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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:32,720 --> 00:00:34,720 A Perfect Planet. 2 00:00:42,120 --> 00:00:47,760 All life in the oceans depends on the continuous movement of water. 3 00:01:01,280 --> 00:01:06,200 There are not five separate oceans on Earth, but just one... 4 00:01:06,320 --> 00:01:10,920 whose parts are linked by powerful, unceasing currents. 5 00:01:13,200 --> 00:01:17,520 Every drop of seawater on Earth rides these currents, 6 00:01:17,640 --> 00:01:21,600 taking a thousand years to complete a single circuit. 7 00:01:25,240 --> 00:01:29,200 And where there are currents... there is life. 8 00:01:46,640 --> 00:01:50,800 Off the coast of South Africa, dolphins are on the hunt. 9 00:02:01,640 --> 00:02:04,120 They have found a cold-water current 10 00:02:04,240 --> 00:02:07,600 and are now travelling along it looking for food. 11 00:02:10,520 --> 00:02:12,880 Gannets follow them. 12 00:02:14,760 --> 00:02:18,720 They know that doing so is the fastest way to a meal. 13 00:02:24,840 --> 00:02:26,440 A shoal of mackerel - 14 00:02:26,560 --> 00:02:28,960 just what the dolphins have been looking for. 15 00:02:35,280 --> 00:02:38,720 They encircle the fish, driving them into a bait ball, 16 00:02:38,840 --> 00:02:41,760 and then trap them against the surface 17 00:02:41,880 --> 00:02:44,680 to prevent them from escaping to deeper water. 18 00:02:49,480 --> 00:02:52,200 Now the fish are within range of the dive-bombing gannets, 19 00:02:52,320 --> 00:02:55,920 who hit the water at 50 miles an hour. 20 00:03:19,200 --> 00:03:23,320 A sudden gathering of thousands of predators brought together 21 00:03:23,440 --> 00:03:26,520 by the flow of currents. 22 00:03:42,200 --> 00:03:44,560 Last to the feast are sharks. 23 00:04:08,080 --> 00:04:10,080 In these vast open waters, 24 00:04:10,200 --> 00:04:15,280 finding food would be all but impossible without currents, 25 00:04:15,400 --> 00:04:19,640 the highways of the seas that bring this life together. 26 00:04:24,320 --> 00:04:26,680 When the bait ball has been dispersed, 27 00:04:26,800 --> 00:04:31,280 all that is left are scales drifting downwards. 28 00:04:36,080 --> 00:04:41,920 They are part of a slow, never-ending blizzard of organic waste 29 00:04:42,040 --> 00:04:45,680 that eventually settles on the sea floor. 30 00:04:48,200 --> 00:04:50,720 But it doesn't stay here for ever. 31 00:04:51,760 --> 00:04:55,880 The currents sweep it back up into the sunlit surface waters... 32 00:04:57,320 --> 00:05:00,400 where it nourishes clouds of phytoplankton... 33 00:05:02,760 --> 00:05:07,360 simple microscopic plants that are the pastures of the seas. 34 00:05:17,160 --> 00:05:20,000 There are thousands of different kinds, 35 00:05:20,120 --> 00:05:24,160 and together they produce half of all the oxygen in the atmosphere... 36 00:05:25,440 --> 00:05:29,240 more than all our forests and jungles combined. 37 00:05:31,400 --> 00:05:33,800 And by absorbing carbon, 38 00:05:33,920 --> 00:05:38,080 they are our greatest ally in combating climate change. 39 00:05:42,960 --> 00:05:48,240 Plankton are the foundation of almost all life in the ocean, 40 00:05:48,360 --> 00:05:53,280 for in those places where the currents bring nutrients to the surface, 41 00:05:53,400 --> 00:05:56,440 they multiply in astonishing numbers... 42 00:05:57,720 --> 00:05:59,760 turning the ocean green. 43 00:06:06,040 --> 00:06:10,920 The currents travelling through our oceans bring life to seas 44 00:06:11,040 --> 00:06:13,720 that would otherwise be marine deserts. 45 00:06:18,640 --> 00:06:22,160 The Galapagos Islands lie in the path of one of them, 46 00:06:22,280 --> 00:06:24,600 the deep-flowing Cromwell Current 47 00:06:24,720 --> 00:06:27,800 that runs for 6,000 miles across the Pacific. 