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Coral reefs...
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..home to an astonishing diversity
of life
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that's vital to the health
of our seas.
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Lying off the coast of eastern
Australia, the Great Barrier Reef
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is the world's largest expanse
of coral reefs.
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But this extraordinary place
and all the life that it supports
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is under threat like never before.
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Some experts predict we could lose
it all in just 30 years.
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To find out what's being done
to save one of the earth's greatest
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natural wonders, we've based
ourselves on Heron Island
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at the southern tip
of the Great Barrier Reef.
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This is one of the last
healthy areas and a hub
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for pioneering research.
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By working with leading scientists,
we've come here to discover
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the magnificent life found
within this fragile kingdom
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of our blue planet.
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WHALE SONG ECHOES
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{\an8}Positioned off the coast of
Queensland, the Great Barrier Reef
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{\an8}is a network of habitats where open
ocean meets coral gardens
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and island paradises.
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These provide food and shelter
for over 9,000 species.
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At 1,400 miles long,
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it also protects the Australian
mainland by bearing the brunt
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of powerful storms.
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Each year, millions of people come
from far and wide to see and study
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this natural wonder -
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the largest living structure
on the planet.
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The minute you look beneath the
surface,
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you are hit between the eyes
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with so much colour
and so many animals.
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This underwater metropolis is made
up of billions of tiny organisms
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called polyps, organised together
to form a single megastructure.
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Each polyp is growing a skeleton,
and the one beside it, and the one
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beside it again, until you've got
hundreds, thousands, even millions
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of coral animals
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building these incredibly beautiful
structures.
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These coral cities take
centuries to grow
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and it's taken the
Great Barrier Reef
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around 500,000 years to evolve.
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But today, its existence
is under threat as the changing
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climate warms our seas.
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From our base on Heron Island,
50 miles off the Queensland coast,
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we can unearth its many riches...
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..teaming up with the scientists
who are working to both understand
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and protect it.
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Professor Peter Harrison
is a global expert in coral reefs,
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having spent the last 40 years
studying their inner workings.
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Heron Island provides the perfect
base for him to examine corals...
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..but to see how the whole reef
functions, he needs to take
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to the air.
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The first time I flew over the reef
was in the 1990s,
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and for the first time I actually
got a sense of the scale
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of the whole reef.
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Extraordinary beauty at large scale.
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This is a spectacular,
interconnected ecosystem.
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When looking at a reef system from
the air, we start to gain a much
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better understanding of
how the system functions,
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all the different zones.
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The scalloped reef edge where you
see all the dynamic forces, the wave
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actions coming in, the wash moving
through, all the new nutrients
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coming into the reef system.
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And then you move into the shallow
reef flat areas where certain types
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of corals are specialised in coping
with these extreme environments.
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My favourite part of the reef
is actually the lagoon where you get
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all of these complex reef systems
forming a patchwork layer.
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It's like a mosaic system.
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The incredible colours
that are coming from the reefs,
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just this azure blue
and turquoise colours.
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And every time I see those, it does
something to me personally.
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It makes the hairs on the back
of my neck stand up.
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I just react to that colour.
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And, for me, it's kind
of like a spiritual home
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for the marine world.
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There's no other systems
on our planet, anything like this.
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It's just a spectacular
environment, so visually beautiful,
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so ecologically complex
and so amazingly fragile.
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I wish everyone on the planet
could come and see a healthy,
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functioning reef system,
and hopefully in the future
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there will still be enough
so that people can enjoy them.
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Back on the ground below,
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summer is in full swing
and Heron Island is at its busiest.
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It's only 800 metres long,
but the dense forest canopy offers
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prime real estate for those looking
to nest.
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From December to March each year,
the wildlife here is booming.
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There's no better time to meet the
residents of this tropical oasis.
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Every inch of the forest is occupied
with over 100,000 birds working
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tirelessly to raise their young.
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The white sandy beaches
that encircle the island are home
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to a busy green sea turtle nursery.
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Heron Island is at the centre
of a reef
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over 100 times larger than
the island itself, which is full
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of charismatic creatures.
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An extraordinary number of fish
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and 18 species of rays and sharks
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call these waters home.
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But it's the towering corals
that provide food and shelter
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for such an abundance of life.
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Each day, this magical place
springs to life,
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as every animal
within this underwater wonderland
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has a role to play.
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Damselfish stand guard over their
coral gardens.
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And this bubble-tip anemone provides
a safe home for clownfish.
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Whilst larger reef residents
patrol for food.
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One of the busiest parts of the reef
is the cleaning station.
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Marine creatures will pass
through here whenever they need some
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attention from a cleaner fish.
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A green sea turtle arrives to take
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a well-earned rest from its travels.
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By raising its head and stretching
out its flippers, this turtle shows
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it's ready for a once-over.
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Its shell is so sensitive
it can feel every nibble.
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Every animal here helps to keep
the reef and its residents
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clean and healthy.
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With such an abundance of marine
life, Heron Reef
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is relatively pristine.
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But sadly, this place is
the exception to the rule.
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As across the globe, coral
reefs are struggling.
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Coral reefs are an essential part
of our life support system.
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Unfortunately, over the past 30
years, we've lost a lot of corals
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and it's been a combination
of problems -
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pollution, overfishing
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and, of course, nowadays
we have the threat
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of major climate change.
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Director of
The Global Change Institute,
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Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg,
is a world expert
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on climate change and coral reefs.
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Climate change impacts coral reefs
in a number of ways.
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As we are adding
carbon dioxide to the atmosphere
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that then drives the temperature up,
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and it doesn't matter
whether you're on land
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or in the upper layers of the ocean,
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that's enough to cause problems with
coral reefs.
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If we see coral reefs die and other
parts of the ocean die,
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we will start
to threaten our very own existence.
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Ove first came to Heron Island
when he was 18 years old, and now,
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along with the team at the research
station, is leading the way
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in understanding what the future
holds for all life found
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on coral reefs.
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We've been coming to Heron Island
for three or four decades now,
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and because it's near pristine,
we really have a unique opportunity,
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together with the facilities
that the university provides, to get
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at some really important questions.
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Run by the University of Queensland,
Heron Island Research Station
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carries out ground-breaking work
using the latest technologies
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to explore the inner workings
of reefs.
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The ability to have access
to advanced laboratory tools,
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cameras and so on,
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it's really generating enormous
amounts of interest and research
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and so on.
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This work equips organisations
and governments with the information
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they need to protect coral reefs.
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Scientists here study everything
the island has to offer,
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from the colourful corals
that are the foundations of all life
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here to the feathered families
that arrive each year to breed.
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And, as December dawns, one
of the reef's most charismatic
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residents comes to shore to nest,
offering researchers an unrivalled
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chance to get a closer
look at these ancient mariners.
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Green sea turtles have been
monitored on Heron Island for almost
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50 years.
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For turtle biologist
Janine Ferguson and her team,
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it's like old friends coming home.
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I love it. Been involved
with the turtles here since
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about 1987, but I'm not sure
what it is about sea turtles
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that grabs a lot of people's
attention and they just do fall
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in love with them.
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{\an8}During the nesting season, as night
begins to fall,
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{\an8}females patrol the beaches, looking
for a spot to lay their eggs.
