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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:38,200 --> 00:00:39,920 Australia - 2 00:00:39,960 --> 00:00:41,760 an island continent 3 00:00:41,800 --> 00:00:46,360 cast adrift during the time of the dinosaurs. 4 00:01:05,760 --> 00:01:11,280 Isolated from the rest of life on land for millions of years, 5 00:01:11,320 --> 00:01:17,200 the animals cast away here are today like none elsewhere. 6 00:01:20,480 --> 00:01:23,960 This is a land of survivors. 7 00:01:51,440 --> 00:01:56,600 The jungles of northern Australia - the oldest on our planet. 8 00:01:59,200 --> 00:02:03,400 Unchanged for 180 million years. 9 00:02:06,640 --> 00:02:10,280 The animals and plants here are armed... 10 00:02:12,840 --> 00:02:15,840 ...built to live alongside dinosaurs. 11 00:02:19,040 --> 00:02:22,800 Now there is just one giant left. 12 00:02:27,480 --> 00:02:31,840 With claws longer than a velociraptor and nearly two metres tall... 13 00:02:33,040 --> 00:02:36,240 ...the cassowary rules this forest. 14 00:02:36,280 --> 00:02:37,560 (BOOMING CALL) 15 00:02:46,120 --> 00:02:49,320 But the key to its success is not its stature... 16 00:02:53,040 --> 00:02:57,080 ...it's the male's abilities as a parent. 17 00:02:59,320 --> 00:03:02,920 This one's chicks are six weeks old, 18 00:03:02,960 --> 00:03:06,240 and he will raise them by himself. 19 00:03:12,880 --> 00:03:15,280 Every morsel of food is valuable 20 00:03:15,320 --> 00:03:18,560 if his chicks are to grow up tall and strong. 21 00:03:23,720 --> 00:03:25,680 But in this forest, 22 00:03:25,720 --> 00:03:28,640 most of the fruit is too big for the chicks. 23 00:03:34,200 --> 00:03:35,880 It must be cut up for them. 24 00:03:47,160 --> 00:03:50,560 There is food to be gathered throughout their territory... 25 00:03:51,880 --> 00:03:55,000 ...but it's not easy to find. 26 00:04:02,680 --> 00:04:05,440 He shows them how to cross water. 27 00:04:07,880 --> 00:04:11,800 But when your legs are only 20cm long, 28 00:04:11,840 --> 00:04:14,760 a stream like this is very deep. 29 00:04:19,680 --> 00:04:22,120 One takes the plunge... 30 00:04:24,680 --> 00:04:27,960 ...but for the other, this is too daunting. 31 00:04:32,640 --> 00:04:36,960 He turns and goes back the way he came. 32 00:04:38,160 --> 00:04:41,640 Out of sight and without his father's protection, 33 00:04:41,680 --> 00:04:43,560 he's vulnerable. 34 00:04:48,440 --> 00:04:53,440 Only half of cassowary chicks make it to adulthood... 35 00:04:54,720 --> 00:04:56,560 ...and for very good reason. 36 00:05:02,160 --> 00:05:07,080 Australia's prehistoric forests are still full of predators. 37 00:05:17,640 --> 00:05:18,640 (CHEEPS) 38 00:05:18,680 --> 00:05:21,040 Many manage to survive here 39 00:05:21,080 --> 00:05:25,480 by eating almost anything that's smaller than they are. 40 00:05:26,720 --> 00:05:28,880 - He needs to find his father... - (CHEEPS) 41 00:05:28,920 --> 00:05:30,200 ...and quickly. 42 00:05:46,240 --> 00:05:47,640 (CHEEPS) 43 00:05:47,680 --> 00:05:50,960 The male hears his cries and answers... 44 00:05:52,360 --> 00:05:58,000 ...using a special call that carries well through the thick forest. 45 00:05:58,040 --> 00:05:59,800 (THROATY CALL) 46 00:06:06,320 --> 00:06:11,640 And then a glimpse of some reassuring bright colours. 47 00:06:34,640 --> 00:06:37,800 Their bonds are stronger than their fears. 48 00:06:45,040 --> 00:06:50,200 The male will guide and protect his chicks for another eight months 49 00:06:50,240 --> 00:06:51,760 before he mates again. 50 00:07:01,840 --> 00:07:07,560 Australia was once part of the vast supercontinent of Gondwanaland... 51 00:07:07,600 --> 00:07:11,040 - (THUNDER RUMBLES) - ...covered in forest and full of life. 52 00:07:12,480 --> 00:07:14,560 Dinosaurs dominated. 53 00:07:14,600 --> 00:07:17,160 Mammals had only just appeared. 54 00:07:18,880 --> 00:07:22,280 Then Australia began to break away. 55 00:07:23,720 --> 00:07:29,280 Cast adrift on this new island were reptiles, birds and early mammals 56 00:07:29,320 --> 00:07:33,160 that then evolved in isolation from the rest of the world. 57 00:07:34,360 --> 00:07:36,800 None could now leave this giant island, 58 00:07:36,840 --> 00:07:38,720 and very few could get here... 59 00:07:40,320 --> 00:07:41,880 ...unless they could fly. 60 00:07:46,880 --> 00:07:48,960 A little red flying fox. 61 00:07:52,040 --> 00:07:54,920 Their ancestors flew here, 62 00:07:54,960 --> 00:07:57,800 travelling along the chain of volcanic islands 63 00:07:57,840 --> 00:07:59,800 that links Asia to Australia. 