48 00:06:31,320 --> 00:06:34,280 As it approaches Fernandina Island, 49 00:06:34,400 --> 00:06:38,560 it rises and delivers nutrients into its shallows. 50 00:06:51,440 --> 00:06:55,840 And it also brings life to this otherwise barren island. 51 00:07:13,800 --> 00:07:15,760 Iguanas. 52 00:07:17,440 --> 00:07:19,560 There are thousands of them. 53 00:07:26,280 --> 00:07:30,960 And yet there's nothing on the island for these vegetarians to eat. 54 00:07:33,560 --> 00:07:36,960 Or... almost nothing. 55 00:07:39,840 --> 00:07:44,640 Cormorants bring seaweed ashore with which to make their nests. 56 00:07:46,360 --> 00:07:49,320 But what is building material for a cormorant 57 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:51,200 is food for an iguana. 58 00:07:57,880 --> 00:08:00,200 Both these species evolved here, 59 00:08:00,320 --> 00:08:03,600 but that doesn't necessarily make them good neighbours. 60 00:08:08,000 --> 00:08:12,120 No matter. He knows where there's more elsewhere. 61 00:08:13,520 --> 00:08:16,000 He's a marine iguana... 62 00:08:21,520 --> 00:08:25,800 the only lizard in the world that gets its food from the sea. 63 00:08:37,600 --> 00:08:40,360 The seaweed on which he totally relies 64 00:08:40,480 --> 00:08:43,120 only grows in abundance here 65 00:08:43,240 --> 00:08:47,480 because of the nutrients brought by the Cromwell Current. 66 00:08:54,000 --> 00:08:58,200 Once in the water, he has just 30 minutes to find food. 67 00:09:06,040 --> 00:09:07,760 Any longer than that, 68 00:09:07,880 --> 00:09:10,840 and his muscles will seize up and he'll drown... 69 00:09:12,600 --> 00:09:16,240 for, like most reptiles, he can't handle the cold. 70 00:09:25,400 --> 00:09:29,360 Chilly water isn't a problem for a warm-blooded cormorant. 71 00:09:30,600 --> 00:09:32,880 She can swim in it all day, 72 00:09:33,000 --> 00:09:35,600 but can only hold her breath for a few minutes. 73 00:09:42,680 --> 00:09:47,200 He, on the other hand, completes his whole half-hour trip 74 00:09:47,320 --> 00:09:49,680 on one single breath. 75 00:09:51,720 --> 00:09:53,720 His flat face and sharp teeth 76 00:09:53,840 --> 00:09:57,000 make him an efficient seaweed-cropping machine, 77 00:09:57,120 --> 00:10:00,480 but with the clock ticking, he must eat fast. 78 00:10:04,760 --> 00:10:10,040 The cormorant, having caught its fish, goes back to the surface. 79 00:10:12,360 --> 00:10:14,000 One last mouthful, 80 00:10:14,120 --> 00:10:17,600 and it's also time for the iguana to head for home. 81 00:10:20,880 --> 00:10:24,120 But to stop his muscles from seizing up in the cold water, 82 00:10:24,240 --> 00:10:26,240 he must get back quickly. 83 00:10:30,400 --> 00:10:34,840 So he could do without the attentions of an inquisitive sea lion. 84 00:10:58,480 --> 00:11:01,680 Dry land is now just 30 metres away, 85 00:11:01,800 --> 00:11:05,000 but the biggest hurdle is still to come. 86 00:11:14,360 --> 00:11:18,480 The surging water now fights against him. 87 00:11:25,080 --> 00:11:26,320 He's out, 88 00:11:26,440 --> 00:11:30,560 but he stayed in the cold so long that he's lost his strength. 89 00:12:11,480 --> 00:12:13,280 And he's made it. 90 00:12:16,240 --> 00:12:21,800 Few reptiles on the planet have to work harder for a meal than he does. 91 00:12:24,520 --> 00:12:27,880 And tomorrow, he'll have to do it all over again... 92 00:12:30,720 --> 00:12:34,800 unless next time he can outwit his neighbour. 93 00:12:40,560 --> 00:12:44,720 Over 100,000 marine iguanas live on Fernandina... 94 00:12:46,120 --> 00:12:49,600 and each owes its existence to the Cromwell Current 95 00:12:49,720 --> 00:12:52,280 that brings nutrients to these shores. 