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Jane Goodall, conservationist renowned for chimpanzee research and environmental advocacy, has died

Jane Goodall, conservationist renowned for chimpanzee research and environmental advocacy, has died

By HALLIE GOLDEN Associated Press

Jane Goodall, the conservationist renowned for her groundbreaking chimpanzee field research and globe-spanning environmental advocacy, has died. She was 91.

The Jane Goodall Institute announced the primatologist’s death Wednesday in an Instagram post. According to the Washington, D.C.-based institute, Goodall died of natural causes while in California on a U.S. speaking tour.

Her discoveries “revolutionized science, and she was a tireless advocate for the protection and restoration of our natural world,” it said.

While living among chimpanzees in Africa decades ago, Goodall documented the animals using tools and doing other activities previously believed to be exclusive to humans, and also noted their distinct personalities. Her observations and subsequent magazine and documentary appearances in the 1960s transformed how the world perceived not only humans’ closest living biological relatives but also the emotional and social complexity of all animals, while propelling her into the public consciousness.

“Out there in nature by myself, when you’re alone, you can become part of nature and your humanity doesn’t get in the way,” she told The Associated Press in 2021. “It’s almost like an out-of-body experience when suddenly you hear different sounds and you smell different smells and you’re actually part of this amazing tapestry of life.”

Goodall never lost her hope for the future

She had been scheduled to meet with students and teachers on Wednesday to launch the planting of 5,000 trees around wildfire burn zones in the Los Angeles area. Organizers learned of her death as the event was set to begin at the EF Academy in Pasadena, California, said spokesperson Shawna Marino. The first tree was planted in Goodall’s name after a moment of silence.

“I don’t think there’s any better way to honor her legacy than having a thousand children gathered for her,” Marino said.

In her later years, Goodall devoted decades to education and advocacy on humanitarian causes and protecting the natural world. In her usual soft-spoken British accent, she was known for balancing the grim realities of the climate crisis with a sincere message of hope for the future.

From her base in the British coastal town of Bournemouth, she traveled nearly 300 days a year, even after she turned 90, to speak to packed auditoriums around the world. Between more serious messages, her speeches often featured her whooping like a chimpanzee or lamenting that Tarzan chose the wrong Jane.

Living among the chimpanzees

While first studying chimps in Tanzania in the early 1960s, Goodall was known for her unconventional approach. She didn’t simply observe them from afar but immersed herself in every aspect of their lives. She fed them and gave them names instead of numbers, something for which she received pushback from some scientists.

Her findings were circulated to millions when she first appeared on the cover of National Geographic in 1963 and soon after in a popular documentary. A collection of photos of Goodall in the field helped her and even some of the chimps become famous. One iconic image showed her crouching across from the infant chimpanzee named Flint. Each has arms outstretched, reaching for the other.

In 1972, the Sunday Times published an obituary for Flo, Flint’s mother and the dominant matriarch, after she was found face down on the edge of a stream. Flint died about three weeks later after showing signs of grief, eating little and losing weight.

″What the chimps have taught me over the years is they’re so like us. They’ve blurred the line between humans and animals,″ she told The Associated Press in 1997.

Goodall has earned top civilian honors from a number of countries including Britain, France, Japan and Tanzania. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2025 by then-U.S. President Joe Biden and won the prestigious Templeton Prize in 2021.

“Her groundbreaking discoveries have changed humanity’s understanding of its role in an interconnected world, and her advocacy has pointed to a greater purpose for our species in caring for life on this planet,” said the citation for the Templeton Prize, which honors individuals whose life’s work embodies a fusion of science and spirituality.

Goodall was also named a United Nations Messenger of Peace and published numerous books, including the bestselling autobiography “Reason for Hope.”

Charting a course from an early age

Born in London in 1934, Goodall said her fascination with animals began around when she learned to crawl. In her book, “In the Shadow of Man,” she described an early memory of hiding in a henhouse to see a chicken lay an egg. She was in there so long her mother reported her missing to the police.

