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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:18,354 --> 00:00:23,144 The ability to move through the air in any direction you wish, 2 00:00:24,167 --> 00:00:26,307 to cross continents and oceans, 3 00:00:26,507 --> 00:00:30,160 to range over forests and deserts and mountains, 4 00:00:30,480 --> 00:00:35,951 all this birds have been able to do for 150 millions years. 5 00:00:36,272 --> 00:00:41,340 But they won't the first or indeed the last in the skies. 6 00:00:43,788 --> 00:00:49,308 We are setting out to explore one of the most astonishing stories in the natural world. 7 00:00:50,736 --> 00:00:55,088 The way in which animals manages to rise up from the surface of the Earth, 8 00:00:55,318 --> 00:00:57,818 and colonise the air. 9 00:01:00,058 --> 00:01:03,296 From the dazzling aerobatics of the insects... 10 00:01:06,623 --> 00:01:10,567 to the majesty of ancient winged reptiles. 11 00:01:17,522 --> 00:01:20,419 The splendor and agility of birds... 12 00:01:24,979 --> 00:01:29,850 and the sonar guided precision of night flying bats. 13 00:01:34,239 --> 00:01:37,163 Flight has been the key to the success 14 00:01:37,249 --> 00:01:40,944 of some of our Planet most remarkable inhabitants. 15 00:01:47,848 --> 00:01:53,057 To analyze theirs spectacular skills, we will use the latest technology. 16 00:01:55,967 --> 00:01:58,817 And we will travel around the world. 17 00:02:00,019 --> 00:02:04,674 From the jungles of Borneo to the fossils filled rocks of China. 18 00:02:06,153 --> 00:02:08,653 And the Cloud Forest of Ecuador. 19 00:02:12,963 --> 00:02:15,561 We will take you into the air... 20 00:02:17,938 --> 00:02:21,216 and travel with animals as they fly. 21 00:02:25,811 --> 00:02:35,695 ~ Conquest Of The Skies ~ 22 00:02:40,867 --> 00:02:49,042 THE FIRST TO FLY 23 00:02:49,105 --> 00:02:52,924 Evidence for the very beginning of this astonishing story 24 00:02:53,197 --> 00:02:57,653 can be found close to home in The Fens of Cambridgeshire. 25 00:03:00,405 --> 00:03:05,953 Here live creatures that have ancestry stretching back millions of years. 26 00:03:08,168 --> 00:03:13,609 Nobody know exactly how the first flying animals in the world evolve, 27 00:03:14,161 --> 00:03:17,717 but there are creatures alive today, that can take us back 28 00:03:17,815 --> 00:03:21,014 to those far distance remarkable times, 29 00:03:21,368 --> 00:03:25,078 and they live surprisingly under water. 30 00:03:30,934 --> 00:03:34,100 Looking down through the surface to the riverbed, 31 00:03:34,324 --> 00:03:40,038 is like traveling back in time over 320 million years. 32 00:03:42,329 --> 00:03:46,689 It was then, in an age long before even the dinosaurs evolved, 33 00:03:46,939 --> 00:03:52,017 that creatures like this first appeared in the waters of the Earth. 34 00:03:56,264 --> 00:03:58,764 It's an insect. 35 00:03:59,740 --> 00:04:04,122 A ferocious predator with jaws like a mechanical grab. 36 00:04:16,847 --> 00:04:20,070 It seems unlikely that this animal ancestors 37 00:04:20,145 --> 00:04:23,609 were among the first creatures ever to fly. 38 00:04:28,536 --> 00:04:32,730 But this one is not yet adult, it's a larva, 39 00:04:32,991 --> 00:04:35,781 and it doesn't spend all his life in the water. 40 00:04:37,305 --> 00:04:42,514 It has another life and another body above the surface. 41 00:04:44,672 --> 00:04:48,007 Early one morning it climbs up a reed. 42 00:04:52,039 --> 00:04:58,282 A split appears in its skin, and a very different looking creature begins to emerge. 43 00:05:01,631 --> 00:05:05,757 It has four lumps on its back, that might perhaps ancestry 44 00:05:05,995 --> 00:05:10,242 have become either gills or protective armor plates. 45 00:05:11,912 --> 00:05:15,926 But now they develop into something very different. 46 00:05:21,090 --> 00:05:23,590 Wings. 47 00:05:25,245 --> 00:05:27,745 It has two pairs of them. 48 00:05:29,112 --> 00:05:34,791 Liquid from its body is pump-down along veins to stretch them tight. 49 00:05:37,222 --> 00:05:40,869 As they dry in the sun, they harden. 50 00:05:49,985 --> 00:05:54,366 The watering dragon has become the Dragonfly. 51 00:05:54,848 --> 00:05:58,980 And the four wing depurates that he uses to get into the air, 52 00:05:59,131 --> 00:06:01,631 is the earliest that we know. 53 00:06:07,211 --> 00:06:10,947 Imprints of such wings, have been found in rocks that was lay-down 54 00:06:11,033 --> 00:06:14,200 on the bottom of ancient lakes and streams. 55 00:06:17,099 --> 00:06:21,765 This specimen is about 150 million years old. 56 00:06:23,360 --> 00:06:28,945 And this wing is double age at nearly 300 million years old. 57 00:06:33,639 --> 00:06:38,560 Ancient and modern wings share a structure that is strikingly similar. 58 00:06:41,303 --> 00:06:46,726 So today's Dragonflies are amazingly living fossils that can show us 59 00:06:46,805 --> 00:06:53,328 how the very first flyers overcame the pull of gravity, and took to the skies. 60 00:07:20,401 --> 00:07:24,475 Their wings are marvels of natural engineering. 61 00:07:25,881 --> 00:07:29,035 But to see how they lift the Dragonfly into the air, 62 00:07:29,319 --> 00:07:32,222 we need to slow the action down. 63 00:07:33,424 --> 00:07:37,539 In principle, it looks very simple, each wing beats-down, 64 00:07:37,739 --> 00:07:41,705 pushing on the air below, so lifting the Dragonfly up. 65 00:07:42,904 --> 00:07:46,215 But each beat also creates another air current 66 00:07:46,436 --> 00:07:49,505 that lifts the Dragonfly in a very different way. 67 00:07:50,855 --> 00:07:55,892 And I can demonstrate it, using this strip of paper to represent a wing. 68 00:07:56,109 --> 00:07:59,936 If I blow across the top of it, it will rise. Watch. 69 00:08:10,972 --> 00:08:15,462 That is because the faster air moves, the lower its pressure. 70 00:08:15,588 --> 00:08:18,418 So I created a lower pressure above the wing, 71 00:08:18,574 --> 00:08:21,969 and in consequence it was sucked upwards. 72 00:08:22,177 --> 00:08:28,317 The problem for a flying animal, is to recreate that difference in air speed. 73 00:08:36,711 --> 00:08:40,346 The way the Dragonfly does this is remarkable. 74 00:08:46,953 --> 00:08:53,003 As it moves through the air, we can see that it twists its wings at different angels. 75 00:08:55,340 --> 00:09:00,785 On the powerful down-beat, it holds them at a slight upward angle to the air flow, 76 00:09:01,471 --> 00:09:05,500 and this produces an extraordinary effect above the wing. 77 00:09:06,382 --> 00:09:11,894 It create a swirl behind the leading edge, which spins the air round, 78 00:09:11,965 --> 00:09:16,399 increasing the speed of the air current over the top of the wing. 79 00:09:16,497 --> 00:09:22,963 And with just a tiny increasing speed generates a significant upward force. 80 00:09:23,656 --> 00:09:27,513 Lifting up the wing and the Dragonfly. 81 00:09:30,689 --> 00:09:34,661 The Dragonfly can then change the direction of its wing beats 82 00:09:34,953 --> 00:09:38,082 to propel it forwards as well as upwards. 83 00:09:44,267 --> 00:09:49,643 Remarkably, a Dragonfly can beat each of its four wings independently. 84 00:09:52,736 --> 00:09:57,763 And that enable it to perform an astonishing variety of maneuvers. 85 00:10:00,173 --> 00:10:02,673 It can hover. 86 00:10:05,623 --> 00:10:08,123 It can glide. 87 00:10:09,320 --> 00:10:11,855 It can even fly backwards. 88 00:10:16,727 --> 00:10:20,744 For maximum power, it beats both pairs together, 89 00:10:21,188 --> 00:10:23,932 and can make really sharp turns. 90 00:10:26,521 --> 00:10:29,725 So the very first Dragonflies were able 91 00:10:29,858 --> 00:10:33,761 to extend their territories far and wide. 92 00:10:36,249 --> 00:10:39,653 And as more insects joined them in the skies, 93 00:10:40,800 --> 00:10:45,504 the Dragonflies had the skills to be deadly aerial hunters. 94 00:11:00,419 --> 00:11:04,521 The ability to fly brought great advances to those early insects. 95 00:11:04,788 --> 00:11:09,237 It enable them to find food, to escape from predators, 96 00:11:09,538 --> 00:11:14,989 and particularly important, to travel to new territories in search of a mate. 97 00:11:19,498 --> 00:11:23,191 Damselflies like their close relations Dragonflies, 98 00:11:23,301 --> 00:11:27,113 have remained virtually unchanged for millions of years. 99 00:11:28,531 --> 00:11:32,662 Mating can be quite complicated when both partners can fly, 100 00:11:33,712 --> 00:11:38,413 and these were among the first kind of animals that had to deal with that problem. 101 00:11:40,330 --> 00:11:43,693 The blue color of this one shows that it's a male. 102 00:11:45,533 --> 00:11:50,350 To attract a female, a male must have something to offer her. A territory. 103 00:11:54,529 --> 00:12:00,375 He chooses a stretch of water, that is likely to contain plenty of food for his offspring. 104 00:12:02,383 --> 00:12:06,045 Then he guard this territory against any rivals. 105 00:12:08,301 --> 00:12:11,884 Until a female flies in and joins him. 106 00:12:14,272 --> 00:12:19,219 He must now grab her before she changes her mind, in mid air if necessary. 107 00:12:22,095 --> 00:12:27,381 He uses Claspers at the tip of his abdomen to grip her behind her neck. 108 00:12:28,232 --> 00:12:33,518 Amazingly, the pair are able to coordinate the beats of their eight wings. 109 00:12:35,332 --> 00:12:41,363 They may mate in the air, or choose a secluded patch where they be safe from predators. 110 00:12:43,406 --> 00:12:48,270 They then fly around the territory, laying their fertilized eggs. 111 00:12:59,405 --> 00:13:03,223 Flight enable insects to invade part of the Planet 112 00:13:03,283 --> 00:13:07,543 that until then had been uninhabited. The air. 113 00:13:08,951 --> 00:13:11,451 And they flourished. 114 00:13:13,387 --> 00:13:19,964 So, 320 million years ago the skies flaunt with flying insects. 115 00:13:20,603 --> 00:13:24,775 But those early four wing forms were destined to produce 116 00:13:25,014 --> 00:13:30,265 a all range of spectacular highly specialize flyers. 117 00:13:32,020 --> 00:13:36,230 The need to lay eggs in water, tied the first Dragonflies 118 00:13:36,363 --> 00:13:39,273 to streams and ponds like these. 119 00:13:39,673 --> 00:13:43,966 But then around 20 million years after their arrival, 120 00:13:44,106 --> 00:13:48,936 a new kind of flying insect appeared with no such ties to water. 121 00:13:51,375 --> 00:13:55,862 Proof of their success can be found almost wherever you look 122 00:13:56,040 --> 00:14:00,090 and few places more abundantly then in Borneo. 123 00:14:17,433 --> 00:14:20,526 The very first flyers had two pairs of wings, 124 00:14:20,912 --> 00:14:23,742 now we looking for their successors. 125 00:14:25,721 --> 00:14:28,888 One group of creatures adapted that original 126 00:14:29,125 --> 00:14:32,698 four wing design with such success, 127 00:14:32,954 --> 00:14:36,119 that they diversified into the most numerous 128 00:14:36,197 --> 00:14:39,583 and wide spectrum of animals on the entire Planet, 129 00:14:39,861 --> 00:14:45,958 and you can find some of the most spectacular examples down there in the rainforest. 130 00:15:07,009 --> 00:15:13,817 Not all insects are hunters, some are strict vegetarians like this one. 131 00:15:14,069 --> 00:15:18,760 This it is the land living equivalent to that underwater monster, 132 00:15:19,039 --> 00:15:21,272 the Dragonfly larva. 133 00:15:21,372 --> 00:15:27,966 But this larva instead of catching little fish and water fleas, munches wood pulp. 134 00:15:28,654 --> 00:15:32,491 The trouble is that wood pulp is not very nutritious, 135 00:15:32,905 --> 00:15:36,834 and this creature, has to eat it for at least a year, 136 00:15:37,031 --> 00:15:40,157 before is this size, which is full grown. 137 00:15:40,599 --> 00:15:46,581 But then this larva will turn into an adult, which is equally monstrous. 138 00:15:52,439 --> 00:15:58,736 Emerging from beneath the ground, where it is lived and fed as a larva, is a beetle. 139 00:15:59,745 --> 00:16:04,854 One of the biggest in the world. The Atlas Beetle. 140 00:16:10,487 --> 00:16:13,844 Males like this one are armed with long horns, 141 00:16:13,935 --> 00:16:17,946 powerful weapons with which to compete with rivals for a mate. 142 00:16:20,035 --> 00:16:23,625 It now spend most of his time above the ground, 143 00:16:23,777 --> 00:16:29,775 margined its way through the undergrowth, where it feed on tree-sap and fallen fruit. 144 00:16:34,262 --> 00:16:39,110 This hefty powerful creature may not look as if it could fly. 145 00:16:41,313 --> 00:16:43,813 But it can. 146 00:16:45,684 --> 00:16:48,984 At key moments in its life he takes to the air 147 00:16:49,347 --> 00:16:55,550 to look for new sources of food, and of course, a female. 148 00:17:02,051 --> 00:17:08,125 Alls burrowing and munching around could injure delicate flight wings, 149 00:17:08,387 --> 00:17:12,032 so beetles have harden the front pair 150 00:17:12,232 --> 00:17:16,074 to form this pair of protective covers, 151 00:17:16,523 --> 00:17:21,566 and the delicate flight pair are stored away in safety underneath. 