64 00:08:03,000 --> 00:08:08,600 But their huge wings, which stretch from their fingers to their toes, 65 00:08:08,640 --> 00:08:12,880 make it difficult for them to walk or take off from the ground, 66 00:08:12,920 --> 00:08:18,720 so, when they want to rest, they hang upside down in trees. 67 00:08:41,960 --> 00:08:45,440 But the bats have to drink every day. 68 00:08:47,920 --> 00:08:50,600 And they do so on the wing. 69 00:09:02,520 --> 00:09:05,680 They swoop just low enough to wet their bellies 70 00:09:05,720 --> 00:09:09,760 and then, back in their roosts, they will suck out the water. 71 00:09:16,520 --> 00:09:19,560 Each evening, 10,000 of them come here. 72 00:09:33,240 --> 00:09:35,720 Not all of them return. 73 00:09:37,640 --> 00:09:40,200 - Every two metres of river, there is... - (BATS SCREECH) 74 00:09:40,240 --> 00:09:41,680 ...a crocodile. 75 00:09:44,960 --> 00:09:49,760 They were here long before the bats... 76 00:09:52,560 --> 00:09:57,280 ...survivors from Australia's prehistoric past. 77 00:10:31,680 --> 00:10:36,120 These dramas have been taking place for millions of years... 78 00:10:40,240 --> 00:10:42,280 ...aerial agility... 79 00:10:43,600 --> 00:10:44,680 ...versus patience... 80 00:10:47,040 --> 00:10:48,560 ...and deadly speed. 81 00:11:05,480 --> 00:11:11,240 Australia's forests are hostile places in which to make your home. 82 00:11:19,000 --> 00:11:23,600 As you move inland, the forest thins, the air cools 83 00:11:23,640 --> 00:11:27,600 and the land, as it gets higher, changes dramatically. 84 00:11:31,520 --> 00:11:33,720 (WIND BLOWS) 85 00:11:39,120 --> 00:11:43,960 The Great Dividing Range, 2,000 metres above the jungle. 86 00:11:47,120 --> 00:11:52,080 To survive here, you must be able to tolerate really harsh conditions. 87 00:12:05,880 --> 00:12:10,520 Kangaroos, like nearly all of the continent's native mammals, 88 00:12:10,560 --> 00:12:11,600 are marsupials... 89 00:12:14,320 --> 00:12:19,160 ...mammals that rear their young usually in a pouch on the mother's belly. 90 00:12:21,400 --> 00:12:25,480 And the young up here certainly need such shelter. 91 00:12:37,520 --> 00:12:42,240 No kangaroos can survive for long higher than this. 92 00:13:01,200 --> 00:13:05,200 But there is an even tougher marsupial up here. 93 00:13:18,280 --> 00:13:19,440 A wombat. 94 00:13:20,480 --> 00:13:24,560 She usually shelters underground in a burrow, 95 00:13:24,600 --> 00:13:28,000 but now that is under a metre of snow, 96 00:13:28,040 --> 00:13:30,760 together with all the grass on which she lives. 97 00:13:32,320 --> 00:13:35,240 She weighs as much a big dog 98 00:13:35,280 --> 00:13:37,760 and has the legs of a small one - 99 00:13:37,800 --> 00:13:40,880 not ideal for deep snow. 100 00:13:47,440 --> 00:13:51,040 Fragments of bark hardly count even as a snack... 101 00:13:52,280 --> 00:13:53,760 ...and she's hungry. 102 00:14:02,280 --> 00:14:04,680 She needs grass. 103 00:14:13,200 --> 00:14:17,520 But it's over a mile away, across a frozen river. 104 00:14:21,920 --> 00:14:24,560 Wombats might not be fast, 105 00:14:24,600 --> 00:14:26,560 but then they don't need to be up here. 106 00:14:27,600 --> 00:14:29,920 They can survive on next to nothing. 107 00:14:35,520 --> 00:14:39,400 A few mouthfuls will be enough food for over a week. 108 00:14:42,080 --> 00:14:46,760 And there's not much competition for it in this small corner of the continent. 109 00:14:54,720 --> 00:14:58,960 Snowy peaks are hardly typical of Australia, 110 00:14:59,000 --> 00:15:02,360 but the Great Dividing Range is a remnant 111 00:15:02,400 --> 00:15:06,080 of what were once some of the longest mountain chains on Earth. 112 00:15:09,240 --> 00:15:12,760 They connected Australia and Antarctica. 113 00:15:14,840 --> 00:15:18,520 But then these sister continents broke apart. 114 00:15:18,560 --> 00:15:23,280 Antarctica, drifting southwards, became locked in ice. 115 00:15:23,320 --> 00:15:27,240 Australia drifted northwards towards the equator 116 00:15:27,280 --> 00:15:30,440 and became hotter and drier. 117 00:15:32,040 --> 00:15:34,000 Woodlands developed, 118 00:15:34,040 --> 00:15:37,240 and in places where rainfall was low - 119 00:15:37,280 --> 00:15:38,880 open grasslands. 120 00:15:45,400 --> 00:15:47,560 On these grassy plains, 121 00:15:47,600 --> 00:15:50,600 animals had the space to thrive. 122 00:15:52,880 --> 00:15:56,000 These are also eastern grey kangaroos, 123 00:15:56,040 --> 00:15:58,400 and this is their true home. 124 00:15:58,440 --> 00:16:01,320 Here, they are well fed and powerful. 