn’t wait. Agencies for environmental regulation vary from state to state, but that grassroots effort in California demonstrated that local groups working together could have a far-reaching impact, says Viani. On an individual level, experts say concerned citizens can take immediate action to reduce threats to birds living in their communities. Raptors Are the Solution offers downloadable outreach materials and an Activist Toolkit with step-by-step instructions for reducing rat poison use and introducing safer integrated pest-control strategies and long-term solutions to infestations. These four Eurasian eagle-owl chicks have been borrowed from their nest for leg banding, which will allow Belgian ornithologists to track the health of their population over time. Didier Vangeluwe Didier Vangeluwe, the head of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences’ bird banding center and an ornithologist who has studied eagle-owls for 40 years, emphasizes the importance of lobbying local authorities to expand cities’ green areas and improve their plant diversity and water quality. He also stresses that managing the balance and health of nonhuman species is our responsibility, whether we acknowledge it or not. “We are in the center of the game, and our influence is going in every direction,” he says. Raptor Trust director Soucy concurs that we should make human habitations safer for wild animals, and that we should be doing it now. “Millions and millions and millions of years of evolution didn’t really design these animals to live in urban environments,” he says. “Some of them don’t have a choice anymore, because we’ve messed up so much of their natural environments; they’ve moved in not necessarily by choice but out of necessity. We have to do our best to understand that we’re sharing the world with them.” Get the latest Science stories in your inbox.

Ornithologists and conservationists say humans can take key steps to make urban environments less hazardous for our avian friends

On March 3, on what felt like the first lovely Sunday afternoon of the year, hundreds of humans gathered at an oak tree in New York City’s Central Park to remember an owl. They carried musical instruments, television cameras, speeches and verse. One speaker took the microphone and read the crowd a rewrite of Frank O’Hara’s piece “Poem [Lana Turner Has Collapsed!],” with adjusted lines to address the departed bird: “Oh Flaco we love you get up.” Many of the mourners had been expecting the grim news that brought them to the park for a long time.

Flaco, the Eurasian eagle-owl who escaped from his Central Park Zoo enclosure at the southern end of the park and lived free in the city for more than a year, had died just over a week earlier, after apparently striking a residential building. Ornithologists and conservationists say his remarkable life as a voluntary New Yorker—and the tragic way it ended—should change the way humans think about the birds that live among us.

Hatched in captivity in North Carolina and raised at New York City’s Central Park Zoo, Flaco chose his own location for the first time on February 2, 2023, after someone created a hole in his enclosure that allowed him to escape. The 12-year-old owl eluded the humans who tried to recapture him and quickly began to behave as his wild counterparts in Europe and Asia do, hunting, hooting and swooping through the city. Zoo officials eventually suspended their efforts to bring him back to his cage and announced that they would monitor him instead. Many human New Yorkers delighted in their non-native avian neighbor: His success as a newly wild bird was proof, perhaps, that theirs was a city where anything could happen.

Flaco's Enclosure at Central Park Zoo
Flaco’s former enclosure at the Central Park Zoo has remained empty for the past year. Lauren Oster

Even as a year passed and the owl’s admirers celebrated his “Flaco-versary” of freedom, experts were cleareyed about the dangers he continued to face in the city before he died.

“He’s not in the wild, born to natural parents, living in his natural habitat; that’s the only good situation for him, and it’s never going to happen,” said Christopher D. Soucy, executive director of the Raptor Trust, a New Jersey wildlife rehabilitation center that admitted 89 owls in 2023.

“He’s most assuredly going to live a far shorter life than if he stayed in captivity,” noted Karla Bloem, executive director of the International Owl Center in Minnesota.

One particular hazard came up in every conversation: “There’s a war on rats in New York City, and they don’t do it all with traps,” said Kevin McGowan, an associate at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. “There’s always a chance that he’ll pick one up somewhere that’s loaded with poison, and we know that secondary poisoning does kill raptors.”

The tragedy they had foreseen struck on February 23, when a building supervisor found Flaco lying in a residential courtyard on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. His improbable year had ended with his death.

When veterinary pathologists performed an initial necropsy on Flaco, their findings were “consistent with death due to acute traumatic injury.” The Wildlife Conservation Society, the zoo’s parent nonprofit, noted that “Flaco’s tragic and untimely death highlights the issue of bird strikes and their devastating effects on wild bird populations.”

Flaco the Owl Perches Near Building
Flaco favored high perches such as scaffolding and water towers as he explored Manhattan’s Upper West Side. David Lei

That issue is especially deserving of local attention, as New York City is notorious for bird fatalities. Millions of migrating birds navigate among its disorienting skyscrapers in the spring and fall as they follow the Atlantic Flyway, and each year an estimated 90,000 to 230,000 die trying. To reduce that number, humans have to mitigate the twin hazards of reflective glass windows and artificial lighting. Glass is invisible to birds, which perceive images reflected in it as food, shelter, open air and even other birds. Humans can make it visible to them with barriers in front of it or markings on its surface. Artificial lighting, in turn, attracts and disorients birds that are accustomed to navigating after dark with natural cues such as moonlight and starlight—and can precipitate fatal crashes into buildings and other obstacles.