96 00:12:55,000 --> 00:12:57,800 But there is another, much bigger current 97 00:12:57,920 --> 00:13:02,720 which carries water from the Pacific into the Indian Ocean. 98 00:13:05,880 --> 00:13:10,400 On this great journey, it travels through the islands of Indonesia, 99 00:13:10,520 --> 00:13:13,360 bringing together life from both oceans. 100 00:13:20,440 --> 00:13:24,800 A third of all the world's reef fish live here. 101 00:13:28,800 --> 00:13:31,760 Some call it the Coral Triangle, 102 00:13:31,880 --> 00:13:35,080 the most diverse marine region on Earth. 103 00:13:43,240 --> 00:13:46,880 The variety here is dazzling, not just of coral, 104 00:13:47,000 --> 00:13:49,760 but of animals of all kinds. 105 00:14:00,120 --> 00:14:04,080 Few are stranger than the flamboyant cuttlefish. 106 00:14:07,240 --> 00:14:11,040 This is a male, just five centimetres long. 107 00:14:16,400 --> 00:14:20,280 Swimming against the current isn't easy when you're small, 108 00:14:20,400 --> 00:14:23,920 so, instead, he prefers to walk... 109 00:14:25,120 --> 00:14:27,560 very, very slowly. 110 00:14:31,640 --> 00:14:34,240 He's a master of camouflage. 111 00:14:34,360 --> 00:14:37,360 But right now he wants to be noticed. 112 00:14:40,240 --> 00:14:42,120 He's looking for a mate. 113 00:14:44,000 --> 00:14:47,000 His potential partner is a giant by comparison, 114 00:14:47,120 --> 00:14:48,920 four times his size. 115 00:14:54,200 --> 00:14:58,480 When it comes to courtship, being flamboyant isn't enough. 116 00:15:04,680 --> 00:15:07,120 To win her over, he must dazzle. 117 00:15:14,080 --> 00:15:19,920 His aim is to deposit a packet of sperm inside her mouth. 118 00:15:22,680 --> 00:15:23,960 Close... 119 00:15:25,080 --> 00:15:26,800 but no cigar. 120 00:15:32,840 --> 00:15:35,240 He'll have to turn up the dazzle. 121 00:15:41,800 --> 00:15:43,480 Take two. 122 00:15:47,840 --> 00:15:49,120 Bingo! 123 00:16:00,040 --> 00:16:01,880 His job is done. 124 00:16:02,000 --> 00:16:05,720 Now she must find somewhere to lay their eggs. 125 00:16:07,640 --> 00:16:10,840 An old shell will do nicely 126 00:16:10,960 --> 00:16:13,880 if she can slip past the present occupant. 127 00:16:18,920 --> 00:16:22,840 She fastens her eggs to the underside of the shell, 128 00:16:22,960 --> 00:16:25,720 where they'll be safe from predators. 129 00:16:38,920 --> 00:16:43,080 The current that brings so much life to the Coral Triangle 130 00:16:43,200 --> 00:16:47,480 now washes the eggs with clean, oxygenated water. 131 00:16:53,600 --> 00:16:57,600 After just three weeks, they start to hatch. 132 00:17:01,560 --> 00:17:04,160 Smaller than a human fingernail, 133 00:17:04,280 --> 00:17:07,360 the hatchlings are now carried by the current 134 00:17:07,480 --> 00:17:09,840 to other parts of the reef. 135 00:17:17,160 --> 00:17:19,760 And in just a few months, 136 00:17:19,880 --> 00:17:24,680 this young male will be ready to find a female of his own. 137 00:17:30,440 --> 00:17:34,800 By a stroke of cosmic good fortune, the Earth has a satellite, 138 00:17:34,920 --> 00:17:40,400 the moon, which orbits our planet every 27 days. 139 00:17:44,080 --> 00:17:48,880 Its gravitational pull drags our oceans across the planet... 140 00:17:51,520 --> 00:17:54,280 and so gives us the tides. 141 00:17:58,840 --> 00:18:02,080 Unlike currents that stir the open ocean, 142 00:18:02,200 --> 00:18:05,320 the tides have their greatest impact on the coasts, 143 00:18:05,440 --> 00:18:10,160 flushing them with nutrients from both sea and land. 144 00:18:12,760 --> 00:18:16,600 And nowhere are they more violent and dramatic than here... 145 00:18:18,360 --> 00:18:21,000 Norway's Saltstraumen strait. 