125 00:16:02,800 --> 00:16:08,920 Adults can stand over two metres tall and travel as fast as a racehorse. 126 00:16:08,960 --> 00:16:11,240 (BIRD SCREECHES) 127 00:16:14,160 --> 00:16:16,080 (SCREECHES) 128 00:16:16,120 --> 00:16:20,440 And on these open plains, you need speed... 129 00:16:21,800 --> 00:16:27,000 ...because where there are large herds, there will be predators. 130 00:16:29,600 --> 00:16:30,600 (DINGO HOWLS) 131 00:16:32,240 --> 00:16:37,000 Dingoes - descendants of wolves that were brought here 132 00:16:37,040 --> 00:16:41,200 over 4,000 years ago by human visitors from Asia. 133 00:16:45,840 --> 00:16:49,360 This pack is led by a white female... 134 00:16:50,480 --> 00:16:52,040 ...and they are hunting. 135 00:17:15,280 --> 00:17:19,520 Creating panic tests the herd. 136 00:17:47,560 --> 00:17:50,120 Mothers with young in their pouches might be slower... 137 00:17:53,520 --> 00:17:56,160 ...but they can still outrun a dingo. 138 00:18:00,840 --> 00:18:03,040 Maybe an ambush will work. 139 00:18:11,040 --> 00:18:17,040 But even young, newly independent kangaroos seem uncatchable. 140 00:18:23,560 --> 00:18:26,840 Across these open, flat plains, 141 00:18:26,880 --> 00:18:29,880 the dingoes are just not fast enough. 142 00:18:33,320 --> 00:18:37,200 But what makes the white female their leader is her stamina 143 00:18:37,240 --> 00:18:40,760 and, particularly, her intelligence. 144 00:18:43,560 --> 00:18:47,880 She has run 18 miles today, but she still doesn't give up. 145 00:18:50,360 --> 00:18:54,760 A different group of kangaroos, this time on uneven ground. 146 00:18:58,040 --> 00:19:00,080 It's what she's been looking for. 147 00:19:08,120 --> 00:19:11,560 Driving them uphill, she's struggling to keep up with them. 148 00:19:29,760 --> 00:19:34,200 And as they hurtle down the other side, the kangaroos pick up speed. 149 00:19:36,640 --> 00:19:40,880 They will easily outpace her, if they stay in control. 150 00:20:22,360 --> 00:20:26,600 The white dingo has more than one reason to be so relentless. 151 00:20:28,520 --> 00:20:29,600 (PUPS WHINE) 152 00:20:30,680 --> 00:20:31,720 She's a mother. 153 00:20:36,600 --> 00:20:38,520 This is a rare sight. 154 00:20:39,880 --> 00:20:42,880 Dingo pups are hardly ever seen. 155 00:20:47,760 --> 00:20:50,200 With so much effort for just one meal, 156 00:20:50,240 --> 00:20:54,760 the open plains are tough places on which to raise young. 157 00:21:01,200 --> 00:21:03,640 These are gumtrees. 158 00:21:04,800 --> 00:21:08,120 They have leaves that are poisonous to most animals. 159 00:21:10,080 --> 00:21:12,040 But not the koala. 160 00:21:12,080 --> 00:21:14,080 They eat almost nothing else. 161 00:21:17,760 --> 00:21:20,440 There are echidnas in these forests, too - 162 00:21:20,480 --> 00:21:25,920 mammals that don't even have pouches but lay eggs, like reptiles. 163 00:21:33,040 --> 00:21:37,560 And there is an assassin here that has only recently been discovered. 164 00:21:42,720 --> 00:21:45,280 A Jotus jumping spider. 165 00:21:47,240 --> 00:21:49,880 She's only 5mm long, 166 00:21:49,920 --> 00:21:54,520 but, nonetheless, she's a stealthy and ferocious hunter. 167 00:21:56,240 --> 00:21:59,360 She searches for prey among the grass stems. 168 00:22:19,880 --> 00:22:23,480 She's single-minded and focused on hunting. 169 00:22:30,960 --> 00:22:33,000 But today might be different. 170 00:22:36,920 --> 00:22:40,840 This is something new, 171 00:22:40,880 --> 00:22:43,360 something fast... 172 00:22:45,960 --> 00:22:47,480 ...and a little trickier. 173 00:22:53,880 --> 00:22:55,800 But what is it? 174 00:22:55,840 --> 00:22:57,200 Is it food? 175 00:23:16,800 --> 00:23:21,240 It's a male Jotus, looking for a mate. 176 00:23:27,280 --> 00:23:30,480 He needs to catch her attention, 177 00:23:30,520 --> 00:23:34,600 but female Jotus only mate once. 178 00:23:34,640 --> 00:23:37,800 If she's mated before, she might kill him. 179 00:23:41,440 --> 00:23:44,040 He will need to seduce her with care. 180 00:23:48,000 --> 00:23:52,400 Waving his arms makes his intentions clear. 181 00:23:52,440 --> 00:23:54,440 He's a friend, not food. 182 00:23:58,440 --> 00:24:00,800 No sign of an attack...yet. 183 00:24:06,560 --> 00:24:09,800 But she doesn't seem particularly impressed. 184 00:24:14,240 --> 00:24:17,240 Time to try his best move... 185 00:24:18,800 --> 00:24:19,880 ...the double paddle. 186 00:24:21,320 --> 00:24:23,360 That surely will do the trick. 