In the wake of the zoo’s report and an uptick in public attention to avian welfare, New York lawmakers renewed local pushes to pass legislation for birds’ sake. Senate Bill S7098A, which was renamed “the Flaco Act” after the owl’s death, would require some state-owned buildings to incorporate practices to reduce bird death. Senate Bill S7663, the Dark Skies Protection Act, would require that non-essential outdoor lighting be shielded, motion-activated or turned off between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. That said, researchers have found that between 365 million and 988 million birds die hitting buildings across the United States each year, and fewer than 1 percent of those fatalities involve high-rises. Products and practices to reduce strikes at low-rises (roughly 56 percent of deaths) and residences (roughly 44 percent) are as just as crucial to conserving birds.

Bloem notes that common equipment and barriers can also be lethal obstacles for owls and other birds. She says hockey and soccer nets, for example, should be taken down when not in active use, as owls that fly into and become entangled in them can incur life-threatening injuries as they struggle to escape. Barbed wire is a particularly grisly hazard: “Owls fly into barbed wire fences and they get impaled,” she explains. “They thrash around, they rip the muscle off their bones, [and] it’s hideous, absolutely hideous.” Adhesive pest control like glue boards intended to catch rodents and tape for lanternflies, in turn, is woefully indiscriminate. “All kinds of things get stuck on them,” Bloem says. “Anything sticky outside: bad.”

Flaco in a Tree
Flaco spent the majority of his first months of freedom exploring Central Park. At least 11 species of owls had been spotted there prior to his escape from the zoo. David Lei

American lawmakers are taking steps to prohibit that form of pest control, as their counterparts have already done in England, Iceland, Ireland and New Zealand. This January, Representative Ted Lieu, a Democrat from California, introduced a bill to ban the possession and use of glue traps nationwide.

Bloem’s colleague Marjon Savelsberg, a Dutch researcher who studies wild eagle-owls’ vocalizations in the quarry near her home in Maastricht, likens Flaco’s experience in Manhattan to that of the local members of his species she hears and sees on a regular basis. The rats, pigeons and crows attracted to litter in and around Maastricht’s city park create an area of high prey density that she says is like McDonald’s for eagle-owls. “They hunt in town, and we know they do because they’ve been fitted with transmitters—but I also know it because people [in town] send me recorded sound files,” she says. “Because I know the individuals, I can tell, ‘Oh, that’s Female No. 1 calling for food.’”

She also likens Flaco’s fate to the owls’ deaths near her home. “The last year of his life, Flaco lived the life of his wild family over here—and, sad to say, also died the way a lot of his family members here die,” she says. “We are their biggest threat: rodenticides, pesticides, PCBs, building collisions, barbed wire entanglements, habitat loss, bird flu … you name it.”

After further study of his tissues and organs, several of those threats were found to have affected Flaco. When Wildlife Conservation Society updated its initial necropsy findings after weeks of additional analyses, the new details painted an even more devastating picture of the city’s effect on Flaco. Post-mortem testing revealed that he had a severe case of pigeon herpesvirus, a disease he contracted from eating feral pigeons, and four different anticoagulant rodenticides in his system. Both the disease and the rat poisons “would have been debilitating and ultimately fatal,” and experts say they likely weakened and disoriented him, causing him to topple from his perch high in the air and sustain traumatic injury on impact with the ground rather than with the building. Testing also revealed trace amounts of DDE, a breakdown product of DDT, an insecticide banned in the United States in 1972. Though the level in Flaco’s body was clinically insignificant, it was a grim reminder of the agricultural chemical’s long shadow.

“It is a general truth that being compromised by a toxin like rodenticide or DDE makes an animal more susceptible to an opportunistic disease, whether bacterial, viral or parasitic,” says Rita McMahon, the director of the Wild Bird Fund, the Manhattan wildlife rehabilitation center that initially retrieved Flaco’s body. The organization brought him to its hospital a few blocks away, where veterinary staff pronounced him dead. Research has demonstrated rodenticides’ deadly effect on wild animals’ immune systems in California, where scientists found that bobcats exposed to multiple types of anticoagulant rat poison were more than seven times more likely to die of mange, a skin parasite that was previously rarely fatal to them, than of any other cause.

Flaco Graffiti
Street art celebrating Flaco on Manhattan’s Lower East Side appeared after he visited the neighborhood in November 2023. Lauren Oster

Wildlife rehabilitators and other experts say bacterial and viral diseases that affect pigeons—and can spread quickly in dense urban populations—also threatened Flaco. “From our very recent readings on the subject of pigeon herpesvirus, apparently the Eurasian eagle-owl is particularly susceptible to the virus,” McMahon says. “We sure make living rough for wildlife.”

Anticoagulant rodenticides, like those detected in Flaco, interfere with the activation of vitamin K, which produces blood-clotting factors in the liver. In animals without those factors, bruising, bleeding into body cavities and hemorrhaging can culminate in shock and death. It can take up to ten days for a rat that has ingested lethal levels of anticoagulant rodenticide to die from internal bleeding, and the toxins can stay in their bodies for up to 100 days. A predator consuming that rat, then, experiences the rodenticide’s effects on its own system. No matter how sheltered a source of poison might seem, its deadly impact can travel far and wide.