She bought her first book — Edgar Rice Burroughs’ “Tarzan of the Apes” — when she was 10 and soon made up her mind about her future: Live with wild animals in Africa.

That plan stayed with her through a secretarial course when she was 18 and two different jobs. And by 1957, she accepted an invitation to travel to a farm in Kenya owned by a friend’s parents.

It was there that she met the famed anthropologist and paleontologist Louis Leakey at a natural history museum in Nairobi, and he gave her a job as an assistant secretary.

Three years later, despite Goodall not having a college degree, Leakey asked if she would be interested in studying chimpanzees in what is now Tanzania. She told the AP in 1997 that he chose her “because he wanted an open mind.”

The beginning was filled with complications. British authorities insisted she have a companion, so she brought her mother at first. The chimps fled if she got within 500 yards (460 meters) of them. She also spent weeks sick from what she believes was malaria, without any drugs to combat it.

But she was eventually able to gain the animals’ trust. By the fall of 1960 she observed the chimpanzee named David Greybeard make a tool from twigs and use it to fish termites from a nest. It was previously believed that only humans made and used tools.

She also found that chimps have individual personalities and share humans’ emotions of pleasure, joy, sadness and fear. She documented bonds between mothers and infants, sibling rivalry and male dominance. In other words, she found that there was no sharp line between humans and the animal kingdom.

In later years, she discovered chimpanzees engage in a type of warfare, and in 1987 she and her staff observed a chimp “adopt” a 3-year-old orphan that wasn’t closely related.

Taking on an activist role

Her work moved into more global advocacy after she watched a disturbing film of experiments on laboratory animals at a conference in 1986.

″I knew I had to do something,″ she told the AP in 1997. ″It was payback time.″

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020 and halted her in-person events, she began podcasting from her childhood home in England. Through dozens of “Jane Goodall Hopecast” episodes, she broadcast her discussions with guests including U.S. Sen. Cory Booker, author Margaret Atwood and marine biologist Ayana Elizabeth Johnson.

“If one wants to reach people; If one wants to change attitudes, you have to reach the heart,” she said during her first episode. “You can reach the heart by telling stories, not by arguing with people’s intellects.”

In later years, she pushed back on more aggressive tactics by climate activists, saying they could backfire, and criticized “gloom and doom” messaging for causing young people to lose hope.

In the lead-up to 2024 elections, she encouraged voters to pick candidates committed to protecting the natural world.

She also built a strong social media presence, advising millions of followers about the need to end factory farming and how to avoid being paralyzed by the climate crisis.

Her advice: “Focus on the present and make choices today whose impact will build over time.”

___

Associated Press journalist Christopher Weber in Los Angeles contributed.

ACC bets on being 1st league in college football to bring TV viewers inside live replay reviews

ACC bets on being 1st league in college football to bring TV viewers inside live replay reviews

By AARON BEARD AP Sports Writer

Florida State and Virginia were locked in a double-overtime thriller as the ball headed to Seminoles receiver Duce Robinson in the end zone.

Robinson bobbled the catch, then continued that juggle through the back of the end zone and out of bounds. The call was a touchdown, the kind of narrow-margin play certain to get closer scrutiny in replay review.

Only now, TV viewers for Atlantic Coast Conference games like that one get a clear window into how officials decide to overturn or uphold those calls.

The ACC is the first college league to let viewers listen live to reviews during select broadcasts. There’s no waiting for referees to take off their headset after a mystery-filled stoppage and deliver a verdict. Instead, viewers can hear frame-by-frame discussions between stadium officials and the replay command center at the league headquarters in Charlotte, North Carolina.

It’s offered a welcome dose of transparency, along with rave reviews for taking viewers somewhere they’ve never been before.

“You hear the whole conversation,” said Bryan Jaroch, ESPN vice president of sports production. “That transparency takes out any of the second-guessing of how they came to their decision. I would love to see this across every conference. We’re trying to push for that. But I think it’s exactly what we need to do.”