187 00:24:41,720 --> 00:24:43,600 One final wave... 188 00:24:52,760 --> 00:24:54,400 ...and he's tamed her. 189 00:24:54,440 --> 00:24:57,200 She stays still for just long enough. 190 00:25:16,880 --> 00:25:20,760 And then he retreats quickly, before she has second thoughts. 191 00:25:37,280 --> 00:25:40,960 If you travel still further towards the centre of Australia, 192 00:25:41,000 --> 00:25:44,120 the landscape changes yet again. 193 00:25:44,160 --> 00:25:46,800 Trees and grass disappear. 194 00:25:50,080 --> 00:25:54,240 The continent, throughout prehistory, continued to drift north, 195 00:25:54,280 --> 00:25:58,400 and as it entered the tropics, it got hotter and hotter. 196 00:26:00,160 --> 00:26:04,360 Over thousands of years, the grasslands of the centre dried, 197 00:26:04,400 --> 00:26:06,760 and lakes and rivers turned dust. 198 00:26:08,360 --> 00:26:13,720 The rocks have been reduced to sand by the hot, blasting winds. 199 00:26:15,880 --> 00:26:19,800 Now Australia's centre is one vast desert. 200 00:26:21,440 --> 00:26:25,040 Its immensity is almost impossible to comprehend. 201 00:26:35,080 --> 00:26:39,160 This train running north is a half a mile long. 202 00:26:42,080 --> 00:26:44,560 Travelling at nearly 50 miles an hour, 203 00:26:44,600 --> 00:26:48,160 it takes almost three days to get from one side to another. 204 00:26:56,320 --> 00:27:02,240 Australia today is the driest inhabited continent on Earth. 205 00:27:06,240 --> 00:27:10,280 Rain hardly ever falls in 70% of it. 206 00:27:14,240 --> 00:27:19,880 From space, the continent is seen to be stained red by iron oxide - 207 00:27:19,920 --> 00:27:23,120 rust from its disintegrating rocks. 208 00:27:26,400 --> 00:27:32,560 In the surface are lines carved by winds over millennia. 209 00:27:33,720 --> 00:27:37,560 The very bones of the continent are now stripped bare... 210 00:27:39,040 --> 00:27:43,240 ...the foundations of what once were mountains. 211 00:27:54,840 --> 00:28:00,080 At its heart stands the great rock mountain of Uluru... 212 00:28:03,280 --> 00:28:08,800 ...sacred to the first people to arrive here 60,000 years ago. 213 00:28:33,760 --> 00:28:39,040 There is almost no soil here, few plants, few animals 214 00:28:39,080 --> 00:28:41,400 and almost no permanent water. 215 00:28:43,680 --> 00:28:47,440 It's a place where only the toughest can survive. 216 00:28:51,920 --> 00:28:55,160 This is the land of reptiles. 217 00:28:56,680 --> 00:29:01,080 Australia has more species of them than any other continent. 218 00:29:03,040 --> 00:29:05,320 The perentie, two metres long, 219 00:29:05,360 --> 00:29:09,040 is the biggest here, and he's thirsty. 220 00:29:15,920 --> 00:29:19,080 It only rains here once or twice a year. 221 00:29:19,120 --> 00:29:22,120 And when there isn't any rain, 222 00:29:22,160 --> 00:29:26,280 perenties get their water from eating lizards. 223 00:29:30,800 --> 00:29:34,280 There are several kinds to choose from... 224 00:29:37,840 --> 00:29:39,400 ...bearded dragons... 225 00:29:42,880 --> 00:29:44,880 ...blue-tongued skinks... 226 00:29:49,080 --> 00:29:50,560 ...and thorny devils. 227 00:29:50,600 --> 00:29:52,680 All are on the menu. 228 00:29:55,480 --> 00:29:59,640 The thorny devil also gets its water from its food. 229 00:30:05,000 --> 00:30:07,040 It's only the size of a mouse, 230 00:30:07,080 --> 00:30:12,400 but, even so, it must eat hundreds of ants every day to get what it needs. 231 00:30:12,440 --> 00:30:14,560 (THUNDER RUMBLES) 232 00:30:19,800 --> 00:30:25,560 Most storm clouds pass by without releasing any water. 233 00:30:29,400 --> 00:30:31,520 But just sometimes, 234 00:30:31,560 --> 00:30:34,120 there's a brief shower. 235 00:30:57,440 --> 00:31:00,800 Everyone makes the most of the opportunity. 236 00:31:09,160 --> 00:31:13,640 It's so hot the droplets will disappear within minutes. 237 00:31:14,720 --> 00:31:17,280 But the thorny devil has a trick. 238 00:31:22,960 --> 00:31:25,400 He's found a tiny puddle, 239 00:31:25,440 --> 00:31:27,400 only a few millimetres deep, 240 00:31:27,440 --> 00:31:29,840 and he dips his toe into it. 241 00:31:41,960 --> 00:31:45,080 His skin is like blotting paper. 242 00:31:50,640 --> 00:31:53,400 It collects moisture by capillary action, 243 00:31:53,440 --> 00:31:58,000 sucking it up along the inter-connecting grooves until he glistens all over. 244 00:32:02,080 --> 00:32:04,000 When the water reaches his mouth, 245 00:32:04,040 --> 00:32:05,360 he can collect it... 246 00:32:06,600 --> 00:32:10,200 ...while still keeping his head up, on the lookout for danger. 247 00:32:13,800 --> 00:32:18,440 The perentie is 200 times the size of a thorny devil. 