146 00:18:23,680 --> 00:18:27,320 Every six hours, nearly half a billion tonnes of water 147 00:18:27,440 --> 00:18:31,680 are forced through a channel just 150 metres wide. 148 00:18:33,280 --> 00:18:36,840 Its very narrowness accelerates the water... 149 00:18:37,920 --> 00:18:43,040 making this the strongest tidal pull in the world. 150 00:18:57,160 --> 00:19:01,320 Most animals caught here would be swept away. 151 00:19:04,320 --> 00:19:07,440 But not these tidal specialists. 152 00:19:07,560 --> 00:19:12,040 Eiders are one of the few ducks that depend totally on the ocean 153 00:19:12,160 --> 00:19:14,120 for their survival. 154 00:19:16,760 --> 00:19:19,560 And they're the only kind strong enough 155 00:19:19,680 --> 00:19:23,040 to live permanently in these racing waters. 156 00:19:30,320 --> 00:19:32,640 But there is food here, and in great quantity, 157 00:19:32,760 --> 00:19:35,240 for any that can gather it... 158 00:19:36,560 --> 00:19:37,880 mussels. 159 00:19:39,160 --> 00:19:44,640 They filter out particles of food brought to them by the tide. 160 00:19:45,920 --> 00:19:48,280 And eider ducks love mussels. 161 00:19:51,480 --> 00:19:54,040 The challenge is reaching them. 162 00:20:11,640 --> 00:20:13,720 Eiders seem to be the only creatures 163 00:20:13,840 --> 00:20:17,680 that can hold their own in the fast-flowing water... 164 00:20:20,080 --> 00:20:23,000 so they have the mussels all to themselves. 165 00:20:24,960 --> 00:20:28,400 They swallow them whole, shell and all. 166 00:20:32,640 --> 00:20:35,720 Each eider duck eats hundreds of mussels a day... 167 00:20:37,520 --> 00:20:40,880 a year-round feast that no others can reach. 168 00:20:52,760 --> 00:20:55,080 The tides here owe their power 169 00:20:55,200 --> 00:20:58,400 to the unique geography of the coastline. 170 00:20:59,920 --> 00:21:04,600 But elsewhere in our oceans, the lay of the land influences tides 171 00:21:04,720 --> 00:21:06,640 in a very different way. 172 00:21:09,640 --> 00:21:11,240 Here in the Bahamas, 173 00:21:11,360 --> 00:21:15,480 wide, shallow sandbanks mean the tide moves gently 174 00:21:15,600 --> 00:21:17,200 over the sea floor... 175 00:21:18,600 --> 00:21:21,160 turning what would be a sandy desert 176 00:21:21,280 --> 00:21:23,600 into a rich underwater habitat. 177 00:21:26,880 --> 00:21:31,600 This is the home of garden eels and razorfish. 178 00:21:35,720 --> 00:21:40,640 And fresh food arrives for them from deeper waters twice a day. 179 00:21:43,280 --> 00:21:46,640 Life seems unhurried and gentle... 180 00:21:48,320 --> 00:21:51,320 but there is trouble in paradise. 181 00:21:54,560 --> 00:21:57,240 These bottlenose dolphins eat razorfish, 182 00:21:57,360 --> 00:22:01,440 and they're not so easily fooled by vanishing tricks. 183 00:22:06,720 --> 00:22:10,080 They scan the sand with echolocating clicks 184 00:22:10,200 --> 00:22:14,440 to discover exactly where the razorfish are hiding. 185 00:22:31,360 --> 00:22:34,960 But knowing where they are is not the same as catching them. 186 00:22:40,480 --> 00:22:45,440 The more the dolphins dig, the deeper the razorfish burrow. 187 00:22:49,120 --> 00:22:51,320 But it's clearly not deep enough. 188 00:23:01,440 --> 00:23:03,680 Blowing jets of water into the sand 189 00:23:03,800 --> 00:23:07,560 exposes even the most hard-to-reach razorfish. 190 00:23:11,160 --> 00:23:15,760 Before long, the dolphins have had enough and they move on. 191 00:23:17,920 --> 00:23:20,680 It looks as if they have picked the sand clean... 192 00:23:26,200 --> 00:23:27,720 but here, at least, 193 00:23:27,840 --> 00:23:31,600 there really are plenty more fish in the sea. 194 00:23:41,560 --> 00:23:45,040 Closer to the land, the same tides bring nourishment 195 00:23:45,160 --> 00:23:48,520 to one of the most threatened of coastal habitats... 