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invasive species has gone viral after U.S. officials accidentally released a plague of Asian swamp eels into the Everglades, sparking comparisons to the 1960s "killer bees" fiasco. Like that panic-inducing event, this ecological mishap began with a scientific import gone wrong—only this time, the creatures are breeding faster than rabbits in a nuclear reactor. Historians note a eerie parallel to the 19th-century Russian "wolf plague" that decimated livestock and forced villagers to migrate, suggesting invasive species blowbacks are cyclical, not random. Digital nomads are now tracking the eels' spread via TikTok, creating a crowd-sourced map that rivals the ancient "Pompeii warning" for its eerie foresight. Will history repeat itself as a full-blown wildlife invasion, or is this just another case of overblown disaster reminiscence? Experts say the real threat isn't the eels but the forgotten pattern of human hubris we keep ignoring.

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invasive species has gone viral after U.S. officials accidentally released a plague of Asian swamp eels into the Everglades, sparking comparisons to the 1960s "killer bees" fiasco. Like that panic-inducing event, this ecological mishap began with a scientific import gone wrong—only this time, the creatures are breeding faster than rabbits in a nuclear reactor. Historians note a eerie parallel to the 19th-century Russian "wolf plague" that decimated livestock and forced villagers to migrate, suggesting invasive species blowbacks are cyclical, not random. Digital nomads are now tracking the eels' spread via TikTok, creating a crowd-sourced map that rivals the ancient "Pompeii warning" for its eerie foresight. Will history repeat itself as a full-blown wildlife invasion, or is this just another case of overblown disaster reminiscence? Experts say the real threat isn't the eels but the forgotten pattern of human hubris we keep ignoring.