248 00:32:18,480 --> 00:32:22,560 Tiny puddles and droplets are of no use to him. 249 00:32:25,360 --> 00:32:29,360 What he needs is a juicy lizard. 250 00:32:51,160 --> 00:32:55,480 That was a bearded dragon that wasn't quite quick enough. 251 00:33:03,400 --> 00:33:08,040 Even the perentie sometimes gets a chance to quench his thirst. 252 00:33:16,000 --> 00:33:21,960 There is one species that has truly conquered the Australian desert. 253 00:33:24,040 --> 00:33:26,920 They don't wait for water to come to them. 254 00:33:26,960 --> 00:33:32,640 They sometimes travel over 300 miles in a single day to find it. 255 00:33:34,200 --> 00:33:36,920 Australia's hardiest animal... 256 00:33:38,000 --> 00:33:39,720 (CHIRPS) 257 00:33:39,760 --> 00:33:41,720 ...the wild budgerigar... 258 00:33:41,760 --> 00:33:44,840 (BUDGIES CHIRP) 259 00:33:44,880 --> 00:33:48,760 ...the most accomplished of all desert nomads. 260 00:33:48,800 --> 00:33:51,680 These have been travelling together for weeks... 261 00:33:54,360 --> 00:33:58,240 ...and that has evidently caused a few domestic arguments. 262 00:34:07,280 --> 00:34:11,240 This is truly an immense community. 263 00:34:11,280 --> 00:34:14,760 There are over 10,000 budgies in this flock. 264 00:34:21,760 --> 00:34:24,320 Every one of them is thirsty. 265 00:34:32,360 --> 00:34:34,880 But although they've found this billabong... 266 00:34:36,080 --> 00:34:38,080 ...they must be wary. 267 00:34:40,560 --> 00:34:43,720 A hawk - and one that eats budgies. 268 00:34:50,320 --> 00:34:55,400 As long as it remains on the ground, the budgies will risk taking a drink. 269 00:35:14,000 --> 00:35:18,680 Once it takes to the air, however, the budgies are in danger. 270 00:35:22,200 --> 00:35:25,920 And it's not the only bird of prey here. 271 00:35:27,680 --> 00:35:32,360 The budgies have a simple but very effective defence - 272 00:35:32,400 --> 00:35:34,240 they all take to the wing at once. 273 00:35:38,360 --> 00:35:42,440 An aerial hunter needs to lock on to a single target for a few seconds 274 00:35:42,480 --> 00:35:44,400 if it is to catch it, 275 00:35:44,440 --> 00:35:47,400 but in this swirl, that's very hard to do. 276 00:35:57,640 --> 00:36:03,000 Flying in a flock keeps the budgies safe, but they're still desperate to drink. 277 00:36:10,400 --> 00:36:14,920 As soon as a particularly brave one takes the plunge, they all do. 278 00:36:21,120 --> 00:36:24,680 But once on the water, they are easier to target. 279 00:36:30,160 --> 00:36:33,280 They must drink quickly and stick together. 280 00:36:52,960 --> 00:36:57,560 The last ones to leave will be the ones in most danger. 281 00:37:21,480 --> 00:37:26,440 Only one has been taken from a flock of 10,000. 282 00:37:35,560 --> 00:37:38,600 In a few days, they will leave the area, 283 00:37:38,640 --> 00:37:40,240 on their never-ending search 284 00:37:40,280 --> 00:37:43,680 for the next brief opportunity to feed and drink. 285 00:38:01,200 --> 00:38:04,400 As the continent continued to drift north, 286 00:38:04,440 --> 00:38:07,760 it eventually entered warm, tropical seas. 287 00:38:10,520 --> 00:38:14,480 And here, in the crystal-clear, sunlit water, 288 00:38:14,520 --> 00:38:17,480 just a metre or two beneath the surface, 289 00:38:17,520 --> 00:38:19,600 life proliferated. 290 00:38:23,560 --> 00:38:27,480 Coral grows into reefs in these shallow seas. 291 00:38:30,520 --> 00:38:32,480 This is Ningaloo... 292 00:38:33,800 --> 00:38:37,280 ...today one of the richest anywhere in the world. 293 00:38:45,640 --> 00:38:50,320 Thousands of species of fish and all kinds of other organisms 294 00:38:50,360 --> 00:38:53,160 thrive in these coral cities. 295 00:38:54,600 --> 00:38:59,680 And they have attracted the most ancient of living predators. 296 00:39:06,920 --> 00:39:08,880 Sharks. 297 00:39:08,920 --> 00:39:14,600 They were around 200 million years before the dinosaurs. 298 00:39:17,560 --> 00:39:20,440 They're fast and agile, 299 00:39:20,480 --> 00:39:24,040 well able to pick off the small reef fish. 300 00:39:26,240 --> 00:39:29,640 But they come here for bigger rewards. 301 00:39:34,200 --> 00:39:37,960 These are fish from the open ocean, 302 00:39:38,000 --> 00:39:42,360 and every so often, for some reason, they swim over the reef. 303 00:39:52,800 --> 00:39:57,720 The small fish swirl like the budgies, and for the same reason. 304 00:39:57,760 --> 00:40:01,960 It makes it harder for a hunter to single out a particular target. 305 00:40:07,560 --> 00:40:11,400 But, in fact, the sharks aren't trying to catch them individually. 