152 00:17:30,800 --> 00:17:36,455 To see how the wings are folded away beneath their covers, we need to wait for take-off. 153 00:17:47,668 --> 00:17:54,587 As it flaps, sprung hinges click-open and the wings are stretch to their full size. 154 00:18:16,015 --> 00:18:21,359 The working wings create lift in just the same way that the Dragonfly wings do, 155 00:18:22,369 --> 00:18:27,117 and the front wings, protecting them as a covers, are held out to the side. 156 00:18:27,854 --> 00:18:31,064 And their shape does give a little extra lift. 157 00:18:31,795 --> 00:18:35,499 So it clear that this is a really are all clumsy flyer. 158 00:18:42,992 --> 00:18:45,559 Landings can be clumsy too. 159 00:18:47,587 --> 00:18:53,064 And now those fragile wings must be carefully packed away beneath of their covers. 160 00:18:54,420 --> 00:18:59,054 They guided by align of tiny hairs of the base of the abdomen. 161 00:19:02,766 --> 00:19:06,749 These grip the wings and help push them into position. 162 00:19:09,686 --> 00:19:12,833 The beetle does it with all the care and precision 163 00:19:13,030 --> 00:19:16,818 that a skydiver uses when packing away his parachute. 164 00:19:21,141 --> 00:19:25,617 Once in a new territory, it will stake out a fresh source of food, 165 00:19:26,057 --> 00:19:29,461 and then defend it until a female arrives. 166 00:19:32,742 --> 00:19:36,526 The beetle way of life proved astonishingly successful. 167 00:19:36,947 --> 00:19:42,670 There are over 370,000 different species of beetle so far discovered. 168 00:19:42,906 --> 00:19:45,406 Unbelievable figure. 169 00:19:46,977 --> 00:19:51,959 So early on, the beetles manage to fly as much as they need to, 170 00:19:52,254 --> 00:19:55,228 with just one pair of wings. 171 00:19:58,608 --> 00:20:02,182 And then around 57 million years ago, 172 00:20:02,333 --> 00:20:05,904 came another key development in the history of flight. 173 00:20:11,139 --> 00:20:15,044 A new type of insect appeared with two pairs of wings 174 00:20:15,239 --> 00:20:18,621 that became in effect huge billboards. 175 00:20:19,814 --> 00:20:24,104 Wings that are perhaps the most dazzlingly beautiful of all. 176 00:20:26,027 --> 00:20:28,527 Butterflies. 177 00:20:34,538 --> 00:20:40,239 To create these extraorinary wings the butterflies evolved complex life cycle. 178 00:20:41,199 --> 00:20:46,272 They hatch some eggs, as little worms with legs. Caterpillars. 179 00:20:48,359 --> 00:20:53,662 But unlike many beetle grubs, caterpillars find their food above ground, 180 00:20:53,749 --> 00:20:55,991 where they are very vulnerable to predators. 181 00:20:56,191 --> 00:20:58,788 So they have evolved several strategies 182 00:20:59,087 --> 00:21:04,073 to accumulate all the bodymass they will need to become flying adults. 183 00:21:05,693 --> 00:21:09,744 First is to eat as much as they can as quicly as they can. 184 00:21:10,550 --> 00:21:14,486 Many are able to reach full size in just a matter of weeks. 185 00:21:18,125 --> 00:21:23,473 Of course, little thin skin fat filled sausage 186 00:21:23,877 --> 00:21:27,530 is attempting morsel for any bird or reptile. 187 00:21:27,714 --> 00:21:31,048 So caterpillas have to have a ways to defending themselves. 188 00:21:31,763 --> 00:21:36,025 This one, which is the caterpillar of lovliest swallowtail butterfly 189 00:21:36,385 --> 00:21:40,361 has disguise itself as a bird dropping. 190 00:21:40,966 --> 00:21:44,646 If that does not deceive of bird and bird goes for it, 191 00:21:44,985 --> 00:21:47,485 it has another form of defense 192 00:21:55,025 --> 00:21:58,438 It's emited rather unpleasant smell aswell. 193 00:22:07,273 --> 00:22:11,213 In the struggle to survive long enough they become winged adults, 194 00:22:11,367 --> 00:22:16,557 other caterpillars have developed other equally ingenious forms of defense. 195 00:22:18,339 --> 00:22:24,072 Consealed with in these fluffy strands are short stinging spikes. 196 00:22:27,053 --> 00:22:32,309 And this one is armed with long spines which have really painful stings 197 00:22:32,717 --> 00:22:36,015 Not only that, it has this warning colours 198 00:22:36,301 --> 00:22:40,938 to tell any potential predator that they will be in trouble if they attack. 199 00:22:44,581 --> 00:22:50,195 This caterpillar my appear to be dangerous, but it is in fact, fraud. 200 00:22:50,728 --> 00:22:53,228 The spines don't sting at all. 201 00:22:53,430 --> 00:22:57,952 It's relying on its disquise to make a potential predator think twice 202 00:22:58,494 --> 00:23:00,994 and leave it alone. 203 00:23:06,505 --> 00:23:09,620 Or, you can simply hide. 204 00:23:10,914 --> 00:23:17,267 These little tents have been made by the caterpillars of a skipper butterfly. 205 00:23:18,064 --> 00:23:23,619 Each caterpillars started by making a circular cut in the edge of the leaf, 206 00:23:23,809 --> 00:23:28,536 but it's left one segment uncut. So them act as a hinge. 207 00:23:28,918 --> 00:23:32,122 Then it pulls over the whole segment 208 00:23:32,486 --> 00:23:37,757 and hides beneath the munch way of the tissues of the leaf. 209 00:23:38,459 --> 00:23:44,083 And if I just pull it up, there are caterpillars. 210 00:23:48,734 --> 00:23:51,775 Caterpillars that survive these hazardious stages, 211 00:23:51,997 --> 00:23:55,821 can now build their wings and turn in to adults. 212 00:23:56,208 --> 00:23:59,556 They undergo truly radical transformation. 213 00:24:00,280 --> 00:24:04,259 Instead of shading of final larvae skin as the dragonfly does, 214 00:24:04,658 --> 00:24:08,703 a caterpillar first surrounding itself with a protective shell. 215 00:24:08,790 --> 00:24:11,258 To act as a sort of changing room. 216 00:24:11,458 --> 00:24:15,497 Within which it dismantles and then completely reconstructs it's body. 217 00:24:17,244 --> 00:24:21,788 After around 10 days it emerges as a butterfly. 218 00:24:23,689 --> 00:24:29,908 Now fluid pumps along veins and wings to stretch them out to the full size. 219 00:24:32,810 --> 00:24:35,390 And then it is ready to fly. 220 00:24:45,437 --> 00:24:49,985 Butterflies live on nectar which they collect from flowers. 221 00:24:51,246 --> 00:24:56,345 Like Dragonflies and Beetles they also fly to find a mate. 222 00:24:56,642 --> 00:25:01,472 But the way they beat their colorful wings is significantly different. 223 00:25:15,766 --> 00:25:19,917 This lovely creature has two pairs of wings, 224 00:25:20,219 --> 00:25:23,898 but he has in effect turn them into one. 225 00:25:24,915 --> 00:25:31,734 It done that quite simply, by overlapping the larger front pair over the smaller hind pair, 226 00:25:31,819 --> 00:25:37,505 so when the front pair beat-down, they automatically press down lower pair. 227 00:25:38,278 --> 00:25:42,202 The lower pair themselves don't have the muscles to beat-down, 228 00:25:42,441 --> 00:25:45,965 but just enough strength to return up. 229 00:25:48,641 --> 00:25:54,719 A Butterfly's overlapping wings compare to the size of their bodies, are enormous, 230 00:25:54,877 --> 00:25:58,972 around 10 times the size of other insect wings. 231 00:26:09,003 --> 00:26:14,343 Because the wing is larger, each beat can generate a huge amount of lift. 232 00:26:16,204 --> 00:26:21,969 So to stay in airborne, a butterfly need to flap less often than other insects. 233 00:26:23,958 --> 00:26:30,870 But that slow wing-beat, also enable it to make rapid and unpredictable changes of direction. 234 00:26:33,205 --> 00:26:37,475 And that allow Butterflies to fly in that zigzag erratic way, 235 00:26:37,810 --> 00:26:41,445 which make them so difficulty to catch, if you are butterfly collector, 236 00:26:41,578 --> 00:26:44,094 or more importantly, a predator. 237 00:27:02,748 --> 00:27:06,926 The combined front and hind wings of butterfly, not only constitute 238 00:27:07,013 --> 00:27:11,542 very effective flying mechanism, they can also carry messages. 239 00:27:11,983 --> 00:27:16,361 In fact, they carry some of the loveliest advertisements in all of the Animal Kingdom. 240 00:27:16,715 --> 00:27:21,453 Like for example, this beautiful Golden Birdwing Butterfly from Borneo. 241 00:27:26,867 --> 00:27:31,029 The butterfly huge wings provide auspicious canvas 242 00:27:31,167 --> 00:27:34,962 on which they display fantastically elaborate designs. 243 00:27:36,926 --> 00:27:40,542 So, how are these flying advertisements created? 244 00:27:42,742 --> 00:27:47,507 The secret lies in the microscopic structure of the wing surface. 245 00:27:52,371 --> 00:27:56,568 These oval lapping scales lined up like tiles on a roof, 246 00:27:56,761 --> 00:28:00,809 have evolved from bristles that were once tiny sensors. 247 00:28:04,493 --> 00:28:09,186 Some contain tiny package of pigment that give the wings color. 248 00:28:17,277 --> 00:28:21,536 Others have a complex structure which split the light, 249 00:28:21,675 --> 00:28:27,201 so that when viewed from a particular angle, it reflects a brilliant iridescence. 250 00:28:40,046 --> 00:28:44,147 There are over 18,000 species of butterfly around the world, 251 00:28:44,359 --> 00:28:48,658 and each has wings with their own distinctive design. 252 00:28:50,004 --> 00:28:54,362 These ravishing colors and delectable patterns, of course, 253 00:28:54,510 --> 00:28:57,990 enable a male butterfly and a female butterfly to know 254 00:28:58,146 --> 00:29:00,678 whether or not they belong to the same species. 255 00:29:01,185 --> 00:29:04,600 And a mature adult ready to mate, 256 00:29:04,800 --> 00:29:09,051 can identify suitable partner from surprising distances. 257 00:29:17,784 --> 00:29:24,492 When a male and female eventually meet, they flutter around each other in a ritual dance. 258 00:29:27,032 --> 00:29:31,163 Each is checking out the flying skills and wingspans of the other. 259 00:29:39,693 --> 00:29:42,568 If both past the test, they mate. 260 00:29:52,828 --> 00:29:58,739 The sheer size of butterfly wings, might seem to condemn their owners to a slow, 261 00:29:59,019 --> 00:30:01,519 almost dawdling flight. 262 00:30:02,246 --> 00:30:06,713 But they can be much more efficient aeronauts then you might suppose. 263 00:30:08,881 --> 00:30:14,046 Butterflies may not be able to fly very fast, but astonishingly, 264 00:30:14,172 --> 00:30:19,952 for such frail looking creatures, they can travel for hundreds of miles in search of food. 265 00:30:22,792 --> 00:30:28,070 New discoveries are revealing that butterflies make immense journeys, 266 00:30:28,470 --> 00:30:30,934 and one of the most exciting of this studies 267 00:30:31,100 --> 00:30:36,538 is taking place 7,000 miles west of Borneo, in Europe. 268 00:30:42,352 --> 00:30:46,142 I am joining a research project in Central Spain, 269 00:30:46,348 --> 00:30:50,263 to look for one of the greaters of all butterfly travelers. 270 00:30:52,113 --> 00:30:54,613 The Painted Lady. 271 00:30:58,267 --> 00:31:02,839 Every spring, Painted Ladies appear in Spain in great numbers. 272 00:31:04,982 --> 00:31:07,810 But Spain is just a stopover. 273 00:31:11,336 --> 00:31:15,250 An international team of scientists are uncovering evidence 274 00:31:15,322 --> 00:31:19,787 of an astonishing journey right across Europe and beyond. 275 00:31:24,719 --> 00:31:30,722 This hugely ambitious project is the brainchild of Dr. Constantise Iovanescu. 276 00:31:42,156 --> 00:31:45,944 Detailed records of when and where Painted Ladies appear 277 00:31:46,130 --> 00:31:49,776 have revealed an extraordinary mass migration. 278 00:31:50,227 --> 00:31:54,937 We were able to collect a huge number of observations 279 00:31:55,020 --> 00:31:58,541 from a more then 60 different countries, 280 00:31:58,930 --> 00:32:04,861 and maybe 35,000 records... - Really? 281 00:32:05,068 --> 00:32:08,927 in many people contributing their observations, 282 00:32:09,363 --> 00:32:13,248 and for the first time it was possible to understand 283 00:32:13,314 --> 00:32:17,269 the general pattern of migration all around. 284 00:32:18,709 --> 00:32:23,266 By combining this wealth of data the team are revealing a route map 285 00:32:23,442 --> 00:32:25,942 that spans incredibly distances. 286 00:32:27,034 --> 00:32:29,896 And it begins in North Africa. 287 00:32:31,693 --> 00:32:36,724 Large numbers of Painted Ladies breed in Morocco over the winter, 288 00:32:37,524 --> 00:32:41,559 before setting out across the Mediterranean to Europe. 289 00:32:42,008 --> 00:32:45,476 They then follow the spring bloom north, as the plants 290 00:32:45,539 --> 00:32:49,914 that they and their young feed on, sprout leafs and flowers. 291 00:32:50,866 --> 00:32:54,717 In summer, they appear in Britain and Scandinavia. 292 00:32:56,499 --> 00:33:02,244 But no individual butterfly lives long enough to achieve this huge journey by itself. 293 00:33:02,685 --> 00:33:06,649 Each step is taking by a new generation. 294 00:33:09,835 --> 00:33:13,306 So, this Painted Lady in Britain is the grandchild 295 00:33:13,389 --> 00:33:16,635 of a butterfly that set out from Morocco. 296 00:33:19,572 --> 00:33:23,576 But then, in autumn, all the Painted Ladies vanish. 297 00:33:25,919 --> 00:33:31,129 Do they simply die out? Or could that be a return leg to their epic migration? 298 00:33:33,701 --> 00:33:37,087 Searching for an answer to this mystery, has given the project 299 00:33:37,181 --> 00:33:40,286 its most astonishing revelation yet. 300 00:33:41,770 --> 00:33:44,653 And it comes from a part of the team based at 301 00:33:44,801 --> 00:33:48,560 Rothamsted Research Institute just outside London. 