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{\an8}They haul themselves up and out of
the water, a herculean effort.
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What she is looking for is
a position that's high enough
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above the high-water mark
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{\an8}so that her eggs are in a safe place
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{\an8}and will not get inundated
with any water from high tides
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{\an8}or a tidal surge from a cyclone.
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The turtle digs a hole around 60
centimetres deep.
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She's using her front flippers
to actually get rid of that sand,
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the more drier sand,
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and she'll also use her rear
flippers as well, to flick the sand
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backwards away from where
she actually wants to dig
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that egg chamber.
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They spend a lot of time
up there, getting rid of that
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soft sand from around them.
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The bone structure within their rear
flippers is very similar
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to our hand.
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She can actually cup it and bring
it up and out of the egg chamber
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and then reach in with her other
flipper and bring out another
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flipper full of sand and put
it beside her.
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It's in sort of a bowl shape.
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And she needs to get that specific
shape so that she can actually
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then put her eggs into that, what
we call the egg chamber.
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It can take up to five hours of hard
work for her to lay over 100 eggs.
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She is more committed to putting
those eggs into the ground.
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So she's a lot more accepting
of us being around her.
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She's actually filling in her egg
chamber and she's just using
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her rear flippers again
just to cover those eggs
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up into a nice little secure area.
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Once she's finished laying
her eggs, Janine can move
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in to attach an ID tag.
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The project itself has been going
since 1974, and most of our females
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during that period of time
should be tagged.
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So if we don't have a tag
on this girl, it probably means
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that this is her first laying
season.
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Since Janine and her team started
monitoring Heron's turtles
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their numbers
have more than doubled.
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A great sign that this population
is doing well.
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But the impact rising temperatures
will have on this species
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is not well understood.
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So this long-term monitoring work
is more important than ever.
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This turtle mother's task is over.
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She heads back towards the water.
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There are plenty of opportunities
on the reef around Heron Island
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for hungry turtles to replenish
their food stores.
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They gather around an old shipwreck,
feasting on a treat brought
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00:16:11,320 --> 00:16:12,640
in by a high tide.
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00:16:43,040 --> 00:16:47,720
Small, jelly-like creatures called
salps, a type of plankton,
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00:16:47,720 --> 00:16:50,080
are carried here by the current,
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and they make for a nutritious
meal on the move.
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But these magnificent turtles also
help the reef in return, in ways
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we're only beginning to comprehend.
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Green turtles can often be found
perusing the underwater gardens,
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which neighbour coral reefs.
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These are filled with the ocean's
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only flowering plants, seagrass.
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Seagrass meadows can store ten times
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as much carbon dioxide as the same
area of rainforest,
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and regular mowing keeps them in
good condition.
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00:18:20,080 --> 00:18:24,520
Consuming up to four kilos
of seagrass a day, a turtle
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will graze the same patch
for several months before moving on.
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But like any terrestrial prairie,
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seagrass meadows also attract herds
of giant grazers.
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Dugongs...
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..one of the largest herbivores
in the ocean.
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There are more dugongs in Australia
than any other place on Earth.
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A distant relative of the elephant,
they can reach three metres
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in length and weigh half a tonne.
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And they eat almost nothing
but seagrass.
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These regular grazers play an
essential role, spreading seagrass
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seeds far and wide.
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And importantly for coral reefs,
seagrass meadows provide safe
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nursery grounds for young fish.
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Fish that are still too small
to cope with the hustle and bustle
241
00:19:58,400 --> 00:20:00,080
of reef life
242
00:20:00,080 --> 00:20:04,400
but who will one day grow up
to join this extravagant world.
243
00:20:07,200 --> 00:20:10,880
Fish found on the reef are reliant
on the healthy appetites
244
00:20:10,880 --> 00:20:12,560
of dugongs and turtles.
245
00:20:14,480 --> 00:20:18,240
It's these interconnected
relationships that underpin
246
00:20:18,240 --> 00:20:21,280
the foundations
of the Great Barrier Reef.
247
00:20:23,120 --> 00:20:27,400
And perhaps the most important one
of all involves the corals
248
00:20:27,400 --> 00:20:32,760
themselves as they harness up to 90%
of their energy from microscopic
249
00:20:32,760 --> 00:20:35,120
algae living within their cells.
250
00:20:36,840 --> 00:20:41,480
Only with this help can they build
such impressive reefs.
251
00:20:41,480 --> 00:20:44,800
It's a relationship that's vital
to everything that calls
252
00:20:44,800 --> 00:20:46,640
this natural wonder home.
253
00:20:48,120 --> 00:20:51,640
But in recent years, it's come
under increasing pressure
254
00:20:51,640 --> 00:20:54,560
as our planet faces
a climate crisis.
255
00:20:56,520 --> 00:20:58,080
Our seas are warming.
256
00:21:00,880 --> 00:21:05,320
And a rise in temperature
of just two degrees for a month
257
00:21:05,320 --> 00:21:09,720
can be enough to cause the coral
polyps to eject their algae.
258
00:21:15,960 --> 00:21:20,240
When this happens, the corals fade,
losing both their colour
259
00:21:20,240 --> 00:21:22,200
and their main food supply.
260
00:21:31,200 --> 00:21:36,120
If high temperatures are sustained,
corals bleached in this way
261
00:21:36,120 --> 00:21:37,480
are likely to die.
262
00:21:45,200 --> 00:21:49,640
Since 2016, half of the
Great Barrier Reef's shallow water
263
00:21:49,640 --> 00:21:53,280
corals have perished due to
bleaching.
264
00:21:53,280 --> 00:21:58,200
If we don't change our habits
with regards to CO2 emissions,
265
00:21:58,200 --> 00:22:01,160
I do not believe it's possible
that coral reefs will be here
266
00:22:01,160 --> 00:22:02,200
in the future.
267
00:22:03,200 --> 00:22:06,040
On Heron Island,
Professor Sophie Dove
268
00:22:06,040 --> 00:22:07,920
is in a race against time,
269
00:22:07,920 --> 00:22:13,120
trying to predict what the future
may look like for coral reefs.
270
00:22:13,120 --> 00:22:15,920
By creating miniature reefs
in a set of tanks,
271
00:22:15,920 --> 00:22:20,520
she can find out how corals might
react to future climate conditions.
272
00:22:22,240 --> 00:22:27,160
The aim is to reproduce a structure
that looks a little bit at least
273
00:22:27,160 --> 00:22:29,760
what we have out there
on the reef slope
274
00:22:29,760 --> 00:22:32,000
so that we can then examine
275
00:22:32,000 --> 00:22:35,720
what increases in temperature
and acidification
276
00:22:35,720 --> 00:22:37,600
do to the mini reefs.
277
00:22:39,560 --> 00:22:42,160
We put them
and we weigh them underwater.
278
00:22:44,120 --> 00:22:49,920
We do a lot of 3D scanning now and
so they give us volumetric change
279
00:22:49,920 --> 00:22:53,320
and also the change
over the surface area of the coral.
280
00:22:54,920 --> 00:22:58,280
And those are fundamental
to understanding
281
00:22:58,280 --> 00:23:03,440
whether it is possible to generate
corals that can grow and survive
282
00:23:03,440 --> 00:23:07,360
the type of environments that
we're going to have in the future.