306 00:40:17,960 --> 00:40:22,760 They're driving them closer to the shore, penning them against the beach. 307 00:40:27,400 --> 00:40:32,640 Slowly, the sharks drive each new wave of fish into shallow water, 308 00:40:32,680 --> 00:40:35,200 and the bait ball grows. 309 00:40:43,440 --> 00:40:47,960 More sharks arrive, some from many miles away. 310 00:40:56,720 --> 00:40:59,040 And still the sharks don't attack. 311 00:41:00,160 --> 00:41:02,080 They're waiting... 312 00:41:03,160 --> 00:41:04,840 ...for the right moment. 313 00:41:12,480 --> 00:41:16,440 Millions of fish are now trapped in these shallow waters. 314 00:41:18,200 --> 00:41:22,440 It only happens like this once in every decade or so. 315 00:41:29,040 --> 00:41:31,840 The time has come to strike. 316 00:41:43,680 --> 00:41:47,080 For the sharks, this is a bonanza. 317 00:41:49,200 --> 00:41:51,200 They work together. 318 00:41:52,320 --> 00:41:55,960 Each shark now fills its stomach. 319 00:42:02,280 --> 00:42:07,280 These shallow seas are exceptionally rich in sharks. 320 00:42:09,160 --> 00:42:13,520 There are more species here than anywhere else on Earth. 321 00:42:25,080 --> 00:42:29,840 Australia is not only fringed by rich reefs 322 00:42:29,880 --> 00:42:35,280 but girdled with islands - some big, some small. 323 00:42:41,440 --> 00:42:45,320 Off the south coast lies by far the biggest of them. 324 00:42:46,760 --> 00:42:48,560 Tasmania. 325 00:42:51,440 --> 00:42:55,440 And that has its own special marsupial... 326 00:42:56,560 --> 00:43:00,360 ...one that seldom appears until after dark. 327 00:43:03,360 --> 00:43:05,680 The Tasmanian devil. 328 00:43:11,600 --> 00:43:15,600 Many predators inhabit a territory packed with prey. 329 00:43:15,640 --> 00:43:18,400 But here, there's nothing like that for them. 330 00:43:27,400 --> 00:43:31,240 Each may travel for miles night after night, 331 00:43:31,280 --> 00:43:35,600 prepared to eat anything it can find, dead or alive. 332 00:43:45,040 --> 00:43:47,800 The shoreline is a good place to search. 333 00:43:48,920 --> 00:43:52,480 There might be some small creatures to catch here, 334 00:43:52,520 --> 00:43:54,880 or maybe something that the tide has brought in. 335 00:44:05,400 --> 00:44:08,880 The carcass of a wallaby has been washed ashore. 336 00:44:16,320 --> 00:44:21,840 Tasmanian devils can eat 40% of their body weight in one session, 337 00:44:21,880 --> 00:44:24,640 and they have hugely powerful jaws. 338 00:44:24,680 --> 00:44:28,320 They tackle everything - even bones. 339 00:44:32,480 --> 00:44:33,880 Back at the den, 340 00:44:33,920 --> 00:44:36,640 there are other hungry mouths. 341 00:44:37,960 --> 00:44:40,160 (YAWNS) 342 00:44:43,680 --> 00:44:46,480 Her two youngsters are six months old. 343 00:44:48,120 --> 00:44:54,080 They still rely on their mother's milk, but they're feeling peckish! 344 00:44:57,880 --> 00:45:01,480 There must be something solid they could find for themselves 345 00:45:01,520 --> 00:45:03,240 while they're waiting for a drink. 346 00:45:11,160 --> 00:45:12,680 Is this food? 347 00:45:14,640 --> 00:45:15,720 (YELPS) 348 00:45:19,560 --> 00:45:20,840 (SNIFFS) 349 00:45:20,880 --> 00:45:23,280 That possum smells tasty... 350 00:45:25,680 --> 00:45:28,160 ...but it's a little high up. 351 00:45:30,520 --> 00:45:33,120 This looks more promising. 352 00:45:43,160 --> 00:45:46,760 At last, a giant stick! 353 00:45:48,640 --> 00:45:50,680 Not bad for a first go. 354 00:45:56,200 --> 00:46:00,840 Their mother will protect and feed these youngsters for another three months. 355 00:46:02,800 --> 00:46:07,640 Their survival is important to her, but also for us... 356 00:46:08,880 --> 00:46:13,320 ...because these are one of the last devil families in the world. 357 00:46:19,680 --> 00:46:22,400 Tasmanian devils are now endangered... 358 00:46:23,440 --> 00:46:25,600 ...found in only a few places, 359 00:46:25,640 --> 00:46:30,160 such as this remote islet off the coast of Tasmania. 360 00:46:36,400 --> 00:46:39,840 But they once lived across the whole of Australia. 361 00:46:41,480 --> 00:46:44,240 Evidence that this was so 362 00:46:44,280 --> 00:46:49,120 can be seen nearly 2,500 miles away from the devils' family den, 363 00:46:49,160 --> 00:46:53,000 on Australia's northern coast. 364 00:47:00,360 --> 00:47:03,440 This great stretch of boulders 365 00:47:03,480 --> 00:47:10,080 is covered by the largest concentration of prehistoric images anywhere in the world. 366 00:47:15,920 --> 00:47:19,360 Over one million pictures of wildlife... 