302 00:33:50,098 --> 00:33:55,957 The key discovery emerge from a surprising source. Radar. 303 00:34:00,133 --> 00:34:05,620 Our radar has a vertical pointing beam, and it illuminates a narrow column of the sky above, 304 00:34:05,690 --> 00:34:08,193 like shining a powerful spotlight up at in the sky, 305 00:34:08,413 --> 00:34:12,358 and we are able to detect individual insects as they fly through that beam. 306 00:34:13,765 --> 00:34:18,499 The signal is so detailed it can even help identify the species. 307 00:34:20,304 --> 00:34:22,512 And during the autumn disappearance, 308 00:34:22,692 --> 00:34:26,190 the radar picked up large numbers of Painted Ladies. 309 00:34:27,349 --> 00:34:30,499 They won't dying out, they were on the move, 310 00:34:30,712 --> 00:34:33,841 and they were flying at astonishing heights. 311 00:34:35,014 --> 00:34:38,225 What we find was, that in fact the Painted Ladies were highly abounded, 312 00:34:38,303 --> 00:34:41,513 at heights of three, four, five hundreds meter above the ground. 313 00:34:45,083 --> 00:34:49,708 At this great height, they were invisible to observers down below. 314 00:34:50,346 --> 00:34:52,846 This explained their disappearance. 315 00:34:53,879 --> 00:34:59,131 But the Butterflies had their own very good reason to travel at such altitudes. 316 00:35:00,938 --> 00:35:03,886 One of the benefits of flying at three or four hundreds meter above the ground, 317 00:35:04,083 --> 00:35:06,977 is that the wind speed-air much faster than the air ground level, 318 00:35:07,043 --> 00:35:09,938 so the insects are able to get a lot of assistance from the wind, 319 00:35:10,018 --> 00:35:13,142 and travel much faster then they would in their own powered flight, 320 00:35:13,321 --> 00:35:17,784 and we see these Painted Ladies traveling at 50 or even 70 km an hour. 321 00:35:21,835 --> 00:35:25,000 As well as measuring the phenomenal speed of their flight, 322 00:35:25,208 --> 00:35:28,107 the radar also revealed its direction. 323 00:35:28,621 --> 00:35:31,121 They were heading south. 324 00:35:32,677 --> 00:35:35,177 So where will they go? 325 00:35:36,771 --> 00:35:42,300 The astonishing answer came from Constantise far-flung network of observers, 326 00:35:42,786 --> 00:35:46,549 and the crucial piece of data was gathered in Africa. 327 00:35:47,076 --> 00:35:50,757 Some expiration in Africa, in October, November, 328 00:35:50,826 --> 00:35:55,543 have shown that there is a huge arrival of Butterflies at that moment. - Really? 329 00:35:55,706 --> 00:36:00,908 So, by the end of the summer, the newborn Butterflies in Europe 330 00:36:01,098 --> 00:36:04,890 are start to migrate a little way back to Africa. 331 00:36:05,063 --> 00:36:07,563 Really? - Ya. 332 00:36:07,857 --> 00:36:13,729 A final generation riding on high altitude winds makes an immense journey 333 00:36:13,788 --> 00:36:18,925 of up to 3,000 miles to West Africa, in just a matter of days. 334 00:36:22,301 --> 00:36:25,336 Observers on the ground, and radar in the air, 335 00:36:25,502 --> 00:36:29,123 had found proof of an amazing migration cycle. 336 00:36:30,517 --> 00:36:34,073 Just in one year the all cycle is made, 337 00:36:34,464 --> 00:36:38,295 and is the succession of these 6 generations moving about 338 00:36:38,692 --> 00:36:44,911 5,000 kilometer in one direction, and 5,000 in another direction. 339 00:36:47,322 --> 00:36:50,153 This migration, is in fact the longest made by 340 00:36:50,238 --> 00:36:53,084 any insect on the Planet so far discovered. 341 00:36:54,240 --> 00:36:56,509 But that raised another question. 342 00:36:56,708 --> 00:37:00,581 How did each generation know which direction in which to fly? 343 00:37:03,241 --> 00:37:07,142 The problem sat scientists once again set out to find an answer. 344 00:37:08,446 --> 00:37:13,052 By tracking the behaviour of Painted Ladies much closer to the ground. 345 00:37:21,444 --> 00:37:23,944 This is our flight simulator experiment. 346 00:37:24,404 --> 00:37:28,404 What we are done is we've.. butterflies to find road. 347 00:37:28,723 --> 00:37:31,378 And put them inside these flight simulators. 348 00:37:31,540 --> 00:37:35,508 There are ridged up to computer and the butterflies are free to turn. 349 00:37:35,931 --> 00:37:38,813 And as they turning, we recording that turning, 350 00:37:39,010 --> 00:37:43,436 and we can acctually draw out the flight path they would've taken if they free flying. 351 00:37:46,230 --> 00:37:50,080 Tha barrel blocks the butterfly's view of surrounding scenery 352 00:37:50,208 --> 00:37:52,884 removing any possible distractions. 353 00:37:53,874 --> 00:37:57,688 The only reference point they have is the sky above. 354 00:37:59,955 --> 00:38:04,747 Remarkably the butterflies consistenly choose a common direction. 355 00:38:07,768 --> 00:38:12,695 These are the flight headings each spot is one individual butterfly 356 00:38:12,935 --> 00:38:15,544 and the overrule direction they went in. 357 00:38:16,062 --> 00:38:20,007 So you can see that on average my butterflies were flying to South. 358 00:38:21,359 --> 00:38:26,165 What we found, when we put a lid on simulator so they could not see the sky, 359 00:38:26,493 --> 00:38:30,270 is as you see they did know in which direction to go. 360 00:38:30,367 --> 00:38:33,524 They would not able to maintain southwest heading. 361 00:38:35,385 --> 00:38:38,930 Rebecca concluded that their ability to choose this heading 362 00:38:39,094 --> 00:38:42,539 must depend one thing they can see in the sky above. 363 00:38:43,572 --> 00:38:46,072 The Sun. 364 00:38:47,661 --> 00:38:52,920 Actually the sun is really good cue, it is very predictable and is movements accross the sky. 365 00:38:53,281 --> 00:38:57,103 And butterflies will be flying in the middle of the day when there is warm 366 00:38:57,357 --> 00:39:02,895 until the Sun is out and this must be a South at that time of the day. 367 00:39:03,074 --> 00:39:07,694 So it is very good sign for butterflies to know which way is South. 368 00:39:11,035 --> 00:39:14,250 These inbuilt compass allows Painted Ladies 369 00:39:14,344 --> 00:39:17,894 at tight altitude to select a wind which heading South. 370 00:39:18,282 --> 00:39:23,226 So it is a free ride at long return jorney all the way to Africa. 371 00:39:31,126 --> 00:39:36,712 Some insects face a very different challenge, not fly long distances, 372 00:39:37,025 --> 00:39:39,525 but flying in the dark. 373 00:39:48,929 --> 00:39:54,416 A Light Trap can attract some of the most remarkable of this nocturnal flyers. 374 00:39:59,435 --> 00:40:01,935 Moths. 375 00:40:04,372 --> 00:40:08,821 Moths probably evolve to fly at night to avoid predators. 376 00:40:10,457 --> 00:40:17,175 Their eyes are adapted to low light, but they also use a second highly develop sense, smell. 377 00:40:21,534 --> 00:40:24,993 This is a male Moon Moth. 378 00:40:26,228 --> 00:40:31,280 Moths overlap their two pairs of wings in just the same way Butterflies do, 379 00:40:31,848 --> 00:40:37,137 and this particular moth is very special. It has an extremely short life. 380 00:40:37,299 --> 00:40:41,529 He will only live for a week. It won't even feed. 381 00:40:42,160 --> 00:40:46,124 Its only object is to find a female. 382 00:40:46,645 --> 00:40:51,897 And it does that with these remarkable feather-like antenna. 383 00:40:54,483 --> 00:40:58,562 The female emits a particular characteristic scent, 384 00:40:58,816 --> 00:41:05,522 and with those antenna, the male can sense it from as much as a mile away. 385 00:41:05,993 --> 00:41:12,855 He then take-off and fly upwind, until eventually it find the source. 386 00:41:21,023 --> 00:41:26,471 Moths with their combined front and rear wings, are also excellent flyers. 387 00:41:29,700 --> 00:41:34,257 Some live longer, and so need to fly to find food. 388 00:41:35,452 --> 00:41:39,003 This Sphinx Moth favorite food is nectar. 389 00:41:41,313 --> 00:41:44,153 It can even hover as it drinks. 390 00:41:53,823 --> 00:41:56,833 So, by overlapping their two pairs of wings, 391 00:41:57,299 --> 00:42:01,203 Butterflies and Moths has become very competent flyers. 392 00:42:01,574 --> 00:42:05,417 But there is one group of flying insects that has change 393 00:42:05,693 --> 00:42:09,908 the back pair of wings into something quite, quite different. 394 00:42:10,215 --> 00:42:16,567 Something that enable them to perform the most extraordinary aerial gymnastics. 395 00:42:18,173 --> 00:42:22,986 For the final chapter in our story of flying insects, I'm returning to London. 396 00:42:30,013 --> 00:42:35,390 The urban jungle and its human inhabitants provide plenty of shelter and food 397 00:42:35,670 --> 00:42:40,216 for a particularly adaptable and numerous kind of insect. 398 00:42:43,760 --> 00:42:46,260 Thank you very much. - Thank you. 399 00:42:48,730 --> 00:42:52,341 An inviting meal like this one, well, I'm quite sure, 400 00:42:52,418 --> 00:42:57,591 very soon attract a flying diner, that is one of the most remarkable 401 00:42:57,775 --> 00:43:00,275 of all insects aeronauts. 402 00:43:02,888 --> 00:43:05,388 It is of course a Fly. 403 00:43:06,243 --> 00:43:10,684 This particular kind, a Blow Fly, occurs all over the world. 404 00:43:11,365 --> 00:43:17,648 And its ancestors have been buzzing around for a least 250 million years. 405 00:43:20,738 --> 00:43:25,606 Flies are so common, we tend to dismiss them as just irritated pests, 406 00:43:26,021 --> 00:43:29,522 but their flying abilities are truly remarkable. 407 00:43:30,170 --> 00:43:33,979 Watch what happen if I try and swat this one on the menu. 408 00:43:39,385 --> 00:43:45,839 Slowing down the action by 40 times, we can see how astonishingly agile Flies are. 409 00:43:50,809 --> 00:43:55,238 It make its escape in the time it take me to blink my eye. 410 00:43:57,798 --> 00:44:02,765 The ability to twist and turn at such high speeds, and so evade enemies, 411 00:44:03,000 --> 00:44:06,314 has made Flies the global success that they are. 412 00:44:13,660 --> 00:44:16,901 They are the jet fighters of the insect world, 413 00:44:17,001 --> 00:44:20,812 and they owe their maneuver ability not to the shape of their wings, 414 00:44:21,008 --> 00:44:27,803 nor the power of their muscles, but to a set of highly advance flight sensors. 415 00:44:30,247 --> 00:44:35,053 A fly has its own version of a fighter pilot instrument-panel. 416 00:44:38,261 --> 00:44:43,771 Providing constant update on speed, altitude and direction of travel. 417 00:44:49,104 --> 00:44:52,260 A fly gather this flight data through its eyes, 418 00:44:53,253 --> 00:44:56,211 and these on among the best in the business. 419 00:44:58,019 --> 00:45:03,760 They can process visual information around 10 times as fast as our own eyes. 420 00:45:05,032 --> 00:45:08,667 But in high speed maneuvers, even a fly eyes 421 00:45:08,759 --> 00:45:12,746 struggle with one crucial piece of flight data. 422 00:45:14,457 --> 00:45:18,554 The angle of its body in the air, and the way it changes. 423 00:45:18,894 --> 00:45:24,244 Information that a human pilot will get from an instrument based on a Gyroscope. 424 00:45:26,853 --> 00:45:32,153 And that is essential if you going to pull-off a stunt like this one. 425 00:45:40,666 --> 00:45:44,850 Fortunately, Flies not only have eyes to guide them. 426 00:45:45,631 --> 00:45:50,626 They also have a second and even more remarkable set of sensors. 427 00:45:51,014 --> 00:45:55,965 One that it derived from that original four wing design. 428 00:45:59,708 --> 00:46:03,002 A fly only has a single pair of wings. 429 00:46:07,079 --> 00:46:10,577 The rear pair have been converted into something else. 430 00:46:11,786 --> 00:46:15,876 A tiny club-like appendage known as a haltere. 431 00:46:17,564 --> 00:46:22,114 This surprisingly sophisticated organ alert the fly for changes 432 00:46:22,196 --> 00:46:25,305 in the position of its body in the air. 433 00:46:27,772 --> 00:46:31,660 As the fly takes-off, each haltere begin to beat up and down, 434 00:46:31,842 --> 00:46:35,378 and so fast, it immediately becomes a blur. 435 00:46:38,899 --> 00:46:44,667 But in slow motion, we can see that it swing back and forth like a pendulum. 436 00:46:46,875 --> 00:46:49,283 To understand how the haltere works, 437 00:46:49,386 --> 00:46:52,879 we need to track its movement in the midair roll. 438 00:46:56,236 --> 00:47:00,478 The weighty tip of the haltere has a kind of moving in arched, 439 00:47:01,498 --> 00:47:06,421 so, that it remain on the same swinging path as the fly banks. 440 00:47:07,390 --> 00:47:10,874 Now, the angle between the body and the haltere changes, 441 00:47:10,962 --> 00:47:13,482 and the base is put under stray. 442 00:47:13,711 --> 00:47:17,493 This triggers sensors which register the roll. 443 00:47:22,588 --> 00:47:28,314 The fly can then adjust its wing beat to correct any imbalance, however extreme. 444 00:47:31,800 --> 00:47:35,855 New studies into a second remarkably use of the haltere signal 445 00:47:36,081 --> 00:47:39,197 are taking place at London Imperial College. 