The first run

The debut came with 6:34 left in the first quarter of the Aug. 30 game between SMU and East Texas A&M on the ACC Network, a review that overturned a fumble call on Mustangs quarterback Kevin Jennings by ruling his arm was coming forward for an incompletion.

There have been seven games with the replay listen-in, generally earmarked for Friday night broadcasts on ESPN or ESPN2, as well as Saturday nights on the ACC Network. The plan can vary beyond that based on the volume of games monitored by the replay center at any one time, such as adding the Clemson-Georgia Tech game on Sept. 13 on ESPN with only one other ACC team playing in that same noon Eastern slot.

The ACC and ESPN, which have a media rights deal through the 2035-36 season, are still tinkering with the visual presentation of video overlays and graphics. But the experiment already has succeeded in pulling back the curtain with reviews, most notably with critical late calls such as Robinson’s later-overturned catch in FSU’s loss at Virginia.

“I think generally speaking, when people communicate, things get better,” Duke coach Manny Diaz said. “Because when people don’t communicate, then people assume, right? Our brains are designed to tell stories, so we either have the facts of the story or we make up the facts of the story.

“So I think it’s a good move for the league. It seems like it’s been well-received, to at least hear the thought process behind upheld, reversal, whatever. So at least people know what’s being said.”

The next usage comes with a spotlight of Saturday night’s matchup between No. 3 Miami and No. 18 Florida State.

“So here it is at prime time on ABC,” Jaroch said. “So I think even more people will see it and say: ‘Wow, that is amazing. That’s exactly what we’re looking for.’”

Getting started

ESPN had experimented with providing access to replay-review conversations going back to XFL games in 2023. The broadcaster had worked with the ACC last year to have a rules analyst listen to conversations between the on-field referee, the stadium replay official in the booth and the Charlotte replay center.

Then ESPN suggested letting viewers listen in, too.

The ACC had been working with off-site replay assistance for roughly a decade back to its previous home in Greensboro. When it opened its current headquarters in Charlotte two years ago, the plan included a video feed in the new command center showing replay officials huddling around monitors to study replays.

“We always say we have nothing to hide in that room,” said Michael Strickland, league senior vice president for football. “We wanted to put our money where our mouth was. So we started with the camera and that worked well. TV liked to use it.

“This sharing of the audio is kind of just the next iteration of that underlying philosophy that we’ve had for quite a while. And it is reflective of the ACC being willing to be a first mover in many different areas.”

Jaroch credited the ACC for making “a leap of faith” by putting those pressure-packed reviews on display. As he said: “Access always wins when it comes to fans.”

Strickland credited Commissioner Jim Phillips for signing off on the idea as good for the league and, more broadly, the sport.

“He could’ve easily said, ‘I don’t want to take that risk,'” Strickland said. “But he did not. He went the other route. It’s pretty awesome to work for somebody who believes in a group of people like he did and does.”

Making the call

The ACC has had high-profile chances to show viewers how reviews work.

Take a late TD catch in the Clemson-Georgia Tech game, for example. The Tigers’ Josh Sapp hauled in a pass near the back of the end zone and pinned the ball against his left thigh, then bobbled it further as he fell out of bounds.

The broadcast showed game referee Adam Savoie communicating via headset with the stadium replay official and the replay center crew in Charlotte. But now the audio fills in formerly missing gaps in that evaluation as officials combed through multiple angles in slow-motion playback.

“Do you see a loss of control with the foot in the white?” Savoie eventually asked.

“I don’t think he has control there,” a voice replied.

“I agree with you,” Savoie said before announcing the call was overturned.

Or there was the review of Robinson’s near-catch in the Virginia loss — “Still moving here, still moving,” a voice said of the ball in a frame-by-frame narration — as momentum carried Robinson out of the end zone before securing the catch.

“We believe in everybody that’s involved in the process,” Strickland said. “Because if we didn’t believe in them, they wouldn’t be here. So why not do it at the end of the day? And it’s nice to see that faith has been rewarded.”

