Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? 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
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.