446 00:47:43,262 --> 00:47:48,310 In the department of Bioengineering, experts are studying Blow Flies 447 00:47:48,459 --> 00:47:52,514 to see if their natural flight mechanics can improve the performance 448 00:47:52,805 --> 00:47:55,856 of man-made flyers, like this drone. 449 00:47:59,282 --> 00:48:05,059 Flies are incredibly maneuverable, and if you look at their performance, 450 00:48:05,166 --> 00:48:09,097 one chasing another one, it's really hardly 451 00:48:09,189 --> 00:48:12,894 any other animal that can match this sort of aerodynamic performance. 452 00:48:13,634 --> 00:48:18,210 Holger has devised an experiment to investigate an intriguing connection 453 00:48:18,368 --> 00:48:23,848 between a fly halteres and it other key flight sensor, its eyes. 454 00:48:30,253 --> 00:48:35,230 A tiny motor simulate a series of high speed midair rolls. 455 00:48:36,732 --> 00:48:40,862 The way the fly then reacts, is recorded on a specialist camera 456 00:48:41,071 --> 00:48:44,052 which can replayed the action in slow motion. 457 00:48:47,311 --> 00:48:52,438 As you can see if you look closely, the head of the fly is maintained level, 458 00:48:53,127 --> 00:48:56,668 the body is rotating, and to maintain level gaze 459 00:48:56,788 --> 00:48:59,572 they have to counter-rotate the head. 460 00:49:00,951 --> 00:49:06,125 Keeping the eyes level is vital, if they to gather accurate flight information. 461 00:49:06,204 --> 00:49:11,447 And the halteres has been identified as the crucial sensor that makes this possible. 462 00:49:11,996 --> 00:49:17,632 Visual system alone will just be to slow, that's where actually the halteres come in. 463 00:49:17,779 --> 00:49:21,644 The halteres are extremely fast in terms of their responses, 464 00:49:21,902 --> 00:49:28,629 and they are immediate will signals, that are then sent to the neck motor system, 465 00:49:28,696 --> 00:49:32,360 and to the flight motor system, they are the first really 466 00:49:32,432 --> 00:49:36,364 to compensate for any disturbances, and if that has happened, 467 00:49:36,871 --> 00:49:41,849 the visual system is perfectly well situated to cope with the rest. 468 00:49:45,452 --> 00:49:51,296 So, Flies lost a pair of wings, but gain an extraordinary new flight sensor 469 00:49:51,416 --> 00:49:55,611 that made them the most advance flyers in the insect world. 470 00:50:02,491 --> 00:50:09,138 Flight has enable the insects as a all to become an astonishing global success. 471 00:50:09,510 --> 00:50:12,079 There are twice as many insects species, 472 00:50:12,138 --> 00:50:15,547 then there are of all other animals put together. 473 00:50:16,416 --> 00:50:19,684 Theirs is a remarkable evolutionary story 474 00:50:19,879 --> 00:50:23,635 that spans over 320 million years. 475 00:50:24,995 --> 00:50:28,688 From the first four wing creatures that emerge from the water, 476 00:50:29,563 --> 00:50:34,611 to the armour-plated Beetles which colonise land away from water. 477 00:50:36,906 --> 00:50:40,216 The Butterflies with their huge colorful wings. 478 00:50:42,886 --> 00:50:47,468 And the stunningly skillful aerobatic Flies. 479 00:50:49,222 --> 00:50:54,609 But skill may not be enough, sometimes sheer size counts. 480 00:50:55,068 --> 00:51:00,307 The insects had the skies for themselves for around 100 million years, 481 00:51:00,683 --> 00:51:06,169 but then a new group of animal appeared, animals that could build bigger bodies, 482 00:51:06,398 --> 00:51:12,307 and they were to lift the techniques of flying to even greater heights. 483 00:51:14,670 --> 00:51:17,841 As our journey through time continues, we encounter 484 00:51:17,940 --> 00:51:22,837 the extraordinary pioneers of a new wave of larger flyers. 485 00:51:25,800 --> 00:51:28,696 Monstrous winged reptiles. 486 00:51:31,821 --> 00:51:38,029 Strange feather dinosaurs, who ventures into the air led to the birds. 487 00:51:41,252 --> 00:51:45,576 And a group of mammals that conquered the pitch-black of the night. 488 00:51:47,464 --> 00:51:49,964 The bats. 489 00:51:52,269 --> 00:51:56,217 Written and Presented by David Attenborough 490 00:53:33,965 --> 00:53:38,127 We human beings are very latecomers to the skies, 491 00:53:38,608 --> 00:53:41,840 and although we might think that we now pretty good at this, 492 00:53:42,250 --> 00:53:46,630 the Natural World, with the help of several million years of evolution, 493 00:53:47,193 --> 00:53:53,722 has produce a dazzling range of aeronauts whose talents are far beyond our. 494 00:53:55,708 --> 00:54:00,861 The story of how animals manage to colonise the air is truly astonishing. 495 00:54:02,450 --> 00:54:05,377 First into the skies were Insects, 496 00:54:05,703 --> 00:54:08,428 they initially had two pairs of wings 497 00:54:08,493 --> 00:54:12,657 which in due course were modified in many different ways. 498 00:54:14,273 --> 00:54:19,030 But after having had the skies for themselves for about 100 million years, 499 00:54:19,331 --> 00:54:21,997 a new group of animals took to the air, 500 00:54:22,551 --> 00:54:25,722 Vertebrates. creatures with backbones. 501 00:54:29,978 --> 00:54:35,337 They faced a different challenge, for their bodies were much bigger and heavier. 502 00:54:36,929 --> 00:54:41,887 But eventually they evolve several ways of solving that problem. 503 00:54:43,948 --> 00:54:47,119 We will travel the globe to trace the details 504 00:54:47,346 --> 00:54:52,564 of the extraordinary skills of the backbone flyers. 505 00:55:02,953 --> 00:55:12,834 ~ Conquest Of The Skies ~ 506 00:55:19,092 --> 00:55:23,609 RIVALS 507 00:55:24,350 --> 00:55:26,850 This is Borneo. 508 00:55:27,554 --> 00:55:31,496 And here there are still great tracks of pristine rainforest. 509 00:55:32,459 --> 00:55:36,992 Forest that is wonderfully rich in animals of all kinds. 510 00:55:40,161 --> 00:55:43,717 I'm being winch up into one of the tallest trees here, 511 00:55:44,886 --> 00:55:47,434 in search of a creature that can give us a hint 512 00:55:47,692 --> 00:55:51,235 of how backbone animals first took to the air. 513 00:56:05,972 --> 00:56:11,450 Hidden among these leafs of this fern, high up here in the canopy, 514 00:56:12,250 --> 00:56:16,214 is a very remarkable little frog. 515 00:56:18,751 --> 00:56:23,833 It's a Harlequin Tree Frog, and it a very-very good climber. 516 00:56:24,114 --> 00:56:29,461 It spend most of its life up here, clumping around in the branches. 517 00:56:31,255 --> 00:56:34,604 Here it's away from the numerous predators there are, 518 00:56:34,751 --> 00:56:37,583 that might attack it down on the forest floor. 519 00:56:39,370 --> 00:56:44,316 But if in fact, a predator were able to get up here, to hunt it, 520 00:56:44,427 --> 00:56:51,266 a snake perhaps, well, the Tree Frog has a remarkable trick for defense. 521 00:57:04,234 --> 00:57:06,734 It glides. 522 00:57:07,259 --> 00:57:10,804 It has membranes between greater elongated toes, 523 00:57:11,029 --> 00:57:15,389 so that each foot becomes a parachute which slow the frog descent, 524 00:57:15,474 --> 00:57:19,418 and so enable it to make a relatively safe landing. 525 00:57:26,561 --> 00:57:32,840 The Vertebrates made their first forage into the air around 260 million years ago, 526 00:57:33,435 --> 00:57:37,659 and it very likely that some of these pioneers use skinny membranes 527 00:57:37,932 --> 00:57:42,436 to control their falls in much the same way as this little frog does. 528 00:57:50,041 --> 00:57:53,758 It has to be said that is not a very good aerial navigator, 529 00:57:54,433 --> 00:57:57,705 it seems that it just jumps and hopes for the best. 530 00:57:58,111 --> 00:58:02,746 But there are animals up here, that glide around from tree to tree, 531 00:58:02,912 --> 00:58:05,714 which are very good navigators indeed, 532 00:58:05,883 --> 00:58:10,157 so good in fact, that they can go from one tree to another 533 00:58:10,225 --> 00:58:14,168 and never go down to the ground in their entire life. 534 00:58:20,014 --> 00:58:23,685 One of them is a little lizard called Draco. 535 00:58:27,473 --> 00:58:30,964 Each male has his own little territory in the branches, 536 00:58:31,109 --> 00:58:36,720 and tries to attract females and warn off rivals by flashing his dewlap. 537 00:58:46,569 --> 00:58:50,692 He also spread colored flaps of skin from his flanks, 538 00:58:50,784 --> 00:58:54,574 that when fully extended do more or less the same thing. 539 00:58:59,642 --> 00:59:02,776 But there are predators among the branches. 540 00:59:04,370 --> 00:59:09,215 Snakes also live up here, and they hunt Lizards. 541 00:59:41,951 --> 00:59:45,631 But Draco side flaps now serve another purpose. 542 00:59:50,591 --> 00:59:55,972 He uses them to glide by hinging forward a specially elongated ribs. 543 00:59:58,545 --> 01:00:02,132 And he so skilled in the air that he can steer land 544 01:00:02,218 --> 01:00:04,718 on the trunk of his choice. 545 01:00:18,272 --> 01:00:22,555 So, if you live up in the branches it's less laborious, 546 01:00:22,651 --> 01:00:27,809 and indeed, safer to travel by air, than to come down to the ground. 547 01:00:28,332 --> 01:00:32,349 But if you want to be a true flyer, you have to be able to fly 548 01:00:32,411 --> 01:00:37,663 not only downwards but upwards, you have to have powered flight. 549 01:00:54,769 --> 01:00:58,167 This is another reptile, 550 01:00:58,677 --> 01:01:03,602 and one with even greater flying abilities than that little gliding lizard. 551 01:01:08,869 --> 01:01:12,887 Today, sadly, it's extinct. 552 01:01:26,755 --> 01:01:32,281 This is Dimorphodon, we can deduce from its fossils 553 01:01:32,426 --> 01:01:36,116 that he had the muscles needed to beat its wings. 554 01:01:37,336 --> 01:01:40,984 And computer imagery can show us what he must was look like. 555 01:02:01,517 --> 01:02:07,243 Dimorphodon was one of the first large animals ever to travel by air, 556 01:02:07,674 --> 01:02:10,167 200 million years ago. 557 01:02:10,367 --> 01:02:15,796 It belong to a group called the Pterosaurs, The Winged Reptiles. 558 01:02:19,487 --> 01:02:24,838 It was probably a forest dweller and it descendant of a tree living glider. 559 01:02:29,445 --> 01:02:34,693 This gliding ancestor might have had wings like those of Draco, 560 01:02:34,759 --> 01:02:39,690 that was made of skin, and perhaps extended from its fingers down to its ankles. 561 01:02:41,537 --> 01:02:47,059 But Pterosaurs have evolved larger wings with a hugely elongated fourth finger. 562 01:02:48,523 --> 01:02:53,956 The wing membrane was strengthen internally by thin rods of a stiffer tissue. 563 01:02:54,823 --> 01:03:00,199 They were muscles fibers too, that enable it to modified its contours as it flew. 564 01:03:02,281 --> 01:03:07,093 Looking at the wings insection revealed a secret of their efficiency. 565 01:03:07,658 --> 01:03:11,500 They have a rounded front edge and a sharp back edge, 566 01:03:11,563 --> 01:03:14,112 a shape known as an aerofoil. 567 01:03:17,028 --> 01:03:21,370 It's works by forcing the air flowing above the wing, to speed up. 568 01:03:21,932 --> 01:03:28,403 This faster air has a lower pressure, and the wing is suck upwards. 569 01:03:29,591 --> 01:03:34,622 The larger the surface area of the wing, the greater lift it can produce. 570 01:03:38,245 --> 01:03:42,940 So, it seem certain that Pterosaurs were very competent flyers. 571 01:03:43,425 --> 01:03:48,988 And judging from their teeth, it's seem likely that many fed on the great variety of Insects 572 01:03:49,068 --> 01:03:51,589 that had preceded them into the air. 573 01:03:53,285 --> 01:03:58,927 Insects have had the skies to themselves for around 100 million years. 574 01:03:59,135 --> 01:04:03,107 Now, bigger creatures had arrived. Reptiles. 575 01:04:09,803 --> 01:04:13,857 The Pterosaurs design for flight proved hugely successful, 576 01:04:14,506 --> 01:04:18,349 they use that new powers to spread beyond the forests 577 01:04:19,077 --> 01:04:22,253 and colonize whole new environments. 578 01:04:25,597 --> 01:04:28,666 A great number of them lived and fed near water. 579 01:04:30,088 --> 01:04:32,602 We know this because fossils of many species 580 01:04:32,677 --> 01:04:37,886 occur in rocks that was once mud at the bottom of lakes and shallow seas. 581 01:04:39,922 --> 01:04:45,479 This one shows the skeleton of little animal that 150 million years ago 582 01:04:45,893 --> 01:04:48,741 fell to the bottom of a shallow lagoon. 583 01:04:49,869 --> 01:04:53,693 This is its head, here is its backbone, 584 01:04:54,336 --> 01:04:57,486 tail, hind legs, 585 01:04:57,753 --> 01:05:04,609 and here stretching from these long extended finger bones are its wings. 586 01:05:05,312 --> 01:05:08,201 And this fossil is particularly remarkable, 587 01:05:08,334 --> 01:05:12,388 because it show an impression of the membrane in extraordinary detail. 588 01:05:12,484 --> 01:05:16,245 You can see every little tiny fold. 589 01:05:17,133 --> 01:05:21,331 You can judge how an animal lived by its skull. 590 01:05:22,002 --> 01:05:25,058 And this one, have these long jaws, 591 01:05:25,865 --> 01:05:30,378 with forward pointing teeth, and we think that this indicates 592 01:05:30,532 --> 01:05:34,097 that it lived by skimming across the surface of the lagoon, 593 01:05:34,255 --> 01:05:39,202 and snatching up fish with impaled on those teeth. 