New York City’s best-known birds have demonstrated rodenticide’s devastating effects on their species time and time again. Pale Male, the city’s most celebrated red-tailed hawk, lost his mate to rodenticide poisoning in 2012; when he mated again later that year, rodenticide sickened two of his chicks and is thought to have killed another. In 2022, a paper in Ecotoxicology reported that 68 percent of red-tailed hawks in New York State have anticoagulant rodenticide toxins in their systems. Barry, a barred owl who captured New Yorkers’ hearts in 2021, had two anticoagulant rodenticides (bromadiolone and difethialone) in her system when she was struck and killed by a vehicle in Central Park. She was at risk for a fatal hemorrhage long before that blunt-force trauma occurred.

“What [many pest-control companies do is use] four or five different poisons, not just one, and if you’re adding a blood thinner to a blood thinner to a blood thinner to a blood thinner, you’re going to end up with water for blood, which is exactly what happens to these animals,” says Lisa Owens Viani, director of Raptors Are the Solution, a California-based nonprofit focused on eliminating toxic rodenticides from the food web. In Flaco’s case, the rodenticides in his system could have turned a nonlethal injury into a fatal one. “This happened to an owl in San Luis Obispo a couple years ago; she had a small wound that ended up bleeding out. When they necropsy these animals, the body cavity is often just filled with blood. The photos are very hard to look at,” Viani says. Furthermore, “If you’re flying around with thinned-out blood, you’re anemic, you’re weak, you’re not going to be able to dodge the normal kinds of things you would have to dodge.”

Flaco Perches on a Building
Eagle-owl researchers in Europe speculate that Flaco used Manhattan’s massive buildings to amplify the sound of his hoots. David Lei

Citizens and conservation groups are pushing lawmakers to curb rodenticides. New Yorkers took a stand on birds’ behalf in 2014, when six nonprofits filed a petition with the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation to regulate the use of second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs). It was denied that fall, a move that the pest-control industry celebrated by commending colleagues who had lobbied against the bill in Albany.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency stopped licensing SGARs for sale to general consumers nationwide in 2015. That said, retail customers in many parts of the country can still buy the first-generation poisons, which act more slowly but are just as harmful. Furthermore, pest-control professionals can still use SGARs in all U.S. states except California, where loopholes exist for industrial uses. Already-purchased products or those that weren’t removed from store shelves are also still deployed. “People are still somehow using them,” veterinarian Cynthia Hopf-Dennis, the lead researcher on the Ecotoxicology study on rodenticide in red-tailed hawks, told the Cornell Chronicle.

On the legislative level, Viani and her fellow conservationists in California were able to push for the passage of rodenticide-regulation bills such as 2020’s California Ecosystems Protection Act (AB 1788) and 2023’s AB 1322. They filed lawsuits to force the state to investigate the wide-ranging impacts and cumulative effects of those poisons and presented groundbreaking research—such as the aforementioned study on bobcats—and stated that moratoriums shouldn’t wait. Agencies for environmental regulation vary from state to state, but that grassroots effort in California demonstrated that local groups working together could have a far-reaching impact, says Viani.

On an individual level, experts say concerned citizens can take immediate action to reduce threats to birds living in their communities. Raptors Are the Solution offers downloadable outreach materials and an Activist Toolkit with step-by-step instructions for reducing rat poison use and introducing safer integrated pest-control strategies and long-term solutions to infestations.

Eurasian Eagle-Owl Chicks
These four Eurasian eagle-owl chicks have been borrowed from their nest for leg banding, which will allow Belgian ornithologists to track the health of their population over time. Didier Vangeluwe

Didier Vangeluwe, the head of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences’ bird banding center and an ornithologist who has studied eagle-owls for 40 years, emphasizes the importance of lobbying local authorities to expand cities’ green areas and improve their plant diversity and water quality. He also stresses that managing the balance and health of nonhuman species is our responsibility, whether we acknowledge it or not. “We are in the center of the game, and our influence is going in every direction,” he says.

Raptor Trust director Soucy concurs that we should make human habitations safer for wild animals, and that we should be doing it now. “Millions and millions and millions of years of evolution didn’t really design these animals to live in urban environments,” he says. “Some of them don’t have a choice anymore, because we’ve messed up so much of their natural environments; they’ve moved in not necessarily by choice but out of necessity. We have to do our best to understand that we’re sharing the world with them.”

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Doug Peacock, the real ‘George Hayduke,’ Looks Back on 50 Years of The Monkey Wrench Gang

Now a famed grizzly conservationist, Peacock served as Edward Abbey’s inspiration for the novel’s most pivotal, piercing character. The post Doug Peacock, the real ‘George Hayduke,’ Looks Back on 50 Years of The Monkey Wrench Gang appeared first on The Revelator.