283
00:23:07,360 --> 00:23:11,880
Sophie's experiments have shown that
if temperatures continue to rise
284
00:23:11,880 --> 00:23:15,760
at their current rate,
we will lose our coral reefs
285
00:23:15,760 --> 00:23:17,520
in just 30 years.
286
00:23:17,520 --> 00:23:19,160
They literally disintegrate.
287
00:23:19,160 --> 00:23:23,840
They start off as these lovely
3-D tiered structures
288
00:23:23,840 --> 00:23:30,040
and they collapse in to
this 2-D scuzz of cyanobacteria.
289
00:23:31,520 --> 00:23:33,800
The situation is desperate.
290
00:23:35,120 --> 00:23:40,560
But scientists are doing their best
to bide coral reefs more time.
291
00:23:40,560 --> 00:23:44,640
And the way that corals reproduce
is providing a much-needed
292
00:23:44,640 --> 00:23:45,800
glimmer of hope.
293
00:23:47,800 --> 00:23:50,120
Coral expert
Professor Peter Harrison
294
00:23:50,120 --> 00:23:53,080
has travelled
to the northern Great Barrier Reef
295
00:23:53,080 --> 00:23:56,760
with a ground-breaking idea
that could offer reefs a lifeline.
296
00:23:58,480 --> 00:24:00,440
Coral IVF.
297
00:24:00,440 --> 00:24:02,800
Collecting eggs and sperm
from corals
298
00:24:02,800 --> 00:24:05,000
that have survived mass bleaching
299
00:24:05,000 --> 00:24:08,400
and transferring them
to recolonise dead reefs.
300
00:24:14,880 --> 00:24:17,760
For this to work,
he's searching for live coral
301
00:24:17,760 --> 00:24:19,920
that's healthy enough to spawn.
302
00:24:24,200 --> 00:24:26,960
But these corals release eggs
and sperm
303
00:24:26,960 --> 00:24:29,560
on just a few nights each year,
304
00:24:29,560 --> 00:24:31,600
so there is no margin for error.
305
00:24:34,360 --> 00:24:37,440
There's good coral cover,
really good diversity,
306
00:24:37,440 --> 00:24:40,160
lots of survivors
from the recent bleaching events.
307
00:24:40,160 --> 00:24:42,640
We need to capture these eggs
and sperm now
308
00:24:42,640 --> 00:24:44,360
before the next bleaching event
309
00:24:44,360 --> 00:24:47,760
because we can't be absolutely sure
that these corals will survive
310
00:24:47,760 --> 00:24:49,600
the coming bleaching.
311
00:24:49,600 --> 00:24:51,600
With a site identified,
312
00:24:51,600 --> 00:24:56,000
the team can deploy
the 65-metre spawn catcher,
313
00:24:56,000 --> 00:24:58,600
a giant ring of floats
that will corral
314
00:24:58,600 --> 00:25:00,480
the released eggs and sperm
315
00:25:00,480 --> 00:25:03,280
into a fine net
where it can be collected.
316
00:25:05,720 --> 00:25:08,680
But as night falls,
the weather turns.
317
00:25:08,680 --> 00:25:11,040
It's always a bit of a worry
when the wind blows up,
318
00:25:11,040 --> 00:25:13,920
and particularly as the wind
is coming from the wrong direction.
319
00:25:13,920 --> 00:25:16,840
We're having to use
a more exposed site.
320
00:25:16,840 --> 00:25:20,040
The window of opportunity
is shrinking fast.
321
00:25:21,560 --> 00:25:24,560
And because artificial light
affects the spawning,
322
00:25:24,560 --> 00:25:27,680
the team prepare to work
in virtual darkness.
323
00:25:30,880 --> 00:25:32,680
It's a race against time.
324
00:25:33,840 --> 00:25:35,800
Our dive teams are in the water
325
00:25:35,800 --> 00:25:40,000
and now our job is to start looking
for surface slicks
326
00:25:40,000 --> 00:25:43,880
as they start to develop
before the wind picks up,
327
00:25:43,880 --> 00:25:46,200
because if we can get
even a little bit of it
328
00:25:46,200 --> 00:25:48,160
in these spawn catcher nets,
329
00:25:48,160 --> 00:25:51,080
then we're looking good
over the next few days.
330
00:25:51,080 --> 00:25:52,920
As long as we can stay
on the water...
331
00:25:52,920 --> 00:25:54,360
CLAP OF THUNDER
332
00:25:54,360 --> 00:25:56,960
..because that was
a big lightning strike.
333
00:25:56,960 --> 00:26:00,400
Small boats are one
of the most dangerous places to be
334
00:26:00,400 --> 00:26:01,840
in a lightning storm.
335
00:26:01,840 --> 00:26:05,320
Peter and the team might be battling
the weather on the surface,
336
00:26:05,320 --> 00:26:07,560
but their timing is perfect.
337
00:26:09,280 --> 00:26:13,000
Beneath them, the coral
is putting on a dazzling display.
338
00:26:14,280 --> 00:26:18,840
Millions of individual corals
are releasing their eggs and sperm
339
00:26:18,840 --> 00:26:21,240
at exactly the same time.
340
00:26:21,240 --> 00:26:24,280
This extraordinary
natural phenomenon
341
00:26:24,280 --> 00:26:26,680
is happening right on cue.
342
00:26:26,680 --> 00:26:29,600
For more than 1,000 kilometres
over the Great Barrier Reef,
343
00:26:29,600 --> 00:26:32,960
you'll see synchronous spawning
of many of these same species.
344
00:26:38,880 --> 00:26:43,360
The team work deep into the night
to collect as much as possible.
345
00:26:43,360 --> 00:26:46,720
By the time they're finished,
it's 3:30 in the morning.
346
00:26:48,280 --> 00:26:53,960
Overnight, the spawn is transported
21 miles north to Vlasoff Reef.
347
00:26:55,080 --> 00:26:59,840
Just 18 months ago,
Vlasoff was full of life and colour.
348
00:26:59,840 --> 00:27:03,040
But today,
it's a dead, white expanse.
349
00:27:04,480 --> 00:27:08,600
Peter's team have built
floating pools above this reef
350
00:27:08,600 --> 00:27:11,600
where the microscopic larvae
will mature.
351
00:27:11,600 --> 00:27:14,760
In time, they will be released
to form new colonies
352
00:27:14,760 --> 00:27:17,240
on the dead skeleton below.
353
00:27:17,240 --> 00:27:21,960
In just three years, the new corals
should be ready to breed.
354
00:27:21,960 --> 00:27:24,000
It's a complex operation.
355
00:27:24,000 --> 00:27:26,680
We've got a lot of healthy embryos
in the cultures
356
00:27:26,680 --> 00:27:29,680
and it looks like we're going to be
successful in at least getting
357
00:27:29,680 --> 00:27:32,120
through the second stage
of rearing the larvae.
358
00:27:34,280 --> 00:27:35,640
We've still got a way to go
359
00:27:35,640 --> 00:27:39,520
but, so far, I'm really happy
and increasingly confident
360
00:27:39,520 --> 00:27:41,760
that we will get a good result.
361
00:27:48,720 --> 00:27:51,360
Peter's ground-breaking coral IVF
362
00:27:51,360 --> 00:27:56,200
is able to speed up the growth and
recovery of damaged coral reefs.