594 01:05:43,264 --> 01:05:46,771 This, very different one, it's just the head. 595 01:05:47,473 --> 01:05:50,882 As you can see has very long jaws 596 01:05:51,163 --> 01:05:56,856 and on the tip of the lower one is this little tuft of very fine filaments. 597 01:05:57,041 --> 01:06:00,360 We know from other specimens that these filaments 598 01:06:00,560 --> 01:06:03,809 originally stretch right along the entire jaw. 599 01:06:06,884 --> 01:06:13,149 This bristely fringe enable the creature to filter feed, taking in a beak full of water, 600 01:06:13,282 --> 01:06:16,481 expelling it through the bristles with the beak half closed 601 01:06:16,607 --> 01:06:19,427 and then swallowing what the bristles retained. 602 01:06:25,940 --> 01:06:31,626 And here's is a skull of a very much bigger species from Brazil. 603 01:06:32,238 --> 01:06:36,793 And it had neither teeth nor bristles in this jaws. 604 01:06:37,032 --> 01:06:41,636 But microscopic examination of the surface of the bone here 605 01:06:42,419 --> 01:06:45,232 reveals very tiny little blood vessels 606 01:06:45,298 --> 01:06:49,636 and that suggests that this jaw was once covered with horny beak. 607 01:06:49,873 --> 01:06:54,239 So maybe this animal used it's beak like the forceps 608 01:06:54,305 --> 01:06:59,689 to pick up small little reptiles or maybe catch dragonflies in the air. 609 01:07:00,205 --> 01:07:06,738 This particular skull reveals something else about the lifestyle of this specimen. 610 01:07:06,860 --> 01:07:10,585 Because of the back of the scull it has this great flange. 611 01:07:10,750 --> 01:07:13,727 And Pterosaur from other species 612 01:07:13,868 --> 01:07:18,420 have been found some with such flanges but others without. 613 01:07:18,555 --> 01:07:22,794 So it's tought that maybe this was the difference between sexes. 614 01:07:22,865 --> 01:07:28,271 Maybe was the male that had this big flanges backwards to display them. 615 01:07:28,592 --> 01:07:31,795 Maybe was covered with the skin. We can only guess. 616 01:07:37,209 --> 01:07:40,741 Many different pterosaurus species evolved these headcrusts 617 01:07:40,919 --> 01:07:43,733 and seems very likely that they were colored. 618 01:07:50,051 --> 01:07:53,851 This spectacular example is known as Tapejara. 619 01:07:54,259 --> 01:07:57,619 And it made it's home beside inland lakes. 620 01:07:59,160 --> 01:08:05,226 But Pterosaurs diversify another ways too. Some evolved much larger bodies. 621 01:08:06,461 --> 01:08:11,861 This species had a wingspan of over 20 feet, 7 meters. 622 01:08:16,278 --> 01:08:19,932 But not all Pterosaurs lived in the forests or near water. 623 01:08:20,948 --> 01:08:24,950 An open arid landscape like this one, was the likely home 624 01:08:25,108 --> 01:08:27,608 of one of the most extraordinary. 625 01:08:28,727 --> 01:08:32,985 Around 70 million years ago a pterosaur appeared 626 01:08:33,225 --> 01:08:36,852 that was of truly colossal proportions. 627 01:09:03,718 --> 01:09:07,286 That was one of the largest creatures that had ever flown, 628 01:09:07,534 --> 01:09:13,998 it was in the size of a small aeroplane, and it was called Quetzalcoatlus. 629 01:09:22,473 --> 01:09:26,731 Its immense wingspan allowed it to ride on the currents of warm air 630 01:09:26,983 --> 01:09:29,483 that rise up from sun heated land. 631 01:09:30,879 --> 01:09:35,022 It could then glide great distances, searching for food. 632 01:09:39,181 --> 01:09:45,007 Small creatures like lizards, or the dead bodies of much larger ones, Dinosaurs. 633 01:10:03,114 --> 01:10:06,372 But the Pterosaurs, with their wings of toughen skin 634 01:10:06,771 --> 01:10:11,339 weren't the only group of reptiles to make it into those ancient skies. 635 01:10:11,886 --> 01:10:17,552 About 150 million years ago, another reptilian group appeared 636 01:10:17,618 --> 01:10:20,279 on the Planet that also flew. 637 01:10:24,276 --> 01:10:27,253 Like most reptiles, including Pterosaurs, 638 01:10:27,461 --> 01:10:31,345 these creatures began their lives inside an egg. 639 01:10:39,671 --> 01:10:44,262 But they had evolved a revolutionary new design for flight. 640 01:10:44,648 --> 01:10:49,451 One that would usher in a remarkable fresh chapter in our story. 641 01:10:52,291 --> 01:10:56,810 And unlike the Pterosaurs, they still with us today. 642 01:11:09,183 --> 01:11:12,208 There are of course the Birds. 643 01:11:20,869 --> 01:11:25,628 Some today can provide clues about how their ancestors 644 01:11:25,747 --> 01:11:28,247 manage to get into the air. 645 01:11:33,862 --> 01:11:37,543 This is the chick of a bird found in farmyards everywhere. 646 01:11:39,927 --> 01:11:42,427 A Bantam Hen. 647 01:11:56,113 --> 01:12:01,764 And at this very early stage in its life, it can show us something very interesting 648 01:12:02,084 --> 01:12:07,596 about the origin of that crucial piece of flying equipment. A feather. 649 01:12:10,568 --> 01:12:16,531 Its feathers are downy, that to say they made up of simple filaments, 650 01:12:16,918 --> 01:12:21,363 and their function is not for flight, but insulation, 651 01:12:21,442 --> 01:12:23,804 to keep this little creature warm. 652 01:12:23,971 --> 01:12:28,493 And back in the Jurassic period, long before the arrival of True Birds, 653 01:12:28,747 --> 01:12:33,698 very similar looking feathers appeared on very different animals. 654 01:12:33,764 --> 01:12:38,109 Reptiles. Dinosaurs if to be precise. 655 01:12:41,166 --> 01:12:44,311 To find evidence for that astonishing statement, 656 01:12:44,401 --> 01:12:49,278 which not so long ago was highly controversial, we heading for China. 657 01:13:03,619 --> 01:13:08,053 Northeast of China's Great Wall, near the borders of Mongolia, 658 01:13:08,634 --> 01:13:11,485 lies the chilly province of Liaoning. 659 01:13:13,586 --> 01:13:17,444 Here, there are great areas of rocks that was lay down as mud 660 01:13:17,614 --> 01:13:20,873 in the bottom of immense fresh water lakes. 661 01:13:23,893 --> 01:13:27,366 The bodies of animals that was swept down into these lakes 662 01:13:27,479 --> 01:13:31,248 was slowly entombed by the fine grains sediment 663 01:13:31,495 --> 01:13:35,363 that preserved them entire and in exquisite detail. 664 01:13:38,154 --> 01:13:41,295 And from these rocks have come specimens 665 01:13:41,443 --> 01:13:46,138 that solve one of the most hotly debated of evolutionary arguments. 666 01:13:46,241 --> 01:13:48,741 The origin of the Birds. 667 01:13:51,940 --> 01:13:54,299 The key specimens are now in Beijing, 668 01:13:54,499 --> 01:13:58,092 where they been delicately prepared under the microscope. 669 01:14:01,744 --> 01:14:06,385 They have been studied here by one of the world greatest Dinosaurs experts, 670 01:14:06,564 --> 01:14:09,064 professor Xing Xu. 671 01:14:10,625 --> 01:14:15,852 First, he showed me one of his oldest specimens, part of a Dinosaur arm. 672 01:14:17,821 --> 01:14:21,410 But thanks to the finest of the mud of those ancient lakes, 673 01:14:21,610 --> 01:14:23,900 there is more here than just bones. 674 01:14:24,772 --> 01:14:28,789 You see here, this species it called a Beipiaosaurus, 675 01:14:28,915 --> 01:14:32,585 So, because this is a very not like us, two or three meters long, 676 01:14:32,718 --> 01:14:38,767 so quite a big animal. And here is an arm, hand, you see here... 677 01:14:40,066 --> 01:14:44,504 dark filamentous structures... - Yes. 678 01:14:44,582 --> 01:14:49,380 along that arms and hand, they are actually primitive feathers. 679 01:14:49,999 --> 01:14:53,754 And those feathers very simple, very simple, 680 01:14:55,273 --> 01:15:01,787 so we believed they represent the very primitive stage for feather evolution. 681 01:15:02,933 --> 01:15:08,210 These simple strands were made of the same material as the feathers of today Birds. 682 01:15:09,014 --> 01:15:12,483 They were relatively thick and must have been quite stiff, 683 01:15:13,494 --> 01:15:16,578 so they would of stuck out beyond the dinosaur arm. 684 01:15:17,314 --> 01:15:20,997 Behind them, were shorter strands that covered its all body. 685 01:15:21,528 --> 01:15:25,815 Like the down on the chick, these might have kept the dinosaur warm. 686 01:15:26,312 --> 01:15:30,069 But those long strands most likely had a different function. 687 01:15:32,203 --> 01:15:37,302 Clues to what that might have been can be found on an even more extraordinary fossil. 688 01:15:38,911 --> 01:15:43,772 These claws and finger bones belong to a creature called Caudipteryx. 689 01:15:46,529 --> 01:15:50,399 The long dark shapes around them are the remains of feathers. 690 01:15:52,753 --> 01:15:55,544 The single strands are here rather more complex. 691 01:15:57,779 --> 01:16:03,024 They had barbs, thin filaments attached to either side of a central rod. 692 01:16:03,685 --> 01:16:06,241 This look more like a bird feather. 693 01:16:07,547 --> 01:16:11,845 Caudipteryx had around 26 of them along each arm. 694 01:16:13,418 --> 01:16:17,689 This may look like a wing, but the feathers were not very long. 695 01:16:20,165 --> 01:16:26,482 And when you compare them to the size of this creature body, and its long legs, it's clear 696 01:16:26,637 --> 01:16:29,946 that they weren't big enough to enable Caudipteryx to fly. 697 01:16:31,802 --> 01:16:34,302 So, what were these feathers for? 698 01:16:35,917 --> 01:16:41,492 Microscopic examination has revealed that they were colored and patent. 699 01:16:41,975 --> 01:16:44,495 So, maybe they were used for display, 700 01:16:44,800 --> 01:16:48,536 perhaps to wave around during courtship to attract a mate. 701 01:16:50,576 --> 01:16:55,544 But then is seems that they also helped the dinosaur in a different way. 702 01:16:58,751 --> 01:17:01,261 We can find a hint of how they might have done this, 703 01:17:01,405 --> 01:17:05,513 by watching the way some young birds use their first feathers today. 704 01:17:10,166 --> 01:17:13,295 These are ten day old Pheasant chicks. 705 01:17:14,403 --> 01:17:16,977 Their feathers are not yet fully developed. 706 01:17:20,248 --> 01:17:25,460 At this stage they similar in structure to the feathers on that dinosaur, Caudipteryx, 707 01:17:25,667 --> 01:17:29,099 and going aline along each arm in much the same way. 708 01:17:33,217 --> 01:17:38,168 But these early feathers are also too short to enable these creatures to fly. 709 01:17:39,294 --> 01:17:41,810 Nevertheless they very helpful. 710 01:17:43,031 --> 01:17:45,695 Pheasant chicks has to nest on the ground, 711 01:17:45,880 --> 01:17:50,231 but they soon need to roost high up, where they are be safe from predators. 712 01:17:58,588 --> 01:18:03,502 Flapping these simple wings gives the chicks a little extra lift 713 01:18:03,600 --> 01:18:06,225 to help them climb into a tree. 714 01:18:18,228 --> 01:18:21,191 And when the time comes to return to the ground, 715 01:18:21,451 --> 01:18:24,902 those first feathers again are a help. 716 01:18:30,790 --> 01:18:33,799 They don't provide a large air-catching surface, 717 01:18:33,880 --> 01:18:36,809 but they enough to slow a chick fall, 718 01:18:37,366 --> 01:18:40,478 and make that landing just a little softer. 719 01:18:45,364 --> 01:18:49,105 Maybe the feathers that had initially kept the Dinosaurs warm, 720 01:18:49,381 --> 01:18:52,016 now also help them to get into the air. 721 01:18:56,880 --> 01:18:59,525 And then, only a few years ago, 722 01:18:59,630 --> 01:19:04,339 the mudstone of Liaoning produce yet another extraordinary fossil. 723 01:19:19,824 --> 01:19:26,518 It been named Microraptor, and it clearly a small dinosaur. 724 01:19:26,925 --> 01:19:33,782 But this specimen it particularly exciting, because of its feathers. 725 01:19:34,523 --> 01:19:37,192 Feathers on the forearm there. 726 01:19:37,761 --> 01:19:40,815 Feathers on its hind limbs. 727 01:19:41,476 --> 01:19:46,428 And even feathers right at the end of its very long tail. 728 01:19:46,968 --> 01:19:50,152 But there is something that makes these feathers 729 01:19:50,322 --> 01:19:54,962 different from any other feathers you seen on Dinosaurs before. 730 01:19:55,647 --> 01:20:00,668 They are narrower on one side of the quill than on the other. 731 01:20:01,129 --> 01:20:03,629 Just like bird feathers. 732 01:20:05,797 --> 01:20:11,844 Microscopic structures within them suggest that they had flashes of iridescence. 733 01:20:12,689 --> 01:20:16,353 So, these feathers were probably use for display. 734 01:20:17,081 --> 01:20:21,245 But their asymmetric shape is characteristic of flight feathers. 735 01:20:28,698 --> 01:20:33,907 The air flowing over the narrow front of the feather can produce lift. 736 01:20:50,664 --> 01:20:57,160 So, could this strange looking dinosaur with feathers all over it actually fly? 737 01:21:03,251 --> 01:21:06,762 Some people think that those feathers on its hind legs 738 01:21:06,954 --> 01:21:10,474 would have made it rather difficult for it to walk around on the ground, 739 01:21:10,558 --> 01:21:13,712 and that it would had been more at home climbing. 740 01:21:25,441 --> 01:21:27,941 And those claws on the fingers and toes 741 01:21:28,320 --> 01:21:32,210 are obviously very helpful in climbing up tree trunks. 