367 00:47:23,720 --> 00:47:25,200 ...and among them... 368 00:47:26,960 --> 00:47:28,600 ...a Tasmanian devil. 369 00:47:31,440 --> 00:47:36,320 It was engraved on stone 60,000 years ago 370 00:47:36,360 --> 00:47:40,080 by some of the first human beings to reach the continent. 371 00:47:43,800 --> 00:47:46,440 Then, just 200 years ago, 372 00:47:46,480 --> 00:47:52,200 European settlers arrived with guns and dogs, foxes and cats. 373 00:47:53,480 --> 00:47:57,520 Together, they decimated Australia's unique wildlife. 374 00:48:03,400 --> 00:48:07,600 This was one of the continent's biggest animal predators - 375 00:48:07,640 --> 00:48:10,240 a marsupial wolf, or thylacine. 376 00:48:12,320 --> 00:48:17,200 The last-known remaining one was filmed in 1936 377 00:48:17,240 --> 00:48:19,480 in a zoo just before it died... 378 00:48:20,920 --> 00:48:25,680 ...and so brought the final extinction of its species. 379 00:48:30,680 --> 00:48:33,960 These rocks are now its memorial. 380 00:48:38,520 --> 00:48:42,320 And they may become that for the Tasmanian devil as well. 381 00:48:44,680 --> 00:48:50,680 Mammals in Australia are disappearing faster than anywhere else on Earth. 382 00:48:54,680 --> 00:48:59,720 They succeeded in adapting to life as their home changed around them. 383 00:49:01,400 --> 00:49:04,680 But now they face their greatest challenge - 384 00:49:04,720 --> 00:49:08,800 the change to their world brought by humanity. 385 00:49:10,960 --> 00:49:15,000 Which of its unique species will survive the coming decades 386 00:49:15,040 --> 00:49:17,200 now depends on us. 387 00:49:30,080 --> 00:49:33,320 DAVID ATTENBOROUGH: The most ambitious shoot for the Australia team 388 00:49:33,360 --> 00:49:37,840 was filming the continent's top predator - the dingo - hunting. 389 00:49:41,800 --> 00:49:45,080 Elusive and shy, they're rarely seen. 390 00:49:49,720 --> 00:49:54,280 The crew journeyed to the high plains of Australia, 391 00:49:54,320 --> 00:49:59,840 where park rangers had reported sightings of a white dingo and her pack. 392 00:50:03,360 --> 00:50:06,440 In their first week, the team confirm the sightings... 393 00:50:06,480 --> 00:50:07,640 THEO: There she is. 394 00:50:09,000 --> 00:50:11,360 ...and begin to catch glimpses. 395 00:50:12,960 --> 00:50:14,920 But with the dingoes constantly on the move, 396 00:50:14,960 --> 00:50:18,800 keeping track of them is a challenge. 397 00:50:18,840 --> 00:50:22,680 They teleport around, because you just lose them in the grass. 398 00:50:22,720 --> 00:50:24,120 It's madness. 399 00:50:24,160 --> 00:50:28,320 Each time the crew arrive to set up... 400 00:50:29,400 --> 00:50:31,400 ...they're too late. 401 00:50:42,760 --> 00:50:44,920 I couldn't believe how far she'd gone. 402 00:50:44,960 --> 00:50:47,560 By the time we managed to drive over the brow of the hill, 403 00:50:47,600 --> 00:50:49,880 she was a kilometre away. 404 00:50:51,040 --> 00:50:54,200 If they lose them, it could take days to find them again. 405 00:50:56,280 --> 00:51:01,320 And searching in outback Australia can be dangerous work. 406 00:51:01,360 --> 00:51:03,200 (PANICKED SCREAM) 407 00:51:09,480 --> 00:51:12,800 Brown snakes are one of the world's most venomous. 408 00:51:14,400 --> 00:51:17,800 And it's not only the snakes that have a nasty bite. 409 00:51:17,840 --> 00:51:18,920 Oh, dear! 410 00:51:18,960 --> 00:51:20,200 Look at that. 411 00:51:21,880 --> 00:51:23,000 Sorry. 412 00:51:27,600 --> 00:51:29,880 Turns out I just stood in an ants' nest. 413 00:51:33,640 --> 00:51:38,640 Over the coming weeks, the dingoes continue to give the crew the runaround. 414 00:51:39,960 --> 00:51:42,080 With such a large area to search, 415 00:51:42,120 --> 00:51:45,160 they enlist the help of two additional cameramen. 416 00:51:46,400 --> 00:51:51,400 Dan is a dingo expert and studied them for five years, 417 00:51:51,440 --> 00:51:54,320 and even he struggled to follow them. 418 00:51:54,360 --> 00:51:58,880 Dingoes are Australia's most heavily persecuted native animal... 419 00:51:58,920 --> 00:52:01,480 - (DINGO HOWLS) - ...and that makes them 420 00:52:01,520 --> 00:52:04,160 so incredibly elusive and hard to film. 421 00:52:05,160 --> 00:52:07,000 They're very scared of humans. 422 00:52:08,120 --> 00:52:12,520 Dingoes have lived in Australia for over 4,000 years, 423 00:52:12,560 --> 00:52:16,760 but when Europeans arrived with livestock, they were seen as a threat. 424 00:52:17,800 --> 00:52:22,160 Today, they continue to be shot, poisoned and trapped, 425 00:52:22,200 --> 00:52:24,440 which explains why they avoid the crew. 426 00:52:25,640 --> 00:52:29,320 So Dan suggests a new approach. 