Dabo Swinney relishes the chance to face Bill Belichick despite a matchup that has lost its luster

Dabo Swinney relishes the chance to face Bill Belichick despite a matchup that has lost its luster

By STEVE REED AP Sports Writer

The coaching clash between Bill Belichick and Dabo Swinney may have lost its luster with North Carolina and Clemson off to disappointing starts, but don’t tell Swinney that.

Swinney said he’s embracing the opportunity to coach against Belichick on Saturday when his Tigers face the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill.

“Yeah, I mean, are you kidding me? It’s amazing,” Swinney said Tuesday. “I mean, I never in my lifetime thought I would get an opportunity to coach against coach Belichick. I mean, how cool is that?”

It marks only the second time in college football history that a coach with multiple national championships will face one with multiple Super Bowl titles. Bill Walsh, a three-time Super Bowl winner with the San Francisco 49ers, led Stanford against two-time champion Joe Paterno and Penn State in the Blockbuster Bowl on Jan. 1, 1993.

The spectacle of Belichick’s arrival at the college level has commanded a national spotlight.

UNC’s hiring of the six-time Super Bowl-winning head coach (he won two others as an assistant) looked to be an all-in bet to upgrade the program — which included paying Belichick at least $10 million in each of his first three seasons — and reset the balance of the Atlantic Coast Conference. Swinney’s Tigers have long dominated the league, winning eight of the last 10 titles.

Excitement grew over the Oct. 4 matchup as the season approached and it figured to be one of the marquee games on the college football schedule.

But North Carolina’s opener turned into a debacle, with TCU running a sold-out crowd out of Kenan Stadium by the end of the third quarter in a 48-14 blowout. UNC’s two wins came against Charlotte and Richmond before the Tar Heels lost to another Big 12 team — UCF — by a 34-9 score.

Clemson has been an even bigger disappointment.

The Tigers entered the season ranked No. 4 in the AP poll, the overwhelming favorite to repeat as ACC champions and expected to compete for a third national title under Swinney after returning the most experienced team in the country.

But first-team preseason All-American Cade Klubnik and company stumbled out of the blocks, losing at home to then-No. 9 LSU. Little has gone right since.

The Tigers needed a second-half comeback to beat Troy, and then dropped back-to-back games to Georgia Tech and Syracuse to fall to 0-2 in the league. The Tigers had entered the game against the Orange as a 17 1/2-point favorite at home, but fell behind 10-0 early and lost 34-21.

Clemson’s 1-3 start is its worst in the Swinney era, and the Tigers spent the bye this past weekend soul-searching, self-evaluating and resetting their season-long goals with their national championship hopes vanquished.

“It has been a coaching failure,” Swinney said. “We have failed as coaches. … I’m not pointing the finger, I’m pointing the thumb.”

With both teams struggling, the ACC scheduled the game for a noon EDT kickoff — not the prime-time matchup that many had anticipated. Rapper Ludacris was booked to perform before the game on the Chapel Hill campus, a concert that is now set to start at 9:40 a.m.

Swinney said it’s time for the Tigers, two-touchdown favorites, to “see what we’re made of.”

Belichick and Swinney had crossed paths before Belichick’s arrival at UNC, though they got to know each other more in the ACC coaches’ meetings during the offseason. At the time, Swinney joked that seeing Belichick at the meetings was “so 2025.”

Belichick said he began picking Swinney’s brain in an effort to garner insights from his long run of coaching at the college level.

“Dabo spoke a number of times about various issues, and I can just tell from his comments and his opinions on certain things where he was coming from, what his beliefs are, what’s important to him and what his convictions are,” Belichick said. “And those were all pretty consistent with what I thought they would be.

“But to actually hear him articulate them and talk about things that he deals with as the head coach at that school — that in all honesty, I haven’t had enough experience at this level to appreciate all those — was very insightful for me. We talked about some things outside of the meetings, off-camera and things like that. But he’s been very, I would say, helpful with a couple of things that I’ve asked him about just in general. And I appreciate his openness and willingness to try to give me some advice that I’ve asked for.”