196 00:23:50,080 --> 00:23:51,720 mangrove forests... 197 00:23:53,280 --> 00:23:56,840 part land... part sea. 198 00:23:59,720 --> 00:24:04,560 Mangroves are the only trees capable of surviving in salt water 199 00:24:04,680 --> 00:24:09,440 and are specially adapted to it coming and going twice every day. 200 00:24:16,440 --> 00:24:20,200 As seawater floods in, fish come with it. 201 00:24:21,800 --> 00:24:23,920 Here, in the flooded forests, 202 00:24:24,040 --> 00:24:26,840 they can find both food and shelter. 203 00:24:33,240 --> 00:24:37,040 Stingrays ride on the incoming tide. 204 00:24:43,920 --> 00:24:46,880 Other commuters follow. 205 00:24:47,000 --> 00:24:50,800 Young lemon sharks, still far from full-grown, 206 00:24:50,920 --> 00:24:52,560 are looking for food. 207 00:25:08,120 --> 00:25:12,960 When the tide is at its highest, even adult lemon sharks 208 00:25:13,080 --> 00:25:14,640 can get into the mangroves. 209 00:25:17,440 --> 00:25:21,400 A three-metre female moves cautiously into the shallows. 210 00:25:25,160 --> 00:25:26,840 She can't stay here for long, 211 00:25:26,960 --> 00:25:29,560 but then she hasn't come here to hunt. 212 00:25:36,440 --> 00:25:38,240 She's come to give birth... 213 00:25:40,600 --> 00:25:44,320 returning to the very place where she was born. 214 00:25:47,120 --> 00:25:51,600 She has nourished the pups inside her body with a placenta, 215 00:25:51,720 --> 00:25:53,160 as we do. 216 00:25:59,600 --> 00:26:02,880 The mangroves provide an ideal nursery for them, 217 00:26:03,000 --> 00:26:06,360 and placing them here gives them an excellent start, 218 00:26:06,480 --> 00:26:10,080 but that is the end of her parental care. 219 00:26:11,600 --> 00:26:15,800 She has to return to deeper water before the tide goes out. 220 00:26:19,400 --> 00:26:23,440 Her young must now fend for themselves. 221 00:26:26,280 --> 00:26:30,760 The pups instinctively take refuge among the roots of the mangroves. 222 00:26:33,600 --> 00:26:39,400 They're so small they can swim deep into this tangled labyrinth. 223 00:26:50,640 --> 00:26:54,680 With the tide fast receding, even they need to find a place 224 00:26:54,800 --> 00:26:57,720 where they won't be left high and dry... 225 00:26:58,760 --> 00:27:00,480 a place like this... 226 00:27:01,960 --> 00:27:06,200 a permanent pool in the heart of the mangrove forest. 227 00:27:12,520 --> 00:27:15,440 Only the smallest sharks can get here, 228 00:27:15,560 --> 00:27:17,680 and only at the highest tides. 229 00:27:24,880 --> 00:27:27,480 The pups will spend the next two years here, 230 00:27:27,600 --> 00:27:32,640 perfecting the skills that make them one of the ocean's top hunters. 231 00:27:36,240 --> 00:27:37,800 And it seems... 232 00:27:38,800 --> 00:27:40,840 that there's a lot to learn. 233 00:27:47,160 --> 00:27:48,720 Got one! 234 00:27:53,960 --> 00:28:00,280 All life at the coasts has to move to the daily rhythm of the tides, 235 00:28:00,400 --> 00:28:03,840 but tides are not the same throughout the year. 236 00:28:09,600 --> 00:28:15,280 Every month, when our planet, the moon and the sun are all aligned, 237 00:28:15,400 --> 00:28:21,040 the increased gravitational pull produces particularly high tides. 238 00:28:22,720 --> 00:28:25,880 And this triggers a truly extraordinary event 239 00:28:26,000 --> 00:28:29,000 on one particular reef in the central Pacific. 240 00:28:35,760 --> 00:28:38,760 Thousands of resident surgeonfish 241 00:28:38,880 --> 00:28:41,920 begin to assemble on these high tides. 242 00:28:46,640 --> 00:28:51,320 And they are being followed by one of the largest fish in the sea... 243 00:28:57,120 --> 00:28:58,960 manta rays. 244 00:29:08,040 --> 00:29:13,400 The rays spend their year moving between coral islands. 