Half a century ago, a lyrical and passionate philosopher named Edward Abbey published a novel that would help define a generation. The Monkey Wrench Gang supercharged a secretive movement to preserve the remaining American wilderness from devastating overdevelopment and corporate exploitation through targeted acts of violence against machines. The book, which remains painfully relevant to the ongoing environmental crises facing the planet, has recently been re-released in a commemorative anniversary edition. “A 50th anniversary of The Monkey Wrench Gang couldn’t be timelier,” says Abbey’s friend and colleague Doug Peacock, who inspired the character of George Washington Hayduke in the novel. “Our American wilderness, Ed’s and my favorite shared value, has never been in greater peril, and so the book’s theme of challenging authority at every turn really hits the bullseye. We live in a scorching era of biological extinctions. Climate change by itself could take everything out.” Now 83 years old, Peacock wrote the introduction to the new edition of the novel. A distinguished author, filmmaker, and conservationist, he has dedicated his life to the preservation of grizzly bears and the “trophic cascade” of spiraling ecological benefits the bears provide throughout their constricted range. (Disclosure: Funk worked as communications director for Peacock’s former startup, Save the Yellowstone Grizzly.) A Fictional Character Birthed in Genuine Trauma Peacock met Abbey in 1969, shortly after his discharge from the Green Berets during the Vietnam War. “I saw a lot of Ed Abbey in Tucson back then,” Peacock reflects. “I wasn’t a writer yet, but I was a character.” Such a character, in fact, that Peacock immediately stood out in a crowd. His anarchic instincts, incited by his combat experiences and coupled with his having partially recovered from post-traumatic stress disorder through profound encounters with grizzly bears in the wild, made him a unique persona — one that would fit perfectly into what would become The Monkey Wrench Gang. In the novel, four contrarians band together and suppress their differences for a shared and singular mission: thwarting the unchecked destruction of their beloved desert landscapes. Led by the furious and untiring Green Beret medic George Hayduke, the gang plans a sweeping campaign of industrial sabotage in desert country. Abbey’s novel is largely built around this singular character, who eagerly puts the violent wrench into the gang’s monkey business. Hayduke’s struggles with what later became known as PTSD were mirrored in Peacock. “Looking back,” Peacock reflects now, “Abbey probably did me a favor in creating a caricature of myself whose dim psyche I could penetrate when my own seemed off-limits. Ed painted the ex-Green Beret Hayduke with precise brushstrokes as caught in an emotional backwater, an eddy out of whose currents I wanted to swim. The only thing worse than reading your own press was becoming someone else’s fiction.” The other three members of the gang, says Peacock, were also based on friends of his in the Southwest: Seldom Seen Smith was built around the late activist and river runner Ken Sleight. Doc Sarvis “is mostly as far as I’m concerned Ed Abbey, especially when he spouts out his philosophy and little nuggets of wisdom — that’s really Ed.” Bonnie Abbzug was modeled after Ingrid Eisenstadter, a recent contributor to The Revelator, whom Peacock notes “was a handful, not just in fiction. That was really her.” Peacock later recounted his own story in the harrowing 1990 book Grizzly Years: In Search of the American Wilderness. In 2009 The Atlantic released a short documentary about him under the same title: ‘Wilderness Is the Glue’ After returning from Vietnam, Peacock says, he went straight into the wilderness. “I didn’t want to work for anyone or have troubles with the authorities, so I lived in the woods,” Peacock recalls. “I like autonomy and I took it to the extreme when I got back from Vietnam.” He spent most of his time in Yellowstone and Glacier national parks, “and you absolutely could not find me. I lived the life of an outlaw, far from any authority, and took anarchy to the extreme, hidden in the wilderness. I love freedom, and my feelings fit right into Abbey’s rather formal libertarian philosophy that permeates The Monkey Wrench Gang.” They found particular common ground on environmental issues. “Defending the wilderness is really the glue that cemented me with Ed.” Peacock’s insular need for a kind of absolute personal liberty, begun as an aching promise to himself while serving overseas, happened to fit neatly with Abbey’s own philosophical beliefs. Abbey wrote his master’s thesis at the University of New Mexico on anarchy, that ultimate expression of chaotic self-governance, and dedicated The Monkey Wrench Gang to the late 18th-century English reactionary and later Romantic icon Ned Ludd, who launched a populist sabotage campaign against the encroaching Industrial Revolution. In his novel Abbey makes the reader confront and question assumptions about the kinds of people behind the current economy’s ultimate, inevitable toll on our communal natural landscapes. And to bring the fight to them. Radical Rebirth The Monkey Wrench Gang was published in a time of social unrest and political turmoil that somehow seems minor compared to today’s unceasing partisan mayhem. But it struck a chord at the time, and many young people took this novel’s message to heart. Readers have credited the book with sparking the creation of Earth First! and other “radical environmentalist” groups who deflated industrial truck tires to stymy commerce, burned billboards to restore the natural view, spiked trees to prevent logging, and otherwise did what little is possible to take some kind of stand against blind, rampaging overdevelopment. “It was the beginning of radical environmentalism,” Peacock tells me. A Message That Still Resonates Peacock, who has spent a lifetime writing books and making documentaries about his dedication to preserving grizzly bears, sees our present political moment of absolute and almost fanatical obedience to the wishes of ultrarich oil, gas, coal, and timber industries as the tragically perfect time for this reintroduction to an unlikely cabal that refused to let the world die around them. Indeed, the sycophantic corporate atmosphere we’re living in today is different from any other in modern U.S. history. From handing over public lands to private extractive interests to ignoring scientific realities on climate and aggressively seeking to remove vital protections for endangered species, the Trump administration proudly proclaims its unprecedented contempt for what allows the United States to be what it was founded to be — wild and free. The categorically contrasting but equally devoted characters of The Monkey Wrench Gang embody the American belief in pushing past seemingly impenetrable boundaries by working together, by risking it all for common ideals, and by regularly squabbling and then reconciling. Out of a shared sense of duty. This book reminds us today that when all else fails, there’s always the option of rebellious attempts at sabotage to cut through the agitprop and draw attention to an enduring and genuinely apolitical value: preserving what remains of our wilderness. Together. After all, as Peacock says, “The principles and anger behind The Monkey Wrench Gang are still with us, and still with me.” Previously in The Revelator: In Understory, An Ecologist Reflects on the Grief of Losing Nature The post Doug Peacock, the real ‘George Hayduke,’ Looks Back on 50 Years of The Monkey Wrench Gang appeared first on The Revelator.