742 01:21:43,671 --> 01:21:48,181 But those aerodynamically shape feathers certainly suggest 743 01:21:48,267 --> 01:21:51,553 that its arms were been used as wings. 744 01:21:59,510 --> 01:22:04,020 This four wing dinosaur must had been a really extraordinary animal. 745 01:22:04,643 --> 01:22:08,968 Its front wings were broad enough to enable it to glide, 746 01:22:09,254 --> 01:22:12,974 and its muscles on the chest were sufficiently strong 747 01:22:13,127 --> 01:22:17,130 to enable it to flap every now and then, and help it on its way. 748 01:22:18,464 --> 01:22:23,641 But the wings on the hind legs were probably not held spread out, 749 01:22:23,863 --> 01:22:27,638 but kept beneath the body to help the animal to steer. 750 01:22:33,142 --> 01:22:36,786 Now, clearly, these Dinosaurs were on their way 751 01:22:36,982 --> 01:22:39,995 to joined the Pterosaurs in the sky. 752 01:22:41,850 --> 01:22:45,224 And then, discovered once again in rocks of China, 753 01:22:45,631 --> 01:22:49,645 creatures recognizable as birds. 754 01:22:50,831 --> 01:22:56,336 This is Confuciusornis. There are two of them here. 755 01:22:56,673 --> 01:23:01,258 They no longer have heavy bony jaws sturded with teeth. 756 01:23:01,625 --> 01:23:06,536 Instead, they have a short beaks made of horn, 757 01:23:06,677 --> 01:23:09,558 without teeth, lightweight. 758 01:23:10,567 --> 01:23:17,139 And the tail is no longer supported by whole chain of the bones. 759 01:23:17,465 --> 01:23:20,942 These bones have been reduced to this tiny little stump here. 760 01:23:21,730 --> 01:23:24,230 These are true birds. 761 01:23:26,672 --> 01:23:30,009 But long feathers, attached to the tail one of this specimens 762 01:23:30,285 --> 01:23:34,387 can reveal something intruiging about these early birds. 763 01:23:36,856 --> 01:23:40,937 To find out what they were for, we can look for a bird here in Borneo 764 01:23:41,084 --> 01:23:43,584 that has very similar tail feathers. 765 01:23:54,516 --> 01:23:57,332 This is the racket-tailed Drongo 766 01:24:01,395 --> 01:24:04,784 and it's tail feathers there are astonishingly resembleance 767 01:24:04,882 --> 01:24:08,553 to those of a distant ancestors Confuciusornis. 768 01:24:14,674 --> 01:24:18,016 They don't seem to help it's flight in any way. 769 01:24:21,059 --> 01:24:23,966 So the drongo must be using them for something else. 770 01:24:25,808 --> 01:24:28,308 Display. 771 01:24:30,737 --> 01:24:34,351 And so, while birds continue to improve their flight 772 01:24:34,816 --> 01:24:38,077 they also continued to use the feathers in courtship 773 01:24:38,506 --> 01:24:42,022 as their dinosaur ancestors had probably done. 774 01:24:47,346 --> 01:24:51,825 Birds use not just shape of their feathers for display 775 01:24:52,082 --> 01:24:57,322 but also their colour and this is really lovely examples of that. 776 01:24:57,708 --> 01:25:00,208 Here in Borneo. 777 01:25:06,669 --> 01:25:11,187 These birds are colorful enough, but one is particulary spectacular. 778 01:25:13,735 --> 01:25:17,002 This is the Bornean Peacock-Pheasant. 779 01:25:19,118 --> 01:25:24,596 This is the male. His feathers are emblazing with colorful irridescent patterns. 780 01:25:25,953 --> 01:25:29,709 And that is because they used to attract the attention of a female. 781 01:25:32,822 --> 01:25:35,612 Her feathers are comparatively drab. 782 01:25:42,431 --> 01:25:48,429 First, the male lures the female in to his courtship arena with the promise of food. 783 01:25:49,143 --> 01:25:51,643 The worm. 784 01:26:04,704 --> 01:26:07,839 He becames to shake his magnificent feathers. 785 01:26:12,169 --> 01:26:16,786 He clears the ground of anything that might interfere with his performance. 786 01:26:26,649 --> 01:26:32,928 As the female dives in after the worm he raises all of his feathers in a huge fan. 787 01:26:35,768 --> 01:26:40,248 If she approves of his display she might choose him as a mate, 788 01:26:40,416 --> 01:26:43,156 over other rival males. 789 01:26:47,415 --> 01:26:50,963 Eventually she makes off with the offering a food 790 01:26:51,498 --> 01:26:54,863 it seems she was not as impress as she might have been. 791 01:27:02,908 --> 01:27:06,895 So feathers, so lightweight, and so easily erected 792 01:27:07,168 --> 01:27:13,107 can serve as billboards on which appertize for the mate or warn off rivals. 793 01:27:17,749 --> 01:27:22,843 But to see, how the early birds used their feathers to acheive fully powered flight, 794 01:27:23,415 --> 01:27:25,917 we are returning to Britain. 795 01:27:40,940 --> 01:27:47,080 And here, on the Lochs in Scotland we can watch some of the most majestic flyers around today. 796 01:27:50,125 --> 01:27:52,625 Whooper Swans. 797 01:28:00,241 --> 01:28:03,996 These particular birds were in contact with human beings 798 01:28:04,141 --> 01:28:09,693 from the very first moment of their hatched, so they allow me to get really close to them. 799 01:28:13,843 --> 01:28:18,072 The small feathers on their bodies are still essential for keeping their owners warm. 800 01:28:19,198 --> 01:28:21,698 But this one is a wing feather. 801 01:28:22,161 --> 01:28:25,164 It extremely strong, but very light, 802 01:28:25,721 --> 01:28:29,823 and the filaments on either side of the quill and the barbs, 803 01:28:29,983 --> 01:28:36,353 zip together to form a continues surface which will strong enough to hold the air. 804 01:28:36,874 --> 01:28:42,120 But if the air is to support a wing bird as it flies, 805 01:28:42,225 --> 01:28:45,983 it has to move over the wing very fast. 806 01:28:46,243 --> 01:28:51,609 And in order for that to happen, these Swans will move at speed 807 01:28:51,707 --> 01:28:56,944 across the surface of the water like an aircraft taxiing before take-off. 808 01:29:54,839 --> 01:29:58,231 When you close up to a flying bird like this, 809 01:29:58,383 --> 01:30:03,822 you can see how a wonderful piece of complex engineering their wings are, 810 01:30:04,146 --> 01:30:07,443 able to change their shape and their beat 811 01:30:07,634 --> 01:30:13,296 to respond to every little change in the currents of the air around them, 812 01:30:13,478 --> 01:30:17,612 and so propelled them forward and lift them upwards. 813 01:30:26,262 --> 01:30:29,209 So, how the bird wings actually work? 814 01:30:31,637 --> 01:30:35,822 If we slow them down we can watch in detail the mini subtle changes 815 01:30:35,976 --> 01:30:38,476 they make as they move up and down. 816 01:30:40,174 --> 01:30:44,588 The feathers overlap to form a smooth contoured surface 817 01:30:44,749 --> 01:30:47,389 that extends far beyond the bones within. 818 01:30:52,548 --> 01:30:57,340 With a curved leading edge of the front, and a sharp trailing edge of the back 819 01:30:57,493 --> 01:31:01,649 they have a classic aerodynamic shape that produced lift. 820 01:31:02,449 --> 01:31:04,949 They are aerofoils. 821 01:31:11,779 --> 01:31:16,242 With this downward beat the air pressure above is reduced, 822 01:31:16,315 --> 01:31:19,473 so that the bird is sucked upwards. 823 01:31:22,807 --> 01:31:28,226 Wings like these consisting of jointed bones covered with closely fitting feathers 824 01:31:28,313 --> 01:31:31,399 can make very subtle delicate movements. 825 01:31:33,011 --> 01:31:38,482 The feathers slide over one another, so that when the wing changed its shape 826 01:31:38,689 --> 01:31:42,119 there is no loss of smoothness on the contour. 827 01:31:48,164 --> 01:31:51,643 When the Swan slightly retract its wings in between beats, 828 01:31:52,175 --> 01:31:56,486 the sliding feathers ensure that the aerofoils still produces lift. 829 01:32:14,265 --> 01:32:17,144 As well as lightweight beaks and shortened tails, 830 01:32:17,796 --> 01:32:20,872 some of the bones of it's body became hollow. 831 01:32:29,788 --> 01:32:34,732 The result is an extremely efficient light weight flyer. 832 01:32:45,808 --> 01:32:49,229 We are traveling around 30 miles an hour now, 833 01:32:49,403 --> 01:32:54,951 and yet these birds could easily accelerate and leave us behind if they wanted to. 834 01:33:29,313 --> 01:33:33,571 So feathers, since they're first appeared on the bodies of Dinosaurs, 835 01:33:33,625 --> 01:33:36,125 have acquired several different functions. 836 01:33:37,416 --> 01:33:40,664 Initially they served to keep their owners warm. 837 01:33:41,792 --> 01:33:48,015 Then, some grew large and acquired color and were probably use in courtship displays. 838 01:33:50,510 --> 01:33:53,032 And only then, after millions of years, 839 01:33:53,098 --> 01:33:56,116 where they used to help their owners get into the air. 840 01:34:04,187 --> 01:34:11,028 So around 150 million years ago birds joined Pterosaurs and insects in the skies. 841 01:34:21,809 --> 01:34:27,496 Then, around 66 million years ago, came the global catastrophe 842 01:34:27,780 --> 01:34:33,187 that triggered the disappearance of a vast proportions of the animal life of this Planet. 843 01:34:41,143 --> 01:34:46,576 An asteroid hitting the Earth was the most likely cause of this mass extinction. 844 01:34:49,982 --> 01:34:53,985 In the devastation that followed, the dominants creatures of that age, 845 01:34:54,301 --> 01:34:56,801 the Dinosaurs, disappeared. 846 01:34:57,679 --> 01:35:00,490 The Pterosaurs were completely wipeout. 847 01:35:01,412 --> 01:35:04,415 And only a few of the Birds survived. 848 01:35:07,249 --> 01:35:11,855 The skies for a short period must have been relatively empty. 849 01:35:15,699 --> 01:35:19,655 But then, a new kind of flying animal appeared. 850 01:35:22,355 --> 01:35:27,550 Now is a chance for a group of furry warm blooded little creatures, 851 01:35:27,738 --> 01:35:31,859 that has been scampering around the feet of the Dinosaurs for several millions years. 852 01:35:32,461 --> 01:35:34,961 They were the mammals. 853 01:35:36,883 --> 01:35:40,534 The first of them to take to the air were doubtous gliders. 854 01:35:41,706 --> 01:35:45,051 And one mysterious creature still alive today, 855 01:35:45,632 --> 01:35:48,468 can give us an idea of what there were like. 856 01:35:50,956 --> 01:35:56,441 It lives in the rainforests of Borneo, and it called the Cobego. 857 01:35:59,397 --> 01:36:03,071 It has an enormous blanket of furry skin that stretched 858 01:36:03,338 --> 01:36:07,486 from the sides of its head right down to the very tip of its tail. 859 01:36:09,980 --> 01:36:15,356 But to see how he travel through the air, we must wait until nightfall. 860 01:37:00,902 --> 01:37:06,866 As soon as it lands, it regain the height it inevitably lost by clambering up the trunk. 861 01:37:17,302 --> 01:37:20,356 It by far the most skillful of the forest gliders, 862 01:37:20,568 --> 01:37:24,655 and can travel over a 100 meters in one leap. 863 01:37:40,068 --> 01:37:44,476 It's undoubtedly a very ancient animal, and some believe that it may well 864 01:37:44,542 --> 01:37:48,813 have survived virtually unchanged from that time long ago 865 01:37:49,027 --> 01:37:52,733 when mammals first took to the skies as gliders. 866 01:38:09,717 --> 01:38:13,747 But soon, the mammals deed better than that. 867 01:38:18,440 --> 01:38:25,377 This is a fossil that dates from about 52.5 million years ago. 868 01:38:26,069 --> 01:38:31,670 Here its head, a very well develop teeth, backbone and ribs, 869 01:38:32,762 --> 01:38:37,402 a long tail, hind legs, and most importantly of all, 870 01:38:37,567 --> 01:38:42,992 from our point of view, hands with enormously elongated fingers. 871 01:38:43,560 --> 01:38:46,587 And there was skin between those fingers. 872 01:38:47,301 --> 01:38:50,331 These were wings and they could flap. 873 01:38:50,564 --> 01:38:55,289 This is the earliest fossil yet discovered of a bat. 874 01:38:58,142 --> 01:39:01,352 We have new evidence to show exactly how a bat fingers 875 01:39:01,439 --> 01:39:04,342 first began to lengthen to support their wings. 876 01:39:06,651 --> 01:39:12,830 But we can understand how those early bats flew, by looking on their modern descendants. 877 01:39:22,884 --> 01:39:25,541 These are some of the largest. 878 01:39:31,718 --> 01:39:36,082 They so big, that they often called Flying Foxes. 879 01:39:43,155 --> 01:39:46,493 And they have a wingspan of over a meter. 880 01:39:54,865 --> 01:39:58,916 When you slow a bat flight down like this, you can see that its four fingers 881 01:39:58,979 --> 01:40:03,439 are spread wide under down stroke, keeping the membrane wide and taut, 882 01:40:03,480 --> 01:40:07,844 and then clump together on the up stroke, with just a thumb off the top three. 883 01:40:14,918 --> 01:40:20,733 This folding of the wings reduces the bat air resistance between each beat. 884 01:40:40,282 --> 01:40:44,974 To maximise the size of its wing, the back edge of the wing membrane 885 01:40:45,232 --> 01:40:47,732 is attached to the ankles. 886 01:40:49,908 --> 01:40:53,056 Bats roost by hanging upside down. 887 01:40:56,343 --> 01:41:00,057 And this is how they tend to spend their days. 888 01:41:02,054 --> 01:41:05,028 Is thought that the first mammals were nocturnal, 889 01:41:05,269 --> 01:41:09,304 that doubtless was the best thing to be out of the way of the Dinosaurs 890 01:41:09,388 --> 01:41:11,888 that were rampaging around during the day. 891 01:41:13,095 --> 01:41:17,298 So, the bats continue the nocturnal habit of their ancestors, 892 01:41:17,705 --> 01:41:22,682 and they are also inherited the acute sensors needed to move around at night. 