245 00:29:15,960 --> 00:29:19,760 But it's only now, when the tide is at its highest 246 00:29:19,880 --> 00:29:21,400 and the surgeonfish have gathered, 247 00:29:21,520 --> 00:29:25,160 that they appear on this particular reef. 248 00:29:29,080 --> 00:29:30,560 Their timing is so perfect 249 00:29:30,680 --> 00:29:33,800 that they rarely have to wait more than an hour 250 00:29:33,920 --> 00:29:36,000 for the event to begin. 251 00:30:02,080 --> 00:30:06,200 At the precise moment when the tide is at its highest, 252 00:30:06,320 --> 00:30:09,160 the surgeonfish begin to spawn. 253 00:30:11,480 --> 00:30:15,440 They release billions of eggs and sperm into the water. 254 00:30:19,720 --> 00:30:22,520 Breeding in this way gives their fertilised eggs 255 00:30:22,640 --> 00:30:25,520 the best chance of being carried on the tide 256 00:30:25,640 --> 00:30:28,000 away from predators that haunt the reef... 257 00:30:31,560 --> 00:30:33,360 all except one. 258 00:30:36,720 --> 00:30:39,080 The mantas move in. 259 00:30:56,960 --> 00:30:59,000 They gorge on the eggs, 260 00:30:59,120 --> 00:31:02,840 filtering them out using specially adapted gills. 261 00:31:04,680 --> 00:31:07,560 If the mantas had arrived just an hour later, 262 00:31:07,680 --> 00:31:11,040 there would have been nothing here for them to eat. 263 00:31:17,480 --> 00:31:20,960 No-one knows how the mantas are so perfectly in tune 264 00:31:21,080 --> 00:31:23,200 with the rhythm of the tides. 265 00:31:29,440 --> 00:31:33,760 But they appear without fail whenever the surgeonfish spawn. 266 00:31:41,960 --> 00:31:46,240 Most of the eggs, however, are carried out into the open ocean 267 00:31:46,360 --> 00:31:49,200 before the mantas are able to eat them all. 268 00:32:05,760 --> 00:32:11,320 The rhythms of coastal life are influenced by another ocean force. 269 00:32:15,160 --> 00:32:19,320 Winds blowing over the sea so batter the surface 270 00:32:19,440 --> 00:32:22,240 that it begins to rise and fall. 271 00:32:24,200 --> 00:32:26,080 These swells may travel far 272 00:32:26,200 --> 00:32:29,480 and reach the shores of even the most sheltered bays. 273 00:32:30,440 --> 00:32:34,720 As they approach shallower water, they turn into waves. 274 00:32:39,440 --> 00:32:41,280 A shoal of hardyheads, 275 00:32:41,400 --> 00:32:45,920 close to the beach of Australia's Lizard Island. 276 00:32:47,080 --> 00:32:51,920 The clearness of these glassy waters shows that they lack nutrients. 277 00:32:53,440 --> 00:32:57,120 But the gentle waves expose food hidden in the sand, 278 00:32:57,240 --> 00:33:00,480 and that's what the hardyheads are looking for. 279 00:33:10,080 --> 00:33:12,000 But... they must beware. 280 00:33:15,800 --> 00:33:18,640 Packs of trevally are on the hunt. 281 00:33:26,360 --> 00:33:28,960 The hardyheads stick together. 282 00:33:30,000 --> 00:33:31,880 There's safety in numbers. 283 00:33:33,480 --> 00:33:35,240 But they're vulnerable nonetheless. 284 00:33:46,640 --> 00:33:50,320 They're so small, they can swim in the shallowest waters... 285 00:33:58,440 --> 00:34:01,280 even in the body of the waves themselves, 286 00:34:01,400 --> 00:34:03,800 out of the reach of their enemies. 287 00:34:09,120 --> 00:34:11,520 But trevally aren't their only concern. 288 00:34:21,080 --> 00:34:23,240 Blacktip reef sharks. 289 00:34:25,200 --> 00:34:28,520 They are bigger and more powerful than trevally... 290 00:34:30,680 --> 00:34:33,000 but not as fast or as agile. 291 00:34:38,480 --> 00:34:40,880 The hardyheads are well aware of them, 292 00:34:41,000 --> 00:34:44,680 but so long as they stay just out of reach, they have little to fear. 293 00:34:59,400 --> 00:35:03,040 But now the sharks and the trevally join forces. 