Graeme Samuel calls for Labor to ditch ‘national interest’ workaround for environment laws

Former ACCC chair condemns proposed exemption allowing minister to approve projects that don’t comply with lawGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastThe former competition watchdog chief Graeme Samuel says the government should axe its proposal to allow the environment minister to make decisions in breach of national laws if it is deemed in the “national interest”.Samuel, who led a 2020 review of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act, also argued a loophole that effectively exempts native forest logging from the laws “shouldn’t be there”. Continue reading...

The former competition watchdog chief Graeme Samuel says the government should axe its proposal to allow the environment minister to make decisions in breach of national laws if it is deemed in the “national interest”.Samuel, who led a 2020 review of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act, also argued a loophole that effectively exempts native forest logging from the laws “shouldn’t be there”.In his written submission to the inquiry, Samuel said “national interest” should instead be incorporated as a consideration in new national environmental standards.He made the comments to a Senate committee examining the Albanese government’s bills to reform national nature laws, which Labor hopes to pass before parliament rises for Christmas.Samuel was also concerned the legislation retained a loophole that effectively exempts native forest logging covered by a regional forest agreement (RFA) from national environmental laws.“I hate the RFA exemption. It shouldn’t be there,” Samuel told the committee.He said if the government did retain it, the agreements “should be governed by a very tough national environmental standard”.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailThe former Howard government environment minister Robert Hill – who introduced the original act – said tighter regulation of land-clearing should be the “highest priority” of the reforms.In his submission to the inquiry, Hill also said that there was “no credible argument” for retaining the logging exemption.What does net zero emissions actually mean? And is it different to the Paris agreement? – videoWhile welcoming the bills as achieving “80% of the aspirations” of a consultative group formed during the review process, Samuel said the government’s proposed national interest exemption could lead to the abuse of the power vested in the minister.Adopting similar language to the former treasury secretary Ken Henry, Samuel warned the exemption could lead to lobbyists seeking favourable decisions.The proposed exemption would allow the minister to approve projects that do not comply with environmental laws if the approval was considered in the national interest.“There’ll be a conga line of lobbyists that will be outside their door saying, ‘Well, look, you just use the national interest exemption’,” he said.“So I would take it out of the legislation and simply say it is now a balancing matter that ought to be taken into account in determining approvals and assessments.”Hill, in a submission co-written with Atticus Fleming, a former deputy secretary of the New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service, wrote that the “primary shortcoming” of the existing laws had been their failure to address the impact of land-clearing on Australia’s biodiversity.“Given the impact on biodiversity, and the failure of state governments, the effective regulation of land clearing must be the highest priority for the EPBC Act,” the submission states.Hill and Fleming suggested changes including provisions that would require land-clearing above certain thresholds to be assessed for impacts on threatened species and ecosystems.They also said “there is no credible argument for maintaining a blanket exemption for the logging of native forests” and the bills should be amended to remove it.“Logging operations should be subject to the same rules as mining, agriculture, urban development and so on,” they wrote.

Conservationists Make An (Intentional) Mess In Mendocino

And coho salmon love it. The post Conservationists Make An (Intentional) Mess In Mendocino appeared first on Bay Nature.