893 01:41:23,018 --> 01:41:27,008 Eyes specially adapted to operating well in low light. 894 01:41:27,288 --> 01:41:31,896 And an acute sense of smell that enable them to find food in the dark. 895 01:41:32,824 --> 01:41:37,107 In any case, Birds already dominate in the daytime skies. 896 01:41:43,847 --> 01:41:50,800 With their wings of skin and nocturnal senses the Bats became a hugh global success. 897 01:41:51,989 --> 01:41:58,366 Today there are over 1,100 species of them, that's over a fifth of all mammals. 898 01:42:02,724 --> 01:42:08,069 So, by 50 million years ago, three groups of large backbone animals 899 01:42:08,233 --> 01:42:11,358 had joined the Insects in the air. 900 01:42:16,290 --> 01:42:19,651 The pioneers were reptiles, Pterosaurs, 901 01:42:19,736 --> 01:42:24,048 with membrane of skin stretch from elongated fingers. 902 01:42:31,475 --> 01:42:38,046 Then, came a group of Dinosaurs that acquired feathers and became Birds. 903 01:42:40,635 --> 01:42:46,314 But when the Pterosaurs and Dinosaurs were swept away in a global extinction event, 904 01:42:46,606 --> 01:42:50,711 the stage was set for the Birds and the newly emerge Bats 905 01:42:50,792 --> 01:42:53,920 between them to take command on the skies. 906 01:42:55,347 --> 01:43:00,632 Each of these two groups had evolved its on techniques for getting into the air, 907 01:43:00,935 --> 01:43:06,671 and each was destined to bring theirs skills to astonishing extremes. 908 01:43:08,440 --> 01:43:12,195 Next time, we see how Birds adapted and diversified 909 01:43:12,434 --> 01:43:16,602 to become the remarkable creatures we see in our skies today. 910 01:43:21,616 --> 01:43:24,116 Lethal hunters... 911 01:43:29,623 --> 01:43:34,779 formation flyers... an aerial acrobats. 912 01:43:38,378 --> 01:43:42,054 We explore how the Bats develop a new super sense 913 01:43:42,225 --> 01:43:45,709 that enable them to hunt in the pitch-blackness of the night. 914 01:43:47,733 --> 01:43:52,237 And we visit one spectacular place were the battle for the skies, 915 01:43:52,349 --> 01:43:57,186 between Insects, Bats and Birds still continues. 916 01:44:08,750 --> 01:44:12,893 Written and Presented by David Attenborough 917 01:46:03,810 --> 01:46:06,310 I'm several hundreds feet up in the air, 918 01:46:07,052 --> 01:46:12,649 up here, I might encounter perhaps a flying insect, although I haven't seen one yet, 919 01:46:12,853 --> 01:46:17,013 or maybe even a baby spider clinging to a gossamer of thready silk, 920 01:46:17,373 --> 01:46:24,222 which is their way of getting around. But by in large, this is the kingdom of the birds. 921 01:46:27,614 --> 01:46:32,710 The first birds flew about 150 million years ago. 922 01:46:33,575 --> 01:46:40,010 They spread around the globe, and evolved into a multitude of different kinds. 923 01:46:41,876 --> 01:46:44,376 Aerial acrobats... 924 01:46:48,290 --> 01:46:50,790 stealthy hunters... 925 01:46:53,835 --> 01:46:57,218 and some of the fastest creatures on the planet. 926 01:47:00,904 --> 01:47:07,676 Their extraordinary skills enable them to surpass Earth original flyers, the insects. 927 01:47:09,585 --> 01:47:15,824 But there is a vast kingdom that the birds do not control, the night skies. 928 01:47:17,312 --> 01:47:23,006 These are ruled by very different creatures, flying mammals. 929 01:47:23,516 --> 01:47:26,016 Bats. 930 01:47:28,521 --> 01:47:33,552 And in one spectacular place these two populations, 931 01:47:33,865 --> 01:47:36,530 of the night and the day, collide. 932 01:47:46,200 --> 01:47:55,283 ~ Conquest Of The Skies ~ 933 01:48:02,595 --> 01:48:08,659 TRIUMPH 934 01:48:11,074 --> 01:48:14,780 This is Segovia in central Spain. 935 01:48:18,267 --> 01:48:22,544 Some of the inhabitants of this gorge allow us to see very clearly 936 01:48:22,661 --> 01:48:27,192 how birds as a group have become so versatile in the air. 937 01:48:27,418 --> 01:48:30,723 Through the ability to change the shape and the size 938 01:48:30,841 --> 01:48:34,458 of their basic flying mechanism, their wing. 939 01:48:34,851 --> 01:48:38,375 And there is wonderful example of that just over here. 940 01:48:42,423 --> 01:48:45,692 You may think that birds are much the same when it comes to flight, 941 01:48:46,341 --> 01:48:50,719 but in fact different species need to fly in their own particularly way. 942 01:48:52,809 --> 01:48:56,082 This vulture is an airborne scavenger. 943 01:48:58,191 --> 01:49:00,839 It feeds on the bodies of dead animals. 944 01:49:02,809 --> 01:49:09,156 So, it need to spot any fresh carcass very quickly, and get to it before others claim it. 945 01:49:11,237 --> 01:49:14,579 Like most birds, it has superb eyesight. 946 01:49:16,392 --> 01:49:21,473 So, it climb high in the sky, constantly scanning the ground below, 947 01:49:21,937 --> 01:49:24,437 for hours at a time if need be. 948 01:49:28,404 --> 01:49:34,760 To fly in this highly specialize way, it is evolved a very distinctive kind of wing. 949 01:49:39,732 --> 01:49:43,567 To get up close to some of the many vultures that live in this area, 950 01:49:43,959 --> 01:49:48,797 I visiting a place where they regularly fed by conservationists. 951 01:49:53,444 --> 01:49:58,613 These are Griffon Vultures, one of the largest of all birds species, 952 01:49:59,166 --> 01:50:02,740 each one can weight up to 11 kilos. 953 01:50:04,249 --> 01:50:09,994 Lifting a 11 kilo body high into the sky takes a lot of energy, 954 01:50:11,387 --> 01:50:16,361 but the vultures don't supply that energy directly themselves. 955 01:50:19,255 --> 01:50:25,354 A clue of how they do so comes from observing their behavior at the start of the day. 956 01:50:28,566 --> 01:50:32,904 Those vultures roost and nest on ledges up there. 957 01:50:37,285 --> 01:50:43,102 They not early rises. That's because they rely on the sun to get airborne. 958 01:50:43,560 --> 01:50:48,072 As tha day warms up, patches of bare rock reflect the heat of the sun, 959 01:50:48,483 --> 01:50:52,948 forming columns of rising hot air known as thermals. 960 01:50:53,454 --> 01:50:56,808 And the vultures know exactly how to exploit those thermals, 961 01:50:56,895 --> 01:51:01,104 to be carry high in the sky with a minimum of effort. 962 01:51:10,800 --> 01:51:14,749 They have wings that have been shaped over millions of years 963 01:51:14,935 --> 01:51:18,425 to catch as much of that rising air as possible. 964 01:51:21,081 --> 01:51:26,545 They huge, very broad, with a span of over 2 meters. 965 01:51:44,069 --> 01:51:48,546 The riding thermals may not be as easy as it looks. 966 01:51:48,898 --> 01:51:52,121 A thermal is quite a narrow column of rising air, 967 01:51:52,247 --> 01:51:56,678 and to stay within it, a vulture has to make quite sharp turns. 968 01:51:56,853 --> 01:51:59,353 And that could lead to disaster. 969 01:52:00,995 --> 01:52:04,303 In a tight spiral, a vulture inside wing 970 01:52:04,470 --> 01:52:07,947 travel a shorter distance than its outer wing. 971 01:52:08,962 --> 01:52:12,191 And if we were to measure the speed of this inner wing, 972 01:52:12,325 --> 01:52:15,515 we will find that it moves much more slowly through the air. 973 01:52:15,690 --> 01:52:18,878 This mean it generates less lift. 974 01:52:19,521 --> 01:52:24,319 So little in fact, that the vulture could easily stall and drop from the sky. 975 01:52:27,940 --> 01:52:34,530 It avoid that by having special control over the feathers at the ends of its wings. 976 01:52:35,736 --> 01:52:38,626 They can be splayed so that they separate. 977 01:52:41,617 --> 01:52:45,997 As a result, each feather acts as a small extra wing, 978 01:52:46,071 --> 01:52:49,433 and together they increase overall lift. 979 01:52:50,240 --> 01:52:54,145 This enable the vulture to turn in a tight circle, 980 01:52:54,404 --> 01:52:59,242 and so hold its place in a thermal and soar upwards. 981 01:53:04,533 --> 01:53:08,709 Using this technique, a vulture can climbe to a height of a kilometer 982 01:53:08,856 --> 01:53:12,035 above the ground with scarcely of flap of its wings. 983 01:53:12,572 --> 01:53:15,277 And then, if it spot food down below, 984 01:53:15,443 --> 01:53:18,593 it can switch its flight technique and descend at speed. 985 01:53:29,167 --> 01:53:34,464 Once on the ground it has to compete with other vultures for the share of the feast. 986 01:53:39,909 --> 01:53:44,919 Now, those broad wings are useful to help muscle out it's rivals. 987 01:54:00,621 --> 01:54:04,489 And that can put those all important wings at risk. 988 01:54:06,539 --> 01:54:11,270 Bird bones being hollow and lightweight are also usually very fragile. 989 01:54:11,456 --> 01:54:16,125 And if a bird breaks it's wings that usually a death sentence, 990 01:54:16,285 --> 01:54:20,057 because most small birds have to feed every day or so. 991 01:54:20,698 --> 01:54:24,001 But this is the wingbone of the vulture 992 01:54:24,777 --> 01:54:29,738 and vultures are so big and can fill their stomach so much food 993 01:54:30,190 --> 01:54:34,400 that they can go without a meal for two or even three weeks. 994 01:54:34,827 --> 01:54:39,832 And as a concequence when these aggressive quarrelsome vultures have a row 995 01:54:39,982 --> 01:54:45,464 and perhaps injure one another, a broken wing can heal itself, 996 01:54:45,693 --> 01:54:52,430 and this is the wingbone of the vulture, as you can see, it has been broken and it has healed. 997 01:54:53,833 --> 01:54:57,184 It's owner may well have lived to soar again. 998 01:54:58,621 --> 01:55:02,318 This soaring tehnique can exploit not just a thermals 999 01:55:02,566 --> 01:55:06,394 but also winds deflected upwards by ridges and hills. 1000 01:55:10,345 --> 01:55:15,121 The same wing shape is used by other large birds to help them soar. 1001 01:55:18,540 --> 01:55:21,040 Eagles. 1002 01:55:22,693 --> 01:55:25,193 Pelicans. 1003 01:55:30,655 --> 01:55:35,020 And the bird that makes immense journey here to Spain every summer. 1004 01:55:48,765 --> 01:55:51,050 Two young storks. 1005 01:55:51,250 --> 01:55:55,609 Their parents come here every year to this small town in northern Spain 1006 01:55:55,970 --> 01:56:01,659 in order to mate and nest and rear their young all the way from Africa. 1007 01:56:01,746 --> 01:56:07,471 Some from as far south as the Cape. And they make that immense journey 1008 01:56:07,708 --> 01:56:11,123 by finding a thermal of a column of rising air. 1009 01:56:11,936 --> 01:56:15,576 Circling in it, allowing it to carry them high in the sky, 1010 01:56:16,058 --> 01:56:19,658 and then gliding off on the next stage of the journey 1011 01:56:19,744 --> 01:56:22,738 to find another thermal to take them back up again. 1012 01:56:23,866 --> 01:56:28,494 It's an extraordinary energy efficient way of travelling. 1013 01:56:32,979 --> 01:56:39,499 So broad wings and splade wingtips enabled larger birds to stay airborne. 1014 01:56:40,719 --> 01:56:46,819 But other birds faced very different challenges and so evolved different specialities. 1015 01:56:51,336 --> 01:56:55,911 To watch a bird that has evolved in to one of the worlds most skilful hunters, 1016 01:56:56,275 --> 01:56:59,389 I have comed to Italy and the city of Rome. 1017 01:57:03,593 --> 01:57:06,239 There is a bird that fly over these roofs, 1018 01:57:06,602 --> 01:57:11,071 that find its prey not on the ground, but in the air. 1019 01:57:11,592 --> 01:57:14,934 And it owe its success to its speed. 1020 01:57:15,280 --> 01:57:20,692 In fact, it said to be the fastest moving animal on Earth. The Peregrine. 1021 01:57:25,457 --> 01:57:28,229 Peregrines hunt other birds. 1022 01:57:30,109 --> 01:57:32,686 Many different kinds of birds now live in cities, 1023 01:57:32,797 --> 01:57:36,579 attracted by the food and shelter that is so easily found here. 1024 01:57:39,792 --> 01:57:44,202 And a tall building like this is an ideal lookout for a hunter. 1025 01:57:48,002 --> 01:57:51,292 Flying prey can move in any direction it chooses, 1026 01:57:51,442 --> 01:57:56,351 so a hunter has to be both, fast and agile if it to get a meal. 1027 01:57:59,366 --> 01:58:02,589 A peregrine wings have a very special shape. 1028 01:58:04,566 --> 01:58:07,528 They pointed and swept back. 1029 01:58:10,448 --> 01:58:15,070 If wings have a blunt end, air will swirl over that end, 1030 01:58:15,277 --> 01:58:17,777 forming trails of turbulents. 1031 01:58:18,892 --> 01:58:21,924 These act like brakes slowing a bird down. 1032 01:58:25,969 --> 01:58:30,974 But pointed wings had shrink that edge, and so reduce the turbulents. 1033 01:58:31,340 --> 01:58:35,957 Pulling the wings back towards the body, makes the bird even more streamlined. 1034 01:58:37,611 --> 01:58:41,796 And speed is crucial to a peregrine success. 1035 01:58:44,412 --> 01:58:50,329 It also has acute vision that enable it to spot prey over a mile away. 1036 01:58:51,464 --> 01:58:57,347 And for the peregrine that hunt in Rome, these birds are prime targets. 1037 01:58:59,212 --> 01:59:01,712 Starlings. 1038 01:59:04,666 --> 01:59:07,166 They too are fast flyers, 1039 01:59:07,949 --> 01:59:12,940 and their smaller size make them even more maneuverable. 