427 00:52:32,440 --> 00:52:35,200 From the air, they have a better view. 428 00:52:36,320 --> 00:52:40,480 Now they can track the dingoes and follow their trails. 429 00:52:41,640 --> 00:52:46,880 And they notice the white dingo repeatedly returning to the same patch of forest. 430 00:52:48,880 --> 00:52:53,440 Ben, the park ranger, goes to explore... 431 00:52:53,480 --> 00:52:55,000 Dog's had a scratch in here. 432 00:52:57,560 --> 00:52:58,920 Old roo leg. 433 00:52:58,960 --> 00:53:01,880 ...and unearths a den site. 434 00:53:01,920 --> 00:53:03,640 Den site in here. Look at it. Jeez. 435 00:53:03,680 --> 00:53:07,760 Only a handful of wild dingo dens 436 00:53:07,800 --> 00:53:10,320 have ever been filmed, so the team set up a stakeout. 437 00:53:19,480 --> 00:53:22,880 And after a few days waiting... 438 00:53:28,280 --> 00:53:31,600 To the best of my knowledge, this is some of the first footage 439 00:53:31,640 --> 00:53:33,200 of wild dingo pups at the den. 440 00:53:35,480 --> 00:53:39,960 Being able to capture this really intimate, up-close footage is amazing. 441 00:53:40,000 --> 00:53:42,280 Really, really special. 442 00:53:43,720 --> 00:53:46,640 The den site is a major breakthrough. 443 00:53:50,120 --> 00:53:53,160 Now the team can find the white dingo each morning... 444 00:53:53,200 --> 00:53:54,440 Yeah, I've got her. 445 00:53:54,480 --> 00:53:57,800 ...and begin to understand her hunting patterns. 446 00:54:01,200 --> 00:54:04,600 At this point, she's just testing the water to see which... 447 00:54:04,640 --> 00:54:08,680 ...which ones are weaker, or if there are any joeys around that she can hunt easily. 448 00:54:11,200 --> 00:54:15,280 But her chases cover such vast distances 449 00:54:15,320 --> 00:54:19,280 that filming them from start to finish is impossible. 450 00:54:20,640 --> 00:54:23,840 Time for the final crew members. 451 00:54:27,320 --> 00:54:31,360 With the filming helicopter, 452 00:54:31,400 --> 00:54:37,000 the team can stay airborne for long enough to capture her marathon hunts. 453 00:54:37,040 --> 00:54:42,920 But to be successful, the ground and aerial team will need to work together. 454 00:54:45,480 --> 00:54:47,840 So we've got spotters all around the valley, 455 00:54:47,880 --> 00:54:49,880 and if anything happens, if anything moves, 456 00:54:49,920 --> 00:54:51,200 we can run to the helicopter 457 00:54:51,240 --> 00:54:54,680 and we can be up in the air in about three minutes and filming. 458 00:54:54,720 --> 00:54:58,240 We're just on standby all morning and all afternoon. 459 00:55:01,000 --> 00:55:05,320 With nine people monitoring the white dingo's every move, 460 00:55:05,360 --> 00:55:07,400 all they can do... 461 00:55:08,480 --> 00:55:09,480 ...is wait. 462 00:55:18,840 --> 00:55:20,960 Until one morning... 463 00:55:21,000 --> 00:55:24,560 She really looks like she's eyeing up those roos over there. 464 00:55:24,600 --> 00:55:26,320 She's just stopped and just looking at them. 465 00:55:29,600 --> 00:55:33,600 RADIO: Yeah, she's definitely looking for some roos. Over. 466 00:55:36,320 --> 00:55:38,320 (MUFFLED RADIO MESSAGE) 467 00:55:38,360 --> 00:55:41,400 DAVID: With the dingo on the move, the hunt seems imminent. 468 00:55:45,160 --> 00:55:50,880 As the helicopter prepares to launch, the ground team keep track of her. 469 00:55:58,320 --> 00:56:00,120 Yep, she's running, she's running, she's running. 470 00:56:14,400 --> 00:56:15,800 She looks good. 471 00:56:33,280 --> 00:56:34,840 Finally able to keep up, 472 00:56:34,880 --> 00:56:40,880 the team film these dingoes hunting kangaroos for the first time, 473 00:56:40,920 --> 00:56:45,320 adding to the little we know about these remarkable predators. 474 00:56:48,360 --> 00:56:51,000 After five weeks following the white dingo, 475 00:56:51,040 --> 00:56:54,520 the team are left in awe of her. 476 00:56:54,560 --> 00:56:56,160 She's worked so hard, 477 00:56:56,200 --> 00:56:59,240 catching roos and looking after her babies, 478 00:56:59,280 --> 00:57:01,680 and it's been just amazing. 479 00:57:02,840 --> 00:57:04,480 I'll never forget it. 480 00:57:08,400 --> 00:57:14,000 Next time - a world transformed by mankind... 481 00:57:15,200 --> 00:57:17,920 ...where extraordinary animals are found... 482 00:57:19,280 --> 00:57:22,000 ...in surprising places. 483 00:57:29,880 --> 00:57:31,280 Europe. 484 00:57:31,320 --> 00:57:32,600 (GRUNTS) 37319

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