Photographs by Christie Hemm Klok. This story was produced by High Country News, hcn.org, with support from Bay Nature. Conservationists restoring salmon along California’s North Coast have a mantra: A good coho salmon stream looks like a teenager’s bedroom—if teenagers discarded logs and branches instead of dirty clothes. Surveying a stretch of the Navarro River one morning last spring, Anna Halligan, a conservation biologist with Trout Unlimited, was delighted. “This is exactly what we want,” she said, examining the debris-filled water. The twigs, dirt and branches around a fallen redwood had slowed the river to a crawl and carved out a deep, sun-dappled pool underneath the trunk. In September 2020, Trout Unlimited’s partners spent days selecting a redwood and then carefully maneuvering it into the river to make it more coho-friendly. That tree has now vanished—crushed under this much larger redwood, likely carried downriver by this winter’s rains. The collision has created even more of a “mess” than Halligan could have planned. Halligan climbed down for a closer look. Within minutes, a young, silvery coho flashed into view in the new pool.  The North Fork of the Navarro River is chock full of restoration projects implemented by Trout Unlimited with federal funding from NOAA. (Christie Hemm Klok) Coho salmon, which migrate between freshwater creeks and the open ocean, have nourished people, plants and animals along the Pacific Coast since time immemorial. Fred Simmons, an environmental technician for the Cahto Tribe of Laytonville Rancheria, recalled growing up along coho runs “jammed up so thick that you could go out there any time of evening and just get whatever you needed for your family.” But logging, development and climate change have devastated the coastal streams, and Simmons—now in his 60s—has seen coho pushed to the brink. The population in and around Mendocino County, toward the southern end of the species’ range, was declared threatened by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1996 and endangered in 2005.  That young coho in the Navarro River was part of a resurgence: For two years now, conservationists have watched the species return to the coast in notably large numbers. For the first time, “recovery seems possible,” said Peter Van De Burgt, a restoration manager with The Nature Conservancy. “We’re on the right track.” Fred Simmons and Anna Halligan. (Christie Hemm Klok) The first attempts to restore Mendocino’s streams for coho and other salmon began in the 1960s. Decades of logging in the area’s old-growth forests left woody debris in stream channels, creating miles-long barriers. Well-intentioned state conservationists decided to remove it. “They had this Western concept, like sweeping the floor,” said Anira G’Acha, environmental director for the Cahto Tribe of Laytonville Rancheria. They left behind hundreds of miles of tidy streams—simplified channels like bowling-alley lanes filled with fast-flowing water. And fish kept dying. “It’s hard to be a salmon,” said Van De Burgt. Everything wants to eat you—birds, otters, even other fish. Without fallen logs to slow their flow, streams lack the overhanging banks, woody debris and deep pools that young salmon need to hide from predators. Gradually, researchers realized that salmon needed the shelter provided by logjams. By the time coho salmon populations were protected by the Endangered Species Act, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife “basically did an ‘Oops’ and said, ‘Well, let’s put them back in again,’” said John Andersen, a California forester and policy director of the Mendocino and Humboldt Redwood Companies. Along the Albion River in Mendocino County, California Conservation Corps members put wood back into the river. Because the location is so remote, all the work is done by hand, with a pulley system to place the logs. (Christie Hemm Klok)Historically, fire helped fell the trees salmon needed. “Stream habitat evolved around fire for thousands of years,” said Ron Reed, a Karuk tribal member who is a cultural biologist and dipnet fisherman. But as the logging industry grew, so did wildfire suppression. Conservationists had to cut down some trees to create new logjams.  In the late 1990s, Mendocino Redwood and other logging companies began partnering with Trout Unlimited to restore coho back to the land they owned; soon, The Nature Conservancy and other groups, supported by state and federal grants, began restoring streams elsewhere in the region. Halligan noted that an “ecological system” of collaborators has sustained this work, directing millions of dollars to local contractors and rural economies.   But creating logjams is harder than clearing them. Projects initially went through the same state environmental permitting processes required for conventional logging projects, despite their substantially different goals. Some took more than a decade to see through.  Other challenges were more practical. “We learned very quickly,” said forester Chris Blencowe, who consults on Nature Conservancy and Trout Unlimited projects. Blencowe initially relied on second-growth redwoods but noticed that when they toppled into a streambed, they would “often just break like an overweight watermelon.” He’s since switched to Douglas fir for many of his projects.  Blencowe has also learned to wedge logs between standing trees so that the wood doesn’t wash away in the winter rains, as it did in the early years. The Nature Conservancy has come to rely on a machine that uses vibrations to sink logs into the sediment, since the sound of a power hammer could stun or kill nearby fish.  Even after 20 years, not everything goes according to plan. Van De Burgt said this unpredictability is a feature, not a bug: “We want to implement projects that create chaos in the river.” The more chaos, the more places young coho will have to live and survive—and the more coho will make their way downstream to the ocean.   The projects can benefit other salmon and steelhead species, too, as well as the streamside forests. Felling nearby second-growth trees for logjams “encourages understory plant relatives to grow,” Marisa McGrew, a Karuk and Yurok woman and assistant natural resources director for the Wiyot Tribe, said over email. “Stream restoration and forest restoration go hand in hand.” Bay Nature’s email newsletter delivers local nature stories, hikes, and events to your inbox each week. Sign up today! On the 10 Mile River in Mendocino County, biologists Lydia Brown and Evan Broberg insert PIT (Passive Integrated Transponder) tags into the underside of juvenile coho salmon, which allows them to track its growth for its lifetime. (Christie Hemm Klok)In the winter of 2023-2024, 15,000 coho salmon returned to spawn along the Mendocino coast, the highest number recorded by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife in 16 years of monitoring the population. Last winter, according to preliminary estimates, that number nearly doubled. “I think we got the perfect alignment,” said Sarah Gallagher, who leads the agency’s monitoring program. Good ocean conditions, a reprieve from several years of drought, and hundreds of miles of restored streams have combined to foster a flush of coho.  Still, this recovering population represents a fraction of historic runs. Once, hundreds of thousands of coho returned to California streams each year. But chinook and steelhead continue to dwindle. In mid-April, the interstate Pacific Fishery Management Council extended its ban on ocean salmon fishing for a third year. And hundreds more miles of North Coast streams still need wood. “Sometimes, when you look at it on a map, it looks like we’ve barely done anything at all,” said Halligan of Trout Unlimited.  Even as this year’s population is tallied, its habitat’s future is uncertain. Earlier this year, the Trump administration proposed deep cuts to the budget of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, whose Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund has supported much of the restoration work along with Gallagher’s coho monitoring.  Meanwhile, Northern California conservationists are exploring alternatives, such as the $10 billion for climate resilience projects in Proposition Four, which California voters approved last November. With recovery underway, they’re determined to continue bringing coho back. The coho “are realizing this is their homeland where they were born,” Simmons said. “It seems like they’re trying to heal.”   Christie Hemm Klok is a San Francisco-based photojournalist. She is passionate about storytelling that highlights the relationship between nature and humans. This story is part of High Country News’s Conservation Beyond Boundaries project, which is supported by the BAND Foundation.  Water reflections on the Navarro River, in the dappled light of the forest. (Christie Hemm Klok)