363
00:27:58,480 --> 00:28:01,960
But the health of these reefs
is not only influenced by life
364
00:28:01,960 --> 00:28:03,280
beneath the waves.
365
00:28:04,640 --> 00:28:08,560
Recent research has shown that life
on land is more connected to coral
366
00:28:08,560 --> 00:28:11,160
reefs than we ever thought possible.
367
00:28:14,120 --> 00:28:18,000
On Heron Island, the birds are busy
looking after their young.
368
00:28:30,320 --> 00:28:34,440
It's now January, and in burrows
below the forest's trees
369
00:28:34,440 --> 00:28:39,360
13,000 wedge-tailed shearwaters
are incubating their eggs.
370
00:28:39,360 --> 00:28:40,680
During the day,
371
00:28:40,680 --> 00:28:44,680
it's hard to know they're here
as they keep below ground.
372
00:28:44,680 --> 00:28:48,320
But by using burrow cameras,
Abbie Taylor and the team
373
00:28:48,320 --> 00:28:52,000
at Heron Island Research Station
can get a unique insight
374
00:28:52,000 --> 00:28:53,240
into their lives.
375
00:28:57,840 --> 00:29:01,400
The shearwaters have travelled
all the way from Micronesia,
376
00:29:01,400 --> 00:29:04,160
nearly 4,000 miles away,
to nest here.
377
00:29:07,520 --> 00:29:12,200
This shearwater mum, called Winona,
got off to a rather bad start.
378
00:29:17,920 --> 00:29:20,760
Winona is a little bit
of a special story to us.
379
00:29:20,760 --> 00:29:23,480
She was a bird that was rescued
out of a skip bin,
380
00:29:23,480 --> 00:29:26,680
that was placed in a nest, just to
give her a little bit of a rest,
381
00:29:26,680 --> 00:29:28,920
and she happened to lay an egg
in the first 24 hours
382
00:29:28,920 --> 00:29:30,080
of being in the nest.
383
00:29:30,080 --> 00:29:32,840
So we knew exactly when her egg
was laid, which was great,
384
00:29:32,840 --> 00:29:35,600
because we could predict
when it was going to hatch.
385
00:29:35,600 --> 00:29:39,960
Over a month has passed and her
chick, named Willie, is almost
386
00:29:39,960 --> 00:29:42,080
ready to hatch.
387
00:29:42,080 --> 00:29:44,840
Winona, we're predicting,
is a first-time mum.
388
00:29:44,840 --> 00:29:47,840
And she got a little bit scared
when the egg started to vibrate
389
00:29:47,840 --> 00:29:51,400
when it was hatching and actually
kicked it across the nest.
390
00:29:51,400 --> 00:29:52,800
And so it was pretty cool to see.
391
00:29:52,800 --> 00:29:54,160
It actually hit the back wall
392
00:29:54,160 --> 00:29:57,080
and you could hear Willie squawking
inside the egg.
393
00:29:57,080 --> 00:30:00,280
SQUEAKING
394
00:30:08,960 --> 00:30:12,080
Being a shearwater parent
is challenging.
395
00:30:12,080 --> 00:30:15,000
Growing chicks need a regular supply
of food.
396
00:30:18,160 --> 00:30:21,160
So each morning,
well before sunrise,
397
00:30:21,160 --> 00:30:24,120
they leave in search
of the next meal.
398
00:30:24,120 --> 00:30:28,320
But here, in the dense forest,
there is little room to fly.
399
00:30:30,080 --> 00:30:33,520
By walking along the forest's
well-trodden footpath,
400
00:30:33,520 --> 00:30:37,160
they make their way towards
the beach where there's easy access
401
00:30:37,160 --> 00:30:38,520
to the open ocean.
402
00:30:40,480 --> 00:30:44,240
They line up in clearings
as if taxiing for takeoff...
403
00:30:48,200 --> 00:30:51,000
..and, with a good run-up,
head out to sea.
404
00:31:05,240 --> 00:31:09,800
These expert foragers will spend
the entire day fishing at sea.
405
00:31:17,200 --> 00:31:21,000
One of the parents fishes close by
to provide a regular supply
406
00:31:21,000 --> 00:31:22,600
of food for the chick.
407
00:31:27,960 --> 00:31:31,920
While the other will spend two weeks
on the wing travelling up to 600
408
00:31:31,920 --> 00:31:34,600
miles to stock up on food
for itself.
409
00:32:01,320 --> 00:32:04,720
The adults only return under cover
of darkness.
410
00:32:08,960 --> 00:32:11,760
After a bumpy landing,
they'll quickly head
411
00:32:11,760 --> 00:32:14,760
into their burrows to provide
their chicks with a meal
412
00:32:14,760 --> 00:32:16,080
of fish and squid.
413
00:32:19,200 --> 00:32:23,960
Every couple of weeks, the parents
will meet to swap shifts,
414
00:32:23,960 --> 00:32:27,000
using their haunting calls to find
each other.
415
00:32:27,000 --> 00:32:31,840
When both parents come in, they are,
um, I guess, super...
416
00:32:31,840 --> 00:32:33,440
'romantic' is a terrible word,
417
00:32:33,440 --> 00:32:36,680
but they are really affectionate
towards each other and there is lots
418
00:32:36,680 --> 00:32:41,040
of nuzzling and preening of both
parents and then the chick as well.
419
00:32:41,040 --> 00:32:43,440
So they will sit in a little kind
of family huddle
420
00:32:43,440 --> 00:32:45,880
and, yeah, preen each other,
which is very cute.
421
00:32:47,840 --> 00:32:51,360
Their reunion is brief, as the next
morning both parents
422
00:32:51,360 --> 00:32:54,000
will go their separate ways to fish.
423
00:32:55,440 --> 00:32:58,400
It's these foraging trips
that are the key
424
00:32:58,400 --> 00:33:00,080
to helping coral reefs.
425
00:33:01,640 --> 00:33:05,360
Every time they return to the island
from their long-distance hunting
426
00:33:05,360 --> 00:33:08,720
trips, sea birds bring back
essential nutrients in their
427
00:33:08,720 --> 00:33:13,040
droppings, or guano, which flow into
the surrounding waters.
428
00:33:16,480 --> 00:33:20,200
These nutrients result in greater
numbers of fish
429
00:33:20,200 --> 00:33:22,280
and healthier coral reefs...
430
00:33:24,760 --> 00:33:28,400
..helping these precious ecosystems
to thrive.
431
00:33:33,960 --> 00:33:37,640
Across our seas, ocean commuters
carry nutrients
432
00:33:37,640 --> 00:33:39,320
for thousands of miles.
433
00:33:42,680 --> 00:33:46,240
And few more so than migrating
whales,
434
00:33:46,240 --> 00:33:51,120
who spend their lives traversing
the big blue.
435
00:33:51,120 --> 00:33:53,280
Humpback whales make their way
436
00:33:53,280 --> 00:33:57,040
from Antarctica to the
Great Barrier Reef each year.
437
00:34:26,120 --> 00:34:28,960
They've travelled all the way
here to breed.