294 00:35:08,960 --> 00:35:11,200 Together, they enter the shallows, 295 00:35:11,320 --> 00:35:13,840 each looking for a chance to attack. 296 00:35:30,960 --> 00:35:33,000 The trevally make the first move... 297 00:35:34,520 --> 00:35:37,840 and the hardyheads take refuge again in the waves. 298 00:35:39,080 --> 00:35:42,240 And this is what the sharks have been waiting for. 299 00:35:46,080 --> 00:35:50,280 Surging forwards, they chase the hardyheads out of the water... 300 00:35:51,560 --> 00:35:56,360 beaching themselves in a daring bid to hoover up their prey. 301 00:36:00,160 --> 00:36:01,960 The hardyheads that escape the sharks 302 00:36:02,080 --> 00:36:05,120 swim back out to deeper water... 303 00:36:06,840 --> 00:36:09,760 but into the mouths of the trevally. 304 00:36:20,760 --> 00:36:23,880 Now the receding waves help to pull the sharks back 305 00:36:24,000 --> 00:36:25,400 into deeper water. 306 00:36:55,680 --> 00:36:59,480 In the chaos, the seabirds get their chance. 307 00:37:04,320 --> 00:37:09,920 It's a feeding frenzy in only ten centimetres of water. 308 00:37:23,240 --> 00:37:26,800 The power of waves is dramatically evident 309 00:37:26,920 --> 00:37:28,880 when they crash onto our shores. 310 00:37:31,720 --> 00:37:37,200 But the biggest of all start far away from land, out at sea. 311 00:37:40,160 --> 00:37:43,320 Great storms blowing over the surface of the ocean 312 00:37:43,440 --> 00:37:46,240 raise towering walls of water. 313 00:37:49,680 --> 00:37:54,120 Such giant swells can travel for thousands of miles. 314 00:37:56,720 --> 00:37:58,360 As they approach land, 315 00:37:58,480 --> 00:38:02,760 the shallowing sea floor begins to drag on their undersides, 316 00:38:02,880 --> 00:38:06,480 and they topple forward... and break. 317 00:38:10,520 --> 00:38:15,000 This stirring of the ocean produces great riches. 318 00:38:18,800 --> 00:38:23,760 The Falkland Islands are surrounded by some of the stormiest waters on Earth... 319 00:38:27,440 --> 00:38:31,200 ideal hunting grounds for rockhopper penguins. 320 00:38:33,920 --> 00:38:35,240 It's the breeding season, 321 00:38:35,360 --> 00:38:40,440 and for the last two weeks, the males have been incubating the eggs by themselves. 322 00:38:42,760 --> 00:38:45,880 They're confined to the nest with nothing to eat, 323 00:38:46,000 --> 00:38:48,800 while the females are out at sea collecting food. 324 00:38:53,000 --> 00:38:57,080 All across the colony, eggs are starting to hatch. 325 00:38:59,440 --> 00:39:02,720 This male now has two youngsters to care for. 326 00:39:05,520 --> 00:39:10,080 But he has no food to give them, and he can't leave them unprotected. 327 00:39:12,000 --> 00:39:14,240 He can do nothing but wait. 328 00:39:24,120 --> 00:39:27,840 The females, after weeks fishing in the stormy seas, 329 00:39:27,960 --> 00:39:31,840 are now heading for home with food in their crops. 330 00:39:35,600 --> 00:39:38,200 There's just one problem. 331 00:39:38,320 --> 00:39:43,000 The colony sits at the top of huge cliffs. 332 00:39:44,960 --> 00:39:48,360 The waves that make feeding so good here 333 00:39:48,480 --> 00:39:51,200 have now become major obstacles. 334 00:39:53,360 --> 00:39:55,400 Timing is vital. 335 00:40:09,840 --> 00:40:11,120 Go too early... 336 00:40:12,640 --> 00:40:15,400 and they could be smashed against the rocks. 337 00:40:21,440 --> 00:40:26,640 Too late... and they will be carried back out to sea. 338 00:40:32,360 --> 00:40:36,760 Hooked claws now help to get purchase on the slippery rocks. 339 00:40:39,920 --> 00:40:42,240 But they're not out of trouble yet. 340 00:40:46,840 --> 00:40:50,920 Success depends on both judgment... and luck. 341 00:41:10,760 --> 00:41:14,880 Time and again, the waves drag her back in. 342 00:41:21,480 --> 00:41:23,440 She has to persevere. 