Swinney said he was more than happy to help.

“The guy’s got eight (Super Bowl) rings,” Swinney said. “He’s arguably the greatest (coach) ever, certainly at the pro level. It’s a cool thing.”

___

AP Sports Writer Aaron Beard in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, contributed to this report.

Bermuda lashed by distant hurricane and prepares for the stronger Imelda

Bermuda lashed by distant hurricane and prepares for the stronger Imelda

By DÁNICA COTO Associated Press

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The outer bands of distant Hurricane Humberto lashed Bermuda on Tuesday ahead of a more direct pass from the newer and stronger Hurricane Imelda on the tiny British territory.

Humberto was passing well north of the island in the north Atlantic, but wind gusts and some rain were forecast into Wednesday.

Imelda had maximum sustained winds of 140 kph (85 mph) late Tuesday and its center was expected to be near the island Wednesday evening, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said.

A hurricane warning for Bermuda was in effect ahead of Imelda, which was expected to strengthen into a Category 2 hurricane, according to the Bermuda Weather Service.

“I cannot overstate the seriousness of this threat,” Michael Weeks, Bermuda’s minister of national security, said of Imelda. “This is not, I must stress, a passing squall.”

He said Bermuda would endure sustained hurricane-force winds for up to six hours starting late Wednesday.

The island’s international airport, schools and government offices were to close Wednesday, and Weeks said residents should have all storm preparations completed by noon.

“Imelda has the potential to damage and disrupt our island significantly,” he said.

Bermuda is a wealthy British territory with strong concrete structures capable of withstanding serious storms.

Imelda was 835 kilometers (520 miles) west-southwest of Bermuda and was moving east-northeast at 28 kph (17 mph), U.S. forecasters said. The storm is expected to bring hurricane-force winds to Bermuda late Wednesday, they added.

Far northwest of the island, Humberto was still hurricane strength with 130 kph (80 mph) winds late Tuesday. The Category 1 storm was moving east-northeast at 17 kph (10 mph).

Both hurricanes were creating ocean swells that were likely to cause dangerous surf conditions on Bermuda, the Bahamas and the U.S. East Coast. Five unoccupied houses along North Carolina’s Outer Banks collapsed into the ocean Tuesday as wave after wave rolled in from the Atlantic.

Earlier this week, Imelda battered eastern Cuba, killing two people, according to Prime Minister Manuel Marrero. Flooding and landslides also cut off communities and forced evacuations, according to state media.

One person was also missing in Haiti after Imelda swelled rivers and caused flooding in some 35 communities, its Civil Protection Agency said. Imelda also caused significant crop destruction in a country where more than half of its nearly 12 million inhabitants were expected to experience severe hunger through the first half of the year.

Imelda also flooded parts of the Bahamas on Monday, with New Providence hit hard. More than a dozen public schools on that island and on nearby Grand Bahama and Abaco remained closed on Tuesday.

“The aftermath is serious,” Prime Minister Philip Davis said. “Floodwaters remain.”

Imelda, which reached hurricane strength earlier Tuesday, is the Atlantic season’s fourth hurricane this year.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration had predicted an above-normal season with 13 to 18 named storms. Of those, five to nine were forecast to become hurricanes, including two to five major hurricanes, which pack winds of 111 mph or greater.

The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.

Pumpkin Soup

Pumpkin Soup

Happy October! Enjoy this rich and warm pumpkin soup as it starts to get chilly.