Jane Goodall, an extraordinary life well-lived (1934 – 2025)

Jane Goodall, a pioneering primatologist, conservationist and peace advocate, died On October 1, 2025. She was 91 years old. The post Jane Goodall, an extraordinary life well-lived (1934 – 2025) first appeared on EarthSky.

You can watch the memorial service for Jane Goodall on Wednesday, November 12, 2025, at the National Cathedral in Washington D.C., in the player above. The service begins at 11 a.m. EST. Jane Goodall was a trailblazing scientist who revolutionized the study of wild chimpanzees, revealing their complex emotions, tool use and social behaviors. She was a conservationist who founded the Jane Goodall Institute and the Roots & Shoots program, dedicated to wildlife protection, youth empowerment and environmental advocacy. Goodall passed away at age 91 on October 1, 2025, leaving behind a legacy of compassion, scientific discovery and hope for a more harmonious relationship between humans and nature. Jane Goodall lived an extraordinary life Jane Goodall was a pioneer in the study of wild chimpanzees, as well as a much-loved conservationist and UN messenger of peace. On October 1, 2025, she passed away in her sleep in Los Angeles, California, while on a speaking tour. She was 91 years old. On Wednesday, November 12, 2025, her family and friends will gather to honor her at a memorial service at the National Cathedral in Washington D.C. You can join in the remembrance by watching the live broadcast on YouTube, at 11 a.m. Eastern Time. Despite not having an undergraduate degree, Goodall completed her PhD at Cambridge University, England, in 1965. While she made her mark as a trailblazer in primate research early in the 1960s, she also went on, in her later years, to be a powerful advocate for young people and conservation. In addition, she was a prolific author and spent most of her time traveling around the world speaking about conservation and peace. Goodall founded the Jane Goodall Institute in 1977, initially to support research on chimpanzees in Gombe, Tanzania, Africa. Later, it evolved into a wider effort to operate diverse conservation projects around the world. One of those notable projects is Roots & Shoots, created to encourage young people of all ages to bring about positive changes in their communities. Jane Goodall is survived by her son, Hugo Eric Louis van Lawick (nicknamed Grub) and her three grandchildren, Merlin, Angel, and Nick. This photo of Jane Goodall is from 2022, when she visited the U.S. Embassy in Uganda. She’s holding a stuffed “chimpanzee” that she took with her on her travels. She called him Mr. H, after Gary Haun, a U.S. Marine who lost his eyesight in a helicopter crash. Goodall carried Mr. H with her to honor Haun, whom she regarded as an inspiration. Image via U.S. Embassy Uganda/ Flickr. (CC by 2.0) A dream come true of studying wildlife in Africa As a child, Goodall dreamed of going to Africa to study animals. Later, in interviews, she often joked that Tarzan had chosen the wrong Jane for his adventures! Goodall worked as a waitress to save enough money for travel to Africa. Her dream finally came true when, in 1957, she set sail for Kenya. There, she met the famed anthropologist Louis Leakey, well-known for his ground-breaking work on early human fossils, and began working as his secretary. Leakey had obtained grant money for a study of chimpanzees. He had hoped that observations of this species, closely related to humans, would yield new insights into our human ancestors. In 1960, he asked Goodall to travel to Gombe, Tanzania, to study chimpanzees. She said, in a documentary she narrated for National Geographic: I had no training, no degree. But Louis did not care about academic credentials. What he was looking for was someone with an open mind, with a passion for knowledge, with a love of animals. And with monumental patience. This touching video from the Jane Goodall Foundation is about the release of a rehabilitated chimpanzee, named Wounda, to a sanctuary island. Jane Goodall’s work with wild chimpanzees Prior to Goodall’s work at Gombe, little was known about wild chimpanzees. Goodall undertook her field work alone, from dawn to dusk, rain or shine, looking for chimpanzees. At first, she could not get close to them because they kept running away. But she stubbornly persisted. After five months, there was a breakthrough. Goodall saw an adult male that she had seen before, and this time, he did not run away. He was the dominant male in the chimpanzee community. She named him David Graybeard, for the distinctive white hair on his chin. Soon, the other chimps also accepted her, and she was able to get closer to them. Goodall learned to identify them and gave them names. Among them was Flo, an older female with a young daughter. Subsequently, these chimps became the focus of her groundbreaking work on their behavior. A new perception of chimps In the early 1960s, many scientists thought that only humans had minds and were capable of rational thought. But in the chimpanzees, Goodall saw beings capable of joy and sorrow, fear and jealousy. They were, she noted, so much like us, in so many ways. She said, in the documentary: Staring into the eyes of a chimpanzee, I saw a thinking, reasoning personality looking back. For the first time, she documented the use of tools in a species other than humans. Prior to that, scientists thought that only humans were capable of making and using tools. But she watched David Graybeard break off leafy twigs, strip out the leaves, and insert them into holes in termite mounds to fish for the insects. Goodall also observed other behaviors never seen before: She saw chimpanzees eating meat. And interestingly, she observed male chimpanzees doing dances in the rain. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Jane Goodall Institute ?? (@janegoodallcan) Flo, an influential chimpanzee in Jane Goodall’s research Flo was a notable chimp in Goodall’s studies. She was the top-ranking female in the community. And one day, Goodall became the first person to document the mating behavior of chimpanzees. Flo did not pick one mate. Instead, she allowed all the males that followed her to mate with her. After some months, Flo gave birth to a son thar Goodall named Flint. It was a unique opportunity for Goodall to observe an infant with its mother. In the documentary, an interviewer asked Goodall: What was it about Flo that you admired? She said: Well, she was all things that a chimp mother should be. She was protective but not overprotective. She was affectionate, she was playful but being supportive. That was the key. And of course that’s what my mother was. She supported me. And there’s no question that those first contacts with Flo and her family were very important to my own development. It was just so amazing to have this sort of relationship. Sadly, several years later, Flo died as she crossed a stream. She was about 50 years old. Goodall observed Flint, by then an adolescent, intermittently approach her, as if begging to be groomed and comforted. He eventually left, seemingly depressed, stopped eating and became isolated. Then, he fell sick and about 3 weeks after Flo died, Flint passed away. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dr. Jane Goodall (@janegoodallinst) A dark side of chimpanzee society After Flo died, the community dynamics changed. They divided into smaller factions. Then, vicious fights broke out, and one faction was killed by others. Goodall said: I thought they were like us but nicer than us. I had no idea of the brutality that they can show. It took me a while to come to terms with that. War had always seemed to me to be a purely human behavior. I had come to accept that the dark and evil side of human nature was deeply embedded in our genes, inherited from our ancient primate ancestors. Reflecting on her work with chimpanzees Today, the research station that Goodall and van Lawick started in 1960 is still active, operating in Gombe National Park. In the documentary, Goodall reflected on her work in Gombe: Louis Leakey sent me to Gombe with a hope that a better understanding of chimpanzee behavior might provide us with a window on our past. Our study of chimpanzees had helped to pinpoint not only the similarities between them and us, but also those ways in which we are most different. Admittedly, we are not the only beings with personalities, reasoning powers, altruism, and emotions, nor are we the only beings capable of mental as well as physical suffering. But our intellect has grown mightily in complexity since the first true man branched off from the ape man stock, some two million years ago. And we, and only we, have developed a sophisticated spoken language. For the first time in evolution, a species evolved that was able to teach its young about objects and events not present, to pass on wisdom gleaned from the successes and the mistakes of the past. With language, we can ask as can no other living being those questions about who we are and why we are here. And this highly developed intellect means, surely, we have a responsibility towards the other life forms of our planet, whose continued existence is threatened by the thoughtless behavior of our own human species. Jane Goodall embarked on raising hope later in life In her later years, Goodall traveled widely, 300 days a year, as a passionate advocate for conservation, young people and world peace. She felt strongly that her biggest purpose was to instill hope in people during dark times. She has left a rich and lasting legacy, inspiring millions with her groundbreaking scientific work, her conservation efforts, her compassion and advocacy for world peace. This clip is from a documentary, aired after her death, by Netflix. Jane Goodall left a final message to all of us. Bottom line: Jane Goodall, a pioneering primatologist, conservationist and peace advocate, died On October 1, 2025. She was 91 years old. Via Jane Goodall: An Inside Look (Full Documentary) | National Geographic Via Remembering Jane Read more: Chimpanzees wear blades of grass in their ears and rearsThe post Jane Goodall, an extraordinary life well-lived (1934 – 2025) first appeared on EarthSky.

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