438
00:34:28,960 --> 00:34:32,080
And these warm tropical waters
provide a safe place
439
00:34:32,080 --> 00:34:37,200
for their calves to grow and fatten
up before returning to cooler seas.
440
00:34:39,960 --> 00:34:43,720
But during the breeding season, some
of the greatest migrations
441
00:34:43,720 --> 00:34:47,520
on the Great Barrier Reef
are carried out by an animal
442
00:34:47,520 --> 00:34:49,360
just centimetres in size.
443
00:34:58,880 --> 00:35:02,920
{\an8}Loggerhead turtle hatchlings from
the Great Barrier Reef travel
444
00:35:02,920 --> 00:35:07,440
{\an8}down the East Australian Current,
past New Zealand, and all the way
445
00:35:07,440 --> 00:35:11,360
{\an8}across the Pacific to Chile
and Peru, a distance
446
00:35:11,360 --> 00:35:13,000
{\an8}of over 8,000 miles.
447
00:35:14,320 --> 00:35:18,640
They won't arrive back until they're
around 16 years of age.
448
00:35:23,280 --> 00:35:27,600
As adults, marine turtles
will then establish home ranges
449
00:35:27,600 --> 00:35:30,760
travelling between feeding
and nesting areas.
450
00:35:32,360 --> 00:35:37,000
Each year, in the northern
Great Barrier Reef, tens of
451
00:35:37,000 --> 00:35:40,720
thousands of turtles gather near
their natal breeding grounds.
452
00:35:44,520 --> 00:35:47,560
They spread out as far as the eye
can see.
453
00:35:51,120 --> 00:35:55,840
And each turtle will carry
little hitchhikers, parasites
454
00:35:55,840 --> 00:36:00,720
and barnacles, on their bodies,
transporting them from open ocean
455
00:36:00,720 --> 00:36:02,560
to coral reefs -
456
00:36:02,560 --> 00:36:06,240
increasing the biodiversity
of our blue planet.
457
00:36:09,040 --> 00:36:14,320
But as our influence on the ocean
increases, these migrations are also
458
00:36:14,320 --> 00:36:17,320
exposing marine turtles
to great dangers.
459
00:36:22,200 --> 00:36:26,080
It's thought 52% of sea
turtles worldwide
460
00:36:26,080 --> 00:36:28,200
have ingested plastic debris.
461
00:36:31,080 --> 00:36:35,160
And over 1,000 die each year
due to entanglement.
462
00:36:40,480 --> 00:36:44,760
Across the world, marine turtle
populations are struggling.
463
00:36:46,760 --> 00:36:48,960
But there are people trying to help.
464
00:36:51,640 --> 00:36:54,120
In the northern Great Barrier Reef,
465
00:36:54,120 --> 00:36:59,120
the Cairns Turtle Rehabilitation
Centre, run by Jennie Gilbert, works
466
00:36:59,120 --> 00:37:03,560
to get sick and injured
turtles back into the wild.
467
00:37:03,560 --> 00:37:06,320
One of the current residents is this
female,
468
00:37:06,320 --> 00:37:10,120
who was hit by a boat after
ingesting some fishing line.
469
00:37:10,120 --> 00:37:13,160
It's not only done enormous amounts
of damage to her shell,
470
00:37:13,160 --> 00:37:15,680
but we're going to have to amputate
that back flipper
471
00:37:15,680 --> 00:37:18,920
because the propeller went
through and she's got nerve damage.
472
00:37:18,920 --> 00:37:20,880
It's completely overwhelming,
isn't it?
473
00:37:20,880 --> 00:37:25,880
Just... She is a case study
in what we are doing to our oceans.
474
00:37:27,480 --> 00:37:31,440
Whether through entanglement
or ingestion, plastics are clearly
475
00:37:31,440 --> 00:37:34,760
having a major impact on turtle
populations.
476
00:37:34,760 --> 00:37:38,240
So this rescue and rehabilitation
effort is more essential
477
00:37:38,240 --> 00:37:39,480
than ever before.
478
00:37:40,560 --> 00:37:46,040
At Cairns Aquarium is a very special
green sea turtle called Midori.
479
00:37:46,040 --> 00:37:50,520
She was brought in two and a half
years ago with tumours and plastics
480
00:37:50,520 --> 00:37:52,480
blocking her bowels.
481
00:37:52,480 --> 00:37:56,360
But now she's testament to the
team's hard work and dedication.
482
00:37:56,360 --> 00:37:58,080
Isn't she beautiful?
483
00:37:58,080 --> 00:38:00,360
She looks in great shape, Jennie.
She really does.
484
00:38:00,360 --> 00:38:02,840
She's in such good shape,
she needs to go.
485
00:38:02,840 --> 00:38:04,680
Before Midori is released
486
00:38:04,680 --> 00:38:08,480
she needs a thorough checkup
to make sure she's fit enough.
487
00:38:08,480 --> 00:38:11,640
For this, Jennie and the team
have access to state-of-the-art
488
00:38:11,640 --> 00:38:14,720
medical equipment at the local
hospital.
489
00:38:14,720 --> 00:38:17,880
A CT scan will reveal
if she's free from tumours
490
00:38:17,880 --> 00:38:19,440
and plastic.
491
00:38:19,440 --> 00:38:22,640
So, Jennie, what are your thoughts
looking at the scan?
492
00:38:22,640 --> 00:38:24,360
I can't see any obvious tumours.
493
00:38:24,360 --> 00:38:26,560
And also, we haven't picked up
any plastic.
494
00:38:26,560 --> 00:38:29,760
So no tumours, no plastic.
495
00:38:29,760 --> 00:38:33,400
Is she ready to go?
She's healthy and she's right to go.
496
00:38:33,400 --> 00:38:36,440
This magnificent turtle
has the all clear.
497
00:38:37,880 --> 00:38:41,920
The next task is to fit Midori
with a GPS tracker so the team
498
00:38:41,920 --> 00:38:44,880
can monitor her after her release.
499
00:38:44,880 --> 00:38:47,840
As much as we're aware
that their carpuses
500
00:38:47,840 --> 00:38:49,760
are incredibly sensitive.
501
00:38:49,760 --> 00:38:53,920
Apparently, this beautiful
female is re-assured
502
00:38:53,920 --> 00:38:57,120
if we just scratch it a little bit
and pat it.
503
00:38:57,120 --> 00:38:58,760
So that's the job I've got
right now,
504
00:38:58,760 --> 00:39:02,800
just to try and calm her down a
little bit before we attach the tag.
505
00:39:02,800 --> 00:39:05,960
And...it's quite the privilege.
506
00:39:09,880 --> 00:39:13,400
This is nontoxic, right?
Nontoxic, yes.
507
00:39:13,400 --> 00:39:16,040
So what kind of data is this
going to give you
508
00:39:16,040 --> 00:39:18,440
about Midori once she's out
in the wild?
509
00:39:18,440 --> 00:39:19,800
A tracker that size is amazing.
510
00:39:19,800 --> 00:39:23,680
It gives us a top time, a bottom
time, dive time, dive depth,
511
00:39:23,680 --> 00:39:26,320
water temperature, distance
and salinity.
512
00:39:26,320 --> 00:39:28,120
All in there.
All in that little thing? Yes.