Ingredients

  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 small onion, finely chopped
  • 1–2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 can (15 oz) pumpkin purée
  • 2 cups vegetable or chicken broth
  • ½ cup milk or cream
  • ½ cup shredded cheddar cheese
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ¼ tsp pepper
  • a pinch of nutmeg 
  • (optional: pumpkin seeds for topping and bread for dipping)

Instructions

1. Preheat stovetop
Put the stovetop on medium heat and put the oil in a large pot to warm.

2. Sauté onion and garlic
Add the onion and garlic to the pot and sauté until soft (about 3–4 min).

3. Add pumpkin and broth
Stir in pumpkin purée and broth, then simmer for 5 minutes.

4. Add the rest
Add the milk or cream, cheese, and spices to the mix. Stir until melted and smooth.

5. Serve it hot
Spoon into bowls and enjoy this taste of fall! (optional: top with pumpkin seeds and serve with bread)

5 homes collapse into the surf of the Outer Banks as hurricanes rumble in Atlantic

5 homes collapse into the surf of the Outer Banks as hurricanes rumble in Atlantic

By GARY ROBERTSON and JESSE BEDAYN Associated Press

Five unoccupied houses along North Carolina’s Outer Banks collapsed into the ocean Tuesday as Hurricanes Humberto and Imelda rumbled in the Atlantic, the National Park Service said, marking the latest private beachfront structures to fall into the surf there in recent years.

The homes, once propped on high stilts, collapsed in the afternoon in Buxton, a community on the string of islands that make up the Outer Banks, said Mike Barber, a spokesperson for the park service.

No injures were reported, the Cape Hatteras National Seashore said in a post on social media.

Five unoccupied houses along North Carolina’s Outer Banks collapsed into the ocean on Tuesday as Hurricanes Humberto and Imelda rumbled in the Atlantic, the National Park Service said, marking the latest private beachfront structures to fall into the surf there in recent years.

In videos shown by the local station 13News Now, homes teetered on stilts battered by the waves before plunging into the surf. The shoreline was clogged with debris, two-by-fours, cushions and an entire home as wave after wave rolled in from the Atlantic.

The post said that more collapses were possible given the ocean conditions, and urged visitors to avoid Tuesday’s sites, including areas several miles south to stay clear of debris.

North Carolina’s coast is almost entirely made up of narrow, low-lying barrier islands that have been eroding for years as the sea level rises. Seventeen privately owned houses have collapsed on Seashore beaches since 2020, the park service said.

The first 15 were north of Buxton in Rodanthe, but a Buxton home fell into the surf two weeks ago.

The threat to these structures often builds when storms affect the region, as is the case with the two latest hurricanes, even as they headed further out in the Atlantic.

Portions of eastern North Carolina were subject to coastal flood advisories and warnings, the National Weather Service said, while dangerous surf conditions were expected in the area through the rest of the week.

Ocean overwash on Tuesday also prompted the state Transportation Department to close a portion of North Carolina Highway 12 on Ocracoke Island. The ferry connecting Ocracoke and Hatteras islands also was suspended Tuesday, the department said.

October 1st 2025

October 1st 2025

Thought of the Day

Getty Image

“If you can’t convince them, confuse them.” – Harry S. Truman

Wet Nose Wednesday: Meet Paola and Peabody!

Wet Nose Wednesday: Meet Paola and Peabody!

Hi there! I’m Paola, a gentle soul looking for my forever home. I may start off a bit shy, but once I warm up to you, I’m all cuddles and purrs! I love finding the coziest spots to curl up and relax, and I’m always ready to offer comfort with my soft purrs and sweet demeanor. I’m a social butterfly who enjoys gentle interactions and quiet moments. While I might prefer to be the star of the show as the only cat in the house, I can also be open to making new feline friends with a proper introduction. I’m playful, adorable, and always eager to show my affectionate side. If you’re looking for a loving companion who will fill your home with warmth and gentle companionship, I’m your girl! Could we be the perfect match? How did I get here? I was transferred from Juliet’s House Animal Rescue. *I would do best in a feline-free home please!* **I am currently living in a foster home – please fill out a survey and select a phone appointment to complete the adoption process. Once that process is complete, your adoption specialist will schedule a time for you to meet us in person!** ~My adoption fee is $65.00~

