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Yesterday — 26 February 2025NPR Topics: Environment

The view from Greenland: 'We don't want to be Americans'

25 February 2025 at 21:18
Naaja Nathanielsen poses for a portrait in her office in Nuuk, Greenland on Feb. 20, 2025.

President Trump's calls for the U.S. to take over Greenland have sparked alarm and outrage.

Denmark, which is responsible for Greenland's security, recently announced that it would further boost its defense spending.

And a recent poll found 85 percent of Greenlanders are opposed to being part of the United States.

Parliamentary candidate Naaja Nathanielsen is one of them.

It isn't clear whether Trump's ambitions for Greenland will take. But some politicians in the territory are taking his calls for acquisition more seriously than ever before.

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Before yesterdayNPR Topics: Environment

New in Peru: 27 species previously undiscovered by science

19 February 2025 at 08:00
This harlequin frog (Atelopus seminiferus) was found in the Alto Mayo landscape at higher elevations than previously recorded. It is considered endangered by the IUCN Red List.

What happens when a team of scientists and local Awajún guides go on a 38-day trip into the Alto Mayo region of Peru? Over 2000 species are identified, of course! Tucked in this lush landscape where the Amazon basin meets the Andes mountains, were 27 species of animals previously unknown to science. It makes us wonder, what else is out there that the scientific community hasn't seen? And who already knows about it?

Check out photos of all the critters we mentioned — and more!

Other ecosystems or critters you think would make a good episode? Let us know by emailing shortwave@npr.org!

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plus.npr.org/shortwave.

In Panama economic needs threaten to erase a way of life

13 February 2025 at 21:25
Community leader, Digna Benite, calls her village of Limon de Chagres, a land made of love.

Panama has been looking for solutions to a long-term problem. Every time a ship passes through the Panama Canal, more than 50 million gallons of fresh water from Lake Gatun pour out into the ocean.

Nobody ever thought Panama could run out of water. It is one of the rainiest countries in the world. But a couple years ago, a drought got so bad that the canal had to reduce traffic by more than a third - which had a huge impact on global shipping.

The Panama Canal needs more water. Authorities have decided to get it by building a dam in a spot that would displace more than 2,000 people along the Rio Indio.

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(Image credit: Tomas Ayuso)

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