513
00:39:28,120 --> 00:39:31,000
You know, the most important thing
about releasing a turtle
514
00:39:31,000 --> 00:39:32,960
is that we want a health profile.
515
00:39:32,960 --> 00:39:37,320
So we want to know that this turtle
is diving and staying down there
516
00:39:37,320 --> 00:39:41,360
and feeding, rather than doing
short and shallow dives.
517
00:39:41,360 --> 00:39:45,560
With the tracker fitted, Midori
is transported to a reef 15 miles
518
00:39:45,560 --> 00:39:46,760
off the coast.
519
00:39:50,360 --> 00:39:53,240
She's to be released from
this permanent platform
520
00:39:53,240 --> 00:39:55,120
at the reef's edge.
521
00:39:55,120 --> 00:39:59,600
This enables us to get in the water
with her and make sure she's stable
522
00:39:59,600 --> 00:40:01,880
and happy before we let her go.
523
00:40:03,280 --> 00:40:06,440
After two and a half years
of rehabilitation,
524
00:40:06,440 --> 00:40:08,280
this is a crucial moment.
525
00:40:11,480 --> 00:40:15,720
OK. Ready. Step forward.
Stepping forward.
526
00:40:15,720 --> 00:40:17,200
Here we go. She's ready to go.
527
00:40:17,200 --> 00:40:20,680
She's going this way. We're heading
her that way. Go, go, go, go.
528
00:40:30,480 --> 00:40:32,560
Yeah!
529
00:40:39,560 --> 00:40:41,480
LAUGHTER
530
00:40:41,480 --> 00:40:44,760
How are you feeling? Fantastic.
What a great release.
531
00:40:44,760 --> 00:40:46,480
She was amazing. So amazing.
So amazing.
532
00:40:46,480 --> 00:40:49,280
You know, that's two and a half
years in captivity
533
00:40:49,280 --> 00:40:51,680
and she's just gone...straight out.
534
00:40:59,680 --> 00:41:04,280
With every turtle successfully
released back into the wild,
535
00:41:04,280 --> 00:41:07,680
the future of our coral reefs
looks a little bit brighter.
536
00:41:12,320 --> 00:41:16,680
But wildlife here needs to be ready
for every eventuality.
537
00:41:19,560 --> 00:41:23,840
In the waters around Heron Island,
reef residents have adapted
538
00:41:23,840 --> 00:41:25,600
in extraordinary ways...
539
00:41:27,800 --> 00:41:30,160
..to this ever-changing landscape.
540
00:41:32,600 --> 00:41:36,920
Twice a day, Heron Reef undergoes
a dramatic transformation...
541
00:41:38,200 --> 00:41:41,800
..as the tide turns and gallons
of water drain away.
542
00:41:53,200 --> 00:41:57,080
As the water finally recedes,
this epaulette shark
543
00:41:57,080 --> 00:41:58,920
is left high and dry.
544
00:42:18,400 --> 00:42:20,640
No shark can breathe in air.
545
00:42:21,880 --> 00:42:25,120
But this fish out of water
has a trick.
546
00:42:29,920 --> 00:42:33,600
By shutting down parts of its brain
547
00:42:33,600 --> 00:42:36,680
it can cope without oxygen
for an hour.
548
00:42:44,400 --> 00:42:49,040
And, if necessary, it switches
to survival strategy number two.
549
00:42:53,040 --> 00:42:55,960
This is a shark that can walk.
550
00:42:55,960 --> 00:42:59,120
As it searches for a refuge
of water,
551
00:42:59,120 --> 00:43:01,080
it uses its fins as legs...
552
00:43:10,960 --> 00:43:12,960
..until it reaches the sea.
553
00:43:20,160 --> 00:43:24,840
The epaulette shark is supremely
adapted to life in the shallows.
554
00:43:26,760 --> 00:43:30,600
But in deeper waters, other
weird and wonderful species
555
00:43:30,600 --> 00:43:33,720
have evolved their own unique
strategies for survival.
556
00:43:35,800 --> 00:43:37,320
A Spanish dancer.
557
00:43:38,360 --> 00:43:42,760
This otherworldly creature
is in fact a swimming sea slug.
558
00:43:43,800 --> 00:43:47,840
It spends most of its life
on the sea floor,
559
00:43:47,840 --> 00:43:50,680
but by using flamenco-style
movements,
560
00:43:50,680 --> 00:43:53,840
it glides through the water
from one patch
561
00:43:53,840 --> 00:43:56,840
of reef to another to escape
any threats.
562
00:43:58,400 --> 00:44:02,320
And its bright colours warns
predators that it would make
563
00:44:02,320 --> 00:44:04,000
an unsavoury meal.
564
00:44:06,800 --> 00:44:11,840
On the seabed below, a tuskfish
is presented with a problem.
565
00:44:14,160 --> 00:44:18,560
It spends each day foraging
for clams, but these shells
566
00:44:18,560 --> 00:44:20,120
are difficult to open.
567
00:44:21,240 --> 00:44:25,960
Ingeniously, the tusk fish has a few
tools under its belt.
568
00:44:29,320 --> 00:44:32,720
Its protruding teeth
make excellent clamps
569
00:44:32,720 --> 00:44:36,680
and this mooring could provide
the perfect workbench.
570
00:44:39,480 --> 00:44:41,600
It doesn't seem to be working.
571
00:44:43,080 --> 00:44:46,680
He takes a break for a mouth
clean courtesy of a wrasse
572
00:44:46,680 --> 00:44:48,560
before starting round two.
573
00:45:03,600 --> 00:45:06,120
Will this brick
prove to be more useful?
574
00:45:13,480 --> 00:45:15,400
Not this time.
575
00:45:18,680 --> 00:45:22,160
But it's clear that there is far
more to these ocean
576
00:45:22,160 --> 00:45:24,680
creatures than first meets the eye.
577
00:45:27,440 --> 00:45:32,320
And this is never more apparent
than at dawn, when coral reefs
578
00:45:32,320 --> 00:45:34,840
are filled with a chorus of sounds.
579
00:45:34,840 --> 00:45:39,000
ECHOES, CLICKS AND WHISTLES
FROM MARINE LIFE
580
00:45:42,960 --> 00:45:46,760
These underwater cities are alive
with conversation.
581
00:45:50,240 --> 00:45:53,680
On Heron Reef, one of the most
talkative residents
582
00:45:53,680 --> 00:45:56,480
is the Barrier Reef clownfish.
583
00:45:56,480 --> 00:45:59,640
CLOWNFISH GRUNTS AND CLICKS
584
00:45:59,640 --> 00:46:03,600
This family have a convenient home
within the tentacles
585
00:46:03,600 --> 00:46:05,360
of a bubble-tip anemone.
586
00:46:07,240 --> 00:46:11,080
The tentacles can kill,
but by continuously rubbing
587
00:46:11,080 --> 00:46:15,480
against them, the clownfish
can remain immune to their sting.
588
00:46:16,800 --> 00:46:21,120
Here they can shelter from danger
and, in return, they help to keep
589
00:46:21,120 --> 00:46:22,440
the anemone clean.
590
00:46:23,600 --> 00:46:28,200
As with all clownfish, there is only
one female present in this group
591
00:46:28,200 --> 00:46:31,040
and she rules over the rest.