Hi there! I’m Mr. Peabody, and I’m here to steal your heart with my super lovable personality! I’m the kind of dog who absolutely adores cuddles and making new friends. When I meet someone new, I’m all about those gentle pets and showing just how friendly I can be. My tail is always ready to wag, and I’m known for being super easygoing and affectionate. I’m looking for a forever family who wants a loyal companion who will shower them with love and greet them with enthusiasm and make every day a little brighter. Are you ready to welcome me into your life and heart? I can’t wait to meet you! I’m full grown at ~54lbs. How did I get here? Transferred from Harnett County Animal Shelter. ~My adoption fee is $120.00.~

Meet Paola

Meet Peabody

Kick It for an NCFC Ticket!

Kick It for an NCFC Ticket!

Kick It for a Ticket continues! Who will be our next winners? Enter to win with the NCFC on Friday, October 10th, against Phoenix Rising FC. There are two ways to win: comment on 96.1 BBB’s social media or enter to win below! Let’s keep the party going.

Chunk, a 1,200-pound bear with a broken jaw, wins Alaska’s popular Fat Bear Week contest

Chunk, a 1,200-pound bear with a broken jaw, wins Alaska’s popular Fat Bear Week contest

By CEDAR ATTANASIO and MARK THIESSEN Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Chunk, a towering brown bear with a broken jaw, swept the competition Tuesday in the popular Fat Bear Week contest — his first win after narrowly finishing in second place three previous years.

The annual online competition allows viewers to follow 12 bears in Alaska’s Katmai National Park and Preserve on live webcams and cast ballots in a bracket-style, single-elimination tournament that lasts a week. Chunk — known officially as Bear 32 — beat out Bear 856, who doesn’t have a nickname, in the final bracket, according to totals posted on the organizers’ website.

Chunk’s weight was estimated at 1,200 pounds by contest organizers. While they do not weigh individual bears during the contest because of safety concerns, Chunk and others have had their density scanned to bolster weight estimates in the past using laser technology called LIDAR.

“Despite his broken jaw, he remains one of the biggest, baddest bears at Brooks River,” said Mike Fitz, a naturalist for explore.org. Fitz said Chunk likely hurt his jaw in a fight with another bear.

The contest is wildly popular. This year it attracted over 1.5 million votes from fans who watched the ursines gorge on a record run of fall salmon as they fished in the Brooks River about 300 miles (483 kilometers) from Anchorage.

It is the largest glut of salmon in the living memories of the bears or the humans who have been running the Fat Bear Week contest since 2014, according to Katmai Conservancy spokesperson Naomi Boak.

That abundance “decreased conflict in the river since salmon were readily available,” Boak said in an email. In Tuesday’s announcement, Katmai National Park ranger Sarah Bruce estimated around 200,000 salmon made their way up Brooks River.

In leaner years, the toughest bears jockey for the best fishing spots at Brooks Falls, where the salmon converge in a bottleneck and leap from the water as they fight their way upstream to spawn.

This year, Brooks Falls fishing spots were often empty as bears hunted up and down stream. There was even room for humans to fish. At one point Monday, one of the Explore.org live cameras showed two people calmly casting fishing rods along the river even as brown bears plodded upstream and downstream from them.

Voters in the online contest could review before and after photos of the bears, lean at the start of summer and fattened at the end. The bears are not actually weighed — that would be too dangerous and difficult — and some fans choose their favorite based on looks or backstory.

The live cameras at Brooks Falls captured the moments in 2024 when mother bear 128 Grazer ’s cub slipped over the waterfall and floated into the fishing spot occupied by Chunk, who attacked and injured the cub. Grazer fought Chunk, but the cub ultimately died. After the dramatic fight, voting fans handed Grazer a victory over Chunk.

Fat Bear Week was started in 2014 as an interactive way to inform the public about brown bears, the coastal cousins of grizzlies. They spend summers catching and eating as many salmon as possible so they can fatten up for hibernation in Alaska’s cold, lean winters.

___

Attanasio reported from Seattle.

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