343 00:41:23,560 --> 00:41:28,280 The lives of her chicks depend on her safe return. 344 00:41:59,800 --> 00:42:04,080 Finally... she's made it. 345 00:42:13,840 --> 00:42:16,200 They're not called rockhoppers for nothing. 346 00:42:21,840 --> 00:42:24,520 With one more jump, she's home. 347 00:42:27,760 --> 00:42:29,400 And just in time. 348 00:42:34,840 --> 00:42:37,320 Her chicks are desperately hungry. 349 00:42:44,840 --> 00:42:47,120 This is their first proper meal. 350 00:42:57,960 --> 00:43:02,800 The oceans have sustained life on our planet for millions of years. 351 00:43:07,120 --> 00:43:11,560 But today, there's growing evidence that this is changing. 352 00:43:17,440 --> 00:43:19,480 As our climate warms, 353 00:43:19,600 --> 00:43:23,320 polar ice sheets are melting at an alarming rate. 354 00:43:27,440 --> 00:43:32,000 In the Arctic alone, 14,000 tonnes of fresh water 355 00:43:32,120 --> 00:43:35,360 are emptying into the sea every second. 356 00:43:43,000 --> 00:43:47,280 This is slowing the flow of currents around the globe. 357 00:43:49,120 --> 00:43:52,200 And if the atmosphere continues to warm, 358 00:43:52,320 --> 00:43:56,280 ocean circulation could eventually stop altogether. 359 00:44:04,200 --> 00:44:10,360 Our seas would then stagnate, threatening the life within them. 360 00:44:14,280 --> 00:44:16,840 And there are places in the oceans today 361 00:44:16,960 --> 00:44:19,960 where this is already beginning to happen. 362 00:44:28,640 --> 00:44:30,640 The Gulf of Thailand. 363 00:44:37,920 --> 00:44:41,800 Eden's whales have lived here for generations. 364 00:44:44,320 --> 00:44:47,280 But the world around them is changing. 365 00:44:56,640 --> 00:45:01,600 Today, agricultural pollution flowing from the land... 366 00:45:02,600 --> 00:45:05,800 is beginning to suffocate this sea. 367 00:45:15,760 --> 00:45:19,040 Many fish now stay closer to the surface, 368 00:45:19,160 --> 00:45:23,120 where the waters still contain enough oxygen to survive. 369 00:45:27,480 --> 00:45:30,880 Eden's whales depend on these fish. 370 00:45:33,040 --> 00:45:34,600 They swallow huge quantities of water 371 00:45:34,720 --> 00:45:37,520 before filtering out their prey. 372 00:45:42,680 --> 00:45:48,400 It takes a lot of energy to drive their 15-tonne bulk through the water. 373 00:45:51,680 --> 00:45:53,360 And with so few fish, 374 00:45:53,480 --> 00:45:57,120 the rewards from feeding like this are barely worth it. 375 00:45:59,040 --> 00:46:01,280 So, to survive here, 376 00:46:01,400 --> 00:46:04,880 the whales have developed a new hunting technique... 377 00:46:09,480 --> 00:46:12,880 one that requires almost no effort. 378 00:46:15,560 --> 00:46:20,360 They simply open their mouths... and wait. 379 00:46:25,800 --> 00:46:28,640 The panicked fish jump right in. 380 00:46:35,760 --> 00:46:37,600 Swimming alongside, 381 00:46:37,720 --> 00:46:41,360 another whale scares even more into the open jaws. 382 00:46:52,760 --> 00:46:55,480 With this ingenious new technique, 383 00:46:55,600 --> 00:47:00,680 Eden's whales have found a way to survive the pressures they now face. 384 00:47:03,600 --> 00:47:07,240 All across the planet, animals are having to adapt 385 00:47:07,360 --> 00:47:09,240 to a changing world. 386 00:47:11,000 --> 00:47:15,400 But the speed of these changes will be too fast for many. 387 00:47:19,360 --> 00:47:24,840 If we could only halt our unrestrained plunder of the ocean, 388 00:47:24,960 --> 00:47:28,200 its habitats and species would recover. 389 00:47:31,000 --> 00:47:35,480 And at a time when our overexploited lands are already failing us, 390 00:47:35,600 --> 00:47:40,560 this has never been more important for humanity. 32238

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