592
00:46:31,040 --> 00:46:34,880
She's the largest amongst them
and uses her size to chase
593
00:46:34,880 --> 00:46:36,200
off any intruders.
594
00:46:42,280 --> 00:46:46,320
The whole family communicates
by popping and clicking, which helps
595
00:46:46,320 --> 00:46:48,800
to maintain ranks amongst the group
596
00:46:48,800 --> 00:46:53,480
and, when accompanied by some
twitching, re-affirms a pair's bond.
597
00:46:57,360 --> 00:47:01,760
The noise of a coral reef is a key
indication that the community
598
00:47:01,760 --> 00:47:03,120
is in good shape.
599
00:47:03,120 --> 00:47:06,320
In fact, the louder the community,
the more inviting
600
00:47:06,320 --> 00:47:08,640
it is to newcomers.
601
00:47:08,640 --> 00:47:12,280
Deciphering this underwater
language could be the secret
602
00:47:12,280 --> 00:47:13,960
to helping coral reefs.
603
00:47:19,520 --> 00:47:23,400
This little clownfish is no
bigger than a button.
604
00:47:23,400 --> 00:47:27,920
But the time has come for it to find
its place in the big city.
605
00:47:29,240 --> 00:47:33,560
At this stage in life, it may not
be the best swimmer, but its hearing
606
00:47:33,560 --> 00:47:37,640
is so sensitive it can detect
the presence of a reef over 100
607
00:47:37,640 --> 00:47:39,440
metres away.
608
00:47:40,880 --> 00:47:43,400
Exactly what sounds attract
609
00:47:43,400 --> 00:47:48,000
these tiny reef fish to a new home
has so far evaded scientists.
610
00:47:49,520 --> 00:47:53,680
But on the outer edge of Heron Reef,
Dr Steve Simpson and fellow
611
00:47:53,680 --> 00:47:58,080
biologist Tim Gordon are hoping
to collect young reef fish to learn
612
00:47:58,080 --> 00:48:00,400
more about their acoustic world.
613
00:48:01,440 --> 00:48:05,480
It's here that juvenile reef fish
will first arrive after spending
614
00:48:05,480 --> 00:48:07,840
several weeks at sea.
615
00:48:07,840 --> 00:48:10,320
They're swimming back towards coral
reef environments.
616
00:48:10,320 --> 00:48:12,120
They're trying to find a place
to make home.
617
00:48:12,120 --> 00:48:15,040
So if we take one of those fish,
we can catch them in light traps.
618
00:48:16,440 --> 00:48:20,280
The baby reef fish will make
their final approach in the dark
619
00:48:20,280 --> 00:48:24,200
to avoid predators and will be
attracted to the bright lights
620
00:48:24,200 --> 00:48:25,240
of the trap.
621
00:48:44,840 --> 00:48:48,400
The next day, any fish
that have been drawn in are ready
622
00:48:48,400 --> 00:48:50,240
for the team to retrieve.
623
00:49:06,520 --> 00:49:08,720
Right. So we've got a fish. Yes!
Which is great.
624
00:49:08,720 --> 00:49:12,320
{\an8}This is a peacock damselfish.
That's large for the fish
625
00:49:12,320 --> 00:49:14,160
when they arrive on the reef.
626
00:49:14,160 --> 00:49:16,080
With this school of reef fish,
627
00:49:16,080 --> 00:49:18,240
they can begin their research.
628
00:49:25,120 --> 00:49:29,400
In the middle of the night, Steve
and Tim set up a long plastic tube
629
00:49:29,400 --> 00:49:33,080
in shallow waters with speakers
rigged at each end.
630
00:49:34,800 --> 00:49:38,680
OK. One of the fish is then
transferred into the tube
631
00:49:38,680 --> 00:49:41,840
while speakers play
different reef sounds.
632
00:49:42,920 --> 00:49:48,080
After a few moments to orientate
itself, the fish clearly heads
633
00:49:48,080 --> 00:49:50,280
towards one of the speakers.
634
00:49:50,280 --> 00:49:53,200
By repeating this hundreds of times,
635
00:49:53,200 --> 00:49:56,600
the team can record which sounds
are the most attractive
636
00:49:56,600 --> 00:49:58,840
to young reef fish.
637
00:49:58,840 --> 00:50:01,760
They really are attracted
by that sound of snapping shrimp -
638
00:50:01,760 --> 00:50:03,840
{\an8}the higher-frequency sounds
that you could hear,
639
00:50:03,840 --> 00:50:05,120
{\an8}those crackling sounds.
640
00:50:05,120 --> 00:50:07,440
And we think that that's
because snapping shrimp live
641
00:50:07,440 --> 00:50:10,040
in the kind of rubbly areas
on the edges of reefs,
642
00:50:10,040 --> 00:50:11,440
as do the baby fish.
643
00:50:11,440 --> 00:50:14,000
So we think snapping shrimp
is a really good way of them finding
644
00:50:14,000 --> 00:50:15,840
the best possible place to live.
645
00:50:15,840 --> 00:50:19,360
The amazing thing, if we then play
other sounds, then the larger fish
646
00:50:19,360 --> 00:50:21,400
start to show an interest.
647
00:50:21,400 --> 00:50:24,360
So we think that they can use
snapping shrimp to find a good place
648
00:50:24,360 --> 00:50:25,480
to set up home.
649
00:50:25,480 --> 00:50:29,960
Once they're ready to graduate
into the big fish community,
650
00:50:29,960 --> 00:50:32,680
they then start listening out
for other fish.
651
00:50:32,680 --> 00:50:34,760
By carrying out these experiments,
652
00:50:34,760 --> 00:50:39,560
Steve can create a library
of recorded sounds which could help
653
00:50:39,560 --> 00:50:41,040
to recolonize reefs.
654
00:50:43,480 --> 00:50:49,880
A bleached reef is a ghostly, silent
place with very few fish around.
655
00:50:49,880 --> 00:50:53,720
But by playing the right sounds,
fish could soon come back to a
656
00:50:53,720 --> 00:50:55,440
damaged reef,
657
00:50:55,440 --> 00:50:59,080
and an abundance of fish can lead to
the growth of new coral.
658
00:51:02,520 --> 00:51:05,960
When you set up a restoration
project, you often quickly get
659
00:51:05,960 --> 00:51:09,440
overgrown by algae, which means
that the reef quite quickly dies.
660
00:51:09,440 --> 00:51:14,320
But the fish are really important
as herbivores for keeping that away.
661
00:51:14,320 --> 00:51:16,040
We've got to keep these reefs alive.
662
00:51:16,040 --> 00:51:18,920
We've actually got to be throwing
them lifelines to give them every
663
00:51:18,920 --> 00:51:21,640
opportunity as one of the greatest
wonders on the Earth.
664
00:51:23,600 --> 00:51:27,840
Each new discovery about coral
reefs is crucial.
665
00:51:27,840 --> 00:51:29,680
So much life depends on them.
666
00:51:36,360 --> 00:51:40,520
On Heron Island,
summer is drawing to a close.
667
00:51:40,520 --> 00:51:43,760
It's now March and the island's
fluffy chicks have ventured
668
00:51:43,760 --> 00:51:46,920
from their nests, exploring
the world around them.
