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David Attenborough turns 100 to global tributes

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  • Sir David Attenborough marked his 100th birthday on Friday with tributes from King Charles III, Queen Camilla, Princess Anne, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer.bbc
  • The BBC aired a 90-minute live concert from the Royal Albert Hall hosted by Kirsty Young, capping a week of special programming.bbc
  • Scientists at the Natural History Museum named a newly discovered Chilean parasitic wasp Attenboroughnculus tau in his honor, his 50th-plus species namesake.eurekalert

David Attenborough Turns 100 to Global Celebrations and Tributes

Sir David Attenborough, the broadcaster whose voice has narrated the natural world for more than seven decades, celebrated his 100th birthday on Friday, May 8, 2026, drawing tributes from royalty, world leaders, and fans across the globe.

“Completely Overwhelmed”

In a recorded message shared on the eve of his centenary, Attenborough said he had been “completely overwhelmed” by the flood of birthday greetings. “I had rather assumed that I would commemorate my 100th birthday in a subdued manner, but it appears that many of you have other plans,” he said. The messages, he noted, came “from preschool groups to care home residents and countless individuals and families of all generations”.bbc

King Charles III and Queen Camilla led tributes from the Royal Family, with Buckingham Palace posting a public birthday message. Princess Anne also praised Attenborough’s impact on conservation. Sir David Beckham and Prime Minister Keir Starmer were among the public figures honoring the broadcaster, according to The Independent.facebook

A Live Celebration at the Royal Albert Hall

The BBC capped its week of special programming with a 90-minute live broadcast from London’s Royal Albert Hall on Friday evening. “David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth,” hosted by Kirsty Young and featuring the BBC Concert Orchestra, aired at 8:30 p.m. BST on BBC One and iPlayer. The event featured appearances from Sir Michael Palin, Steve Backshall, and Chris Packham, alongside performances from musicians who have scored Attenborough’s nature documentaries. The Royal Albert Hall concert crowned a broader celebration that included three new documentaries and a curated collection of more than 40 of his iconic series on iPlayer.instagram

A Wasp for a Birthday Gift

Scientists at the Natural History Museum in London marked the occasion by naming a newly discovered parasitic wasp after Attenborough. The insect, designated Attenboroughnculus tau, was described from a specimen originally collected in 1983 in the Valdivia Province of Chile. Measuring just 3.5 millimeters, the wasp is so distinct from its closest relatives that researchers created an entirely new genus to accommodate it, according to a paper published in the Journal of Natural History. The species name “tau” refers to a T-shaped marking on the insect’s abdomen. According to National Geographic, more than 50 species now carry Attenborough’s name, but only a handful of genera have been named in his honor.nbcrightnow

Born in London in 1926, Attenborough joined the BBC in 1952 and went on to present landmark series including “Planet Earth,” “Blue Planet,” and “Frozen Planet.” His career has spanned the transition from black-and-white television to the streaming era — and now, his centenary.

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