669
00:51:54,400 --> 00:51:55,520
Up in the trees,
670
00:51:55,520 --> 00:51:59,560
this year's noddy tern chicks
have lost most of their down to make
671
00:51:59,560 --> 00:52:01,840
room for their flight feathers.
672
00:52:09,800 --> 00:52:13,360
Flapping like this may not
get them very far yet...
673
00:52:15,640 --> 00:52:17,880
..but this is essential practice
674
00:52:17,880 --> 00:52:20,160
to strengthen growing flight
muscles.
675
00:52:26,520 --> 00:52:29,200
And it won't be long until they take
to the skies.
676
00:52:34,280 --> 00:52:38,160
On the ground, shearwater chicks
are getting their first glimpse
677
00:52:38,160 --> 00:52:39,760
of sunlight.
678
00:52:39,760 --> 00:52:43,200
Many of their parents
have now started their long journeys
679
00:52:43,200 --> 00:52:46,880
back to their wintering grounds,
leaving the young chicks to teach
680
00:52:46,880 --> 00:52:52,000
themselves how to fly and find
their own way across the equator.
681
00:52:52,000 --> 00:52:54,200
We're predicting that we've got
a few more weeks
682
00:52:54,200 --> 00:52:55,600
for the shearwaters to leave.
683
00:52:55,600 --> 00:52:57,040
It will be a little bit sad.
684
00:52:57,040 --> 00:52:59,880
You get so used to them being around
and the constant noise throughout
685
00:52:59,880 --> 00:53:02,120
the night-time. And the adults
will slowly go now.
686
00:53:02,120 --> 00:53:04,760
And then when the chicks go,
they go in one big wave.
687
00:53:04,760 --> 00:53:07,600
So you'll just wake up one night
and there'll just be no sound.
688
00:53:07,600 --> 00:53:09,960
So it's kind of eerie getting
used to that sound
689
00:53:09,960 --> 00:53:11,480
and then just having nothing.
690
00:53:13,920 --> 00:53:17,320
Over the next few weeks, most
of the island's birds will embark
691
00:53:17,320 --> 00:53:19,920
on huge migrations across the globe.
692
00:53:23,080 --> 00:53:26,600
But it's not just the bird life
that's departing the island.
693
00:53:26,600 --> 00:53:29,800
As the dawn light starts
to warm the sand,
694
00:53:29,800 --> 00:53:31,080
new life stirs.
695
00:53:33,520 --> 00:53:37,560
It's time for Heron's turtle
hatchlings to embark on the greatest
696
00:53:37,560 --> 00:53:39,240
journey of their lives.
697
00:53:47,760 --> 00:53:50,680
These hatchlings are emerging
from the sand
698
00:53:50,680 --> 00:53:52,800
after two months in the dark.
699
00:53:56,120 --> 00:54:00,160
Having never seen water or their
mother, instinct drives them
700
00:54:00,160 --> 00:54:01,480
towards the sea.
701
00:54:08,920 --> 00:54:11,320
But danger is all around.
702
00:54:16,200 --> 00:54:19,320
This youngster will need
luck on its side to make
703
00:54:19,320 --> 00:54:23,120
it past the swathes of gulls
picking off its siblings.
704
00:54:24,240 --> 00:54:26,640
It's a race against all the odds.
705
00:55:32,280 --> 00:55:38,200
This year, 43,000 turtle hatchlings
have left Heron Island's beaches
706
00:55:38,200 --> 00:55:41,200
to head off into the open ocean.
707
00:55:41,200 --> 00:55:48,480
And unbelievably, only about 43
of these will make it to adulthood.
708
00:55:48,480 --> 00:55:51,560
The odds are stacked against them,
but we need to give them
709
00:55:51,560 --> 00:55:54,240
the best chance possible.
710
00:55:54,240 --> 00:55:59,960
We are releasing seven green sea
turtle hatchlings into the sea.
711
00:55:59,960 --> 00:56:04,440
Thanks to Janine's hard work, seven
individuals are getting a new chance
712
00:56:04,440 --> 00:56:08,560
at life out into this very precious
reef because of the work that's
713
00:56:08,560 --> 00:56:09,880
taking place here.
714
00:56:12,640 --> 00:56:16,320
The contribution of scientists
here is vital.
715
00:56:16,320 --> 00:56:19,800
The Great Barrier Reef needs
these turtles, as well
716
00:56:19,800 --> 00:56:25,080
as its breeding birds and all other
reef residents to thrive.
717
00:56:25,080 --> 00:56:27,440
All species here are connected.
718
00:56:27,440 --> 00:56:32,280
And when these relationships
are strained, life falters.
719
00:56:32,280 --> 00:56:37,040
The Great Barrier Reef is essential
to life on Earth, but it's facing
720
00:56:37,040 --> 00:56:39,560
some of its toughest challenges yet.
721
00:56:39,560 --> 00:56:43,400
And we risk losing coral reefs
before we've even discovered
722
00:56:43,400 --> 00:56:45,440
just how important they are.
723
00:56:53,360 --> 00:56:57,320
This spectacular light show
of glowing colours and striking
724
00:56:57,320 --> 00:57:00,560
patterns is only visible
to the naked eye
725
00:57:00,560 --> 00:57:02,080
once the sun has set.
726
00:57:03,200 --> 00:57:07,160
The fluorescence is produced
by proteins within the corals
727
00:57:07,160 --> 00:57:10,560
that are able to alter
the wavelength of light.
728
00:57:14,600 --> 00:57:18,800
Little is known about exactly
how they do this, but it's thought
729
00:57:18,800 --> 00:57:22,040
that the process provides
the corals with protection
730
00:57:22,040 --> 00:57:25,920
from the harsh rays of the sun,
whilst allowing enough light
731
00:57:25,920 --> 00:57:29,120
to reach the algae
within their cells that provide
732
00:57:29,120 --> 00:57:30,240
them with food.
733
00:57:31,240 --> 00:57:35,320
It's one of the ingenious mechanisms
of coral reefs that have enabled
734
00:57:35,320 --> 00:57:39,880
them to survive for hundreds
of millions of years.
735
00:57:39,880 --> 00:57:45,040
Scientists are working tirelessly,
searching for novel and innovative
736
00:57:45,040 --> 00:57:48,720
ways to preserve the future
of this natural wonder.
737
00:57:49,800 --> 00:57:54,400
It's now down to us to give reefs
and our planet that relies
738
00:57:54,400 --> 00:57:56,040
on them a helping hand.
739
00:57:58,280 --> 00:58:01,840
There is no denying that this
awe-inspiring kingdom
740
00:58:01,840 --> 00:58:03,520
really is worth saving.
741
00:58:05,040 --> 00:58:09,200
When I think about the idea
that we could easily have a world
742
00:58:09,200 --> 00:58:12,720
without a coral-dominated
Great Barrier Reef.
743
00:58:12,720 --> 00:58:17,760
I mean, to me, the fact that we can
talk about that spurs me on to keep
744
00:58:17,760 --> 00:58:21,520
wanting to say, "No, we still
have time and we could still turn
745
00:58:21,520 --> 00:58:24,600
"this thing around and still
have these beautiful and diverse
746
00:58:24,600 --> 00:58:27,160
"ecosystems to wonder
and be in awe of."
95131
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