1040 01:59:20,276 --> 01:59:24,563 So, to catch a starling a peregrine must be even faster, 1041 01:59:24,859 --> 01:59:30,055 and in order to gain speed and surprise, it attacks from above. 1042 01:59:34,093 --> 01:59:36,593 First, it climbs. 1043 01:59:41,840 --> 01:59:46,460 When it sees a group of its potential prey, it turns... 1044 01:59:47,648 --> 01:59:52,480 dives... and accelerate by beating its wings. 1045 02:00:08,258 --> 02:00:13,771 The starlings are still unaware of the danger hurtling toward them. 1046 02:00:19,614 --> 02:00:26,096 Finally the peregrine draws its wings back. This is called the stoop, 1047 02:00:26,508 --> 02:00:31,004 a superb streamline shape that slices through the air. 1048 02:00:32,852 --> 02:00:36,549 Now, it can reach speed of over 200 miles an hour. 1049 02:00:39,461 --> 02:00:42,995 As it neared its target, it open its wings 1050 02:00:43,060 --> 02:00:47,570 to slow its descent and makes its final launch. 1051 02:01:10,241 --> 02:01:14,605 Starlings in fact, are an abundance source of food for the peregrines. 1052 02:01:15,549 --> 02:01:21,248 They come into the city in the winter, attracted no doubt by the warmth in order to roost. 1053 02:01:23,310 --> 02:01:27,605 Every evening at dusk, the starlings start to arrive, 1054 02:01:28,621 --> 02:01:33,951 and they have a remarkable way of defending themselves against peregrines. 1055 02:01:35,174 --> 02:01:41,169 One that relies on their ability to fly together in tight formations as a flock. 1056 02:01:44,466 --> 02:01:50,872 And here they come, vast numbers of them, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands. 1057 02:01:51,988 --> 02:01:56,415 It's like a great black hailstorm, a blizzard of birds. 1058 02:02:19,428 --> 02:02:25,894 And now, some start to fly closely together and perform far more complex maneuvers. 1059 02:02:30,504 --> 02:02:37,426 Look how these great flocks come together, form a cloud, veer away and split, 1060 02:02:37,545 --> 02:02:41,441 It's a quite extraordinary piece of aerial navigation. 1061 02:02:46,284 --> 02:02:50,663 We still unsure exactly why they perform these elaborate dances, 1062 02:02:50,987 --> 02:02:54,370 but they often triggered by the arrival of a predator. 1063 02:02:55,813 --> 02:03:00,169 And today is no exception, because over there, 1064 02:03:00,438 --> 02:03:04,280 on one of those buildings I have seeing a peregrine. 1065 02:03:17,162 --> 02:03:21,392 Coming in a great numbers like this, is in itself a defense, 1066 02:03:21,453 --> 02:03:24,729 because if you surrounded by tens of thousands of others, 1067 02:03:24,978 --> 02:03:28,280 well, it's a good chance that the peregrine won't get you. 1068 02:03:32,735 --> 02:03:38,029 But the aerial ballet is part of a more complex defensive strategy. 1069 02:03:40,310 --> 02:03:44,446 When a peregrine does attack with its wings drawing back in its stoop, 1070 02:03:45,055 --> 02:03:49,848 the starlings flying in their tight formation coordinate their escape. 1071 02:03:52,471 --> 02:03:56,929 Instead of scattering in different directions when a struggler might be picked off, 1072 02:03:57,103 --> 02:04:01,193 they stick together, even when they make the sharpest of turns. 1073 02:04:03,606 --> 02:04:07,784 Recent studies analyzing the flight birds of these Roman flocks, 1074 02:04:08,032 --> 02:04:11,617 have now revealed how they manage to do this. 1075 02:04:15,344 --> 02:04:19,424 Just how they achieve this was not understood until very recently. 1076 02:04:20,749 --> 02:04:25,897 But now a team of physicists from Sapientia University in Rome 1077 02:04:26,156 --> 02:04:28,656 is beginning to find the answers. 1078 02:04:29,692 --> 02:04:32,618 We see these huge flocks of birds dancing in front of us 1079 02:04:32,871 --> 02:04:35,135 and every time that you look at them you wonder, 1080 02:04:35,170 --> 02:04:39,285 how it is possible that so many birds would be as only one entity. 1081 02:04:40,296 --> 02:04:46,693 They precisen series of cameras on a rooftop overlooking a favourite starling roostsite 1082 02:04:46,772 --> 02:04:49,864 just outside Rome's main railway station. 1083 02:04:56,787 --> 02:05:02,044 The cameras record the flocks complex manouvers in three-dimensions. 1084 02:05:14,009 --> 02:05:20,253 Advanced computer software then locks on to the flightpods of thousands of individuals, 1085 02:05:20,340 --> 02:05:22,840 with extraordinary precision. 1086 02:05:25,498 --> 02:05:29,174 Their painstaking work has produced a remarkable insight 1087 02:05:29,286 --> 02:05:32,490 into how starlings coordinate their behaviour. 1088 02:05:34,206 --> 02:05:39,695 The main result that we found is that each bird interacts with the seven birds around it. 1089 02:05:39,953 --> 02:05:46,021 Regardless of the distance between these birds it is the key to have a stable flock. 1090 02:05:48,050 --> 02:05:54,289 And individual starling is affectively linked to seven around it by an invisible web, 1091 02:05:54,387 --> 02:05:56,887 even if they drift far apart. 1092 02:05:58,015 --> 02:06:01,713 This is the hidden glue binding the flock together. 1093 02:06:05,302 --> 02:06:08,730 But it may also act as a communication channel. 1094 02:06:11,842 --> 02:06:15,907 A bird that turns to evade a predator triggers a ripple effect 1095 02:06:16,024 --> 02:06:19,385 that passes rapidly through the overlapping networks, 1096 02:06:19,585 --> 02:06:22,235 causing the whole flock to turn as one. 1097 02:06:33,648 --> 02:06:37,938 Special thing is that the information can be passed through the flock in milliseconds 1098 02:06:38,024 --> 02:06:41,761 and this allows them to escape very quickly from predators. 1099 02:06:44,990 --> 02:06:49,493 Most of the time the starlings flock defence keeps them alive. 1100 02:06:52,107 --> 02:06:58,160 But now and again the share spreed and surprise of peregrins diving attack prooves too strong. 1101 02:07:19,582 --> 02:07:22,548 Out of the millions of starlings in the skies 1102 02:07:22,748 --> 02:07:26,176 only a few will fall pray to the peregrins tonight. 1103 02:07:38,159 --> 02:07:42,883 As the light finally fades, the flock suddenly descends into the trees 1104 02:07:43,065 --> 02:07:45,565 that will be their roost for the night. 1105 02:07:46,378 --> 02:07:51,067 The peregrines sharp eyesight doesn't operate nearly so well in the dark. 1106 02:07:52,445 --> 02:07:57,449 So now, the starlings are safe... until tomorrow that is. 1107 02:08:02,856 --> 02:08:05,511 6,000 miles away in South America, 1108 02:08:05,721 --> 02:08:08,948 there are other birds with a very different skill. 1109 02:08:11,710 --> 02:08:14,265 And they also find their food on the wind. 1110 02:08:17,953 --> 02:08:23,110 In the Cloud Forest of Ecuador there is a plentiful supply of a type of food 1111 02:08:23,285 --> 02:08:26,954 produce by plants to attract flying animals. 1112 02:08:28,255 --> 02:08:30,755 Nectar. 1113 02:08:32,310 --> 02:08:39,054 Around 130 million years ago, plants recruited insects to transport pollen 1114 02:08:39,201 --> 02:08:44,261 from one flower to another by bribing them with a sugar rich drink. 1115 02:08:46,362 --> 02:08:50,315 Birds when they first evolved were unable to collect it, 1116 02:08:50,426 --> 02:08:54,885 because there where seldom something solid nearby, on which they could perch. 1117 02:08:58,432 --> 02:09:00,932 Then, around 30 million years ago, 1118 02:09:01,176 --> 02:09:05,187 a kind of bird appeared that had no need of such a perch. 1119 02:09:07,470 --> 02:09:09,970 Hummingbirds. 1120 02:09:12,664 --> 02:09:15,164 They could hover. 1121 02:09:26,990 --> 02:09:30,895 They do so by beating their wings extremely swiftly, 1122 02:09:31,000 --> 02:09:34,832 so fast in fact, that they make a humming noise. 1123 02:09:44,082 --> 02:09:48,856 The largest hummingbird beat its wings around 14 times a second, 1124 02:09:49,310 --> 02:09:54,657 but some tiny species are able to do so 80 times a second. 1125 02:10:08,105 --> 02:10:12,168 To fly in this extraordinary way, hummingbirds have changed 1126 02:10:12,330 --> 02:10:15,734 the structure of their wings and the way they beat them. 1127 02:10:17,014 --> 02:10:20,122 Here in Ecuador, scientist Doug Altshuler 1128 02:10:20,261 --> 02:10:23,318 is working to analyse exactly how they do so. 1129 02:10:27,713 --> 02:10:32,718 Hummingbirds are remarkable animals, they have extreme adaptations in physiology and anatomy, 1130 02:10:33,038 --> 02:10:36,741 and they also have a very unique behavior, they can hover, 1131 02:10:36,963 --> 02:10:40,712 and the approach that we have taken is to study how those 1132 02:10:40,811 --> 02:10:44,757 physiological and anatomical adaptations determine their hovering ability. 1133 02:10:48,698 --> 02:10:54,563 Using High-Speed cameras, he record the mechanics of their flight in minute detail. 1134 02:10:59,489 --> 02:11:03,098 He can slowdown the action by around 40 times, 1135 02:11:03,298 --> 02:11:06,689 and so observe exactly what's taking place. 1136 02:11:11,191 --> 02:11:14,361 Most birds flap their wings up and down, 1137 02:11:14,460 --> 02:11:18,430 but hummingbirds flap theirs more like insects. 1138 02:11:20,251 --> 02:11:22,946 They twist their wings around between strokes, 1139 02:11:23,028 --> 02:11:28,170 and so can generate lift when flapping both forwards and backwards. 1140 02:11:33,860 --> 02:11:38,034 Doing this at high speed put a huge straying on their wings. 1141 02:11:42,021 --> 02:11:46,221 So, to withstand it, the wings have a special structure. 1142 02:11:48,271 --> 02:11:52,012 The hummingbird wing is very stiff, and undergo a few changes in shape 1143 02:11:52,064 --> 02:11:54,564 as it rapidly beats back and forth. 1144 02:12:03,907 --> 02:12:07,829 They owe this stiffness to a modification of the bones. 1145 02:12:11,018 --> 02:12:14,918 The arm bones have shrunk, but the bones of the hand 1146 02:12:14,998 --> 02:12:18,652 have elongated and support most of the wing surface. 1147 02:12:21,465 --> 02:12:24,372 Twisting this wing of the shoulder and at the wrist 1148 02:12:24,592 --> 02:12:27,896 produces the hummingbird distinctive wing beat. 1149 02:12:34,960 --> 02:12:40,340 Doug is also investigating one of the great mysteries of hummingbird flight. 1150 02:12:41,817 --> 02:12:46,343 Their ability to move sideways in mid-hover. 1151 02:12:47,630 --> 02:12:51,561 Hummingbirds are able to track flowers that are moving back and forth in the wind, 1152 02:12:51,719 --> 02:12:54,219 and this was something I always wanted to know more about. 1153 02:12:56,149 --> 02:12:58,860 To replicate the swaying motion of a flower, 1154 02:12:59,018 --> 02:13:03,164 Doug places a reservoir of nectar on a mechanical slider. 1155 02:13:07,706 --> 02:13:10,490 Befor long, he has a volunteer. 1156 02:13:19,306 --> 02:13:25,583 Amazingly, it manages to track sideways to keep-up with the slider, and still feed. 1157 02:13:27,291 --> 02:13:31,381 The bird is exploiting an unexpected feature of its wing beat, 1158 02:13:31,680 --> 02:13:36,716 not the flapping itself, but the twists at the end of each stroke. 1159 02:13:37,291 --> 02:13:39,935 During hovering flight, as the wings come forward, 1160 02:13:40,033 --> 02:13:43,204 they rotate symmetrically, so the froces remain in balance, 1161 02:13:43,411 --> 02:13:48,928 but if they instead rotate differently, so that one wing rotate before the other, 1162 02:13:49,142 --> 02:13:51,417 then the forces are no longer in balance, 1163 02:13:51,477 --> 02:13:55,468 and this asymmetry can be sufficient to push them to one side of the other. 1164 02:13:59,702 --> 02:14:04,905 So, a combination of modified wing bones, and precise control of wing motion, 1165 02:14:05,084 --> 02:14:09,634 gives hummingbirds the aerial agility they need to collect nectar. 1166 02:14:10,997 --> 02:14:16,092 And they need plenty of it, hovering burns a huge amount of fuel. 1167 02:14:18,221 --> 02:14:23,559 All hummingbirds have to constantly top at their tacks with high energy nectar. 1168 02:14:24,668 --> 02:14:28,809 And when supply are low, competition can be fierce. 1169 02:14:33,736 --> 02:14:37,460 Now, their flying skills are put to a very different use. 1170 02:14:38,612 --> 02:14:41,112 To fight off rivals. 1171 02:15:15,876 --> 02:15:21,419 So, different birds adapted their wings to fly in highly specialise ways. 1172 02:15:22,655 --> 02:15:27,158 Some began to hunt the Earth first flyers, the insects, 1173 02:15:28,929 --> 02:15:33,145 and in that battle, there is now no real contest. 1174 02:15:45,593 --> 02:15:48,876 But because most birds rely for so much of their success 1175 02:15:49,167 --> 02:15:54,937 on their exceptional eyesight, there is one major habitat that is largely close to them, 1176 02:15:56,650 --> 02:15:59,150 not a place, but a time, 1177 02:16:02,200 --> 02:16:04,700 the night. 1178 02:16:06,918 --> 02:16:13,362 In the British countryside however, there is a bird that can fly in the dark. 1179 02:16:14,705 --> 02:16:21,350 The Barn Owl and one of its favorite meals is a Field Mouse. 1180 02:16:23,037 --> 02:16:26,190 But first, it has to find it in the dark. 1181 02:16:28,180 --> 02:16:32,485 A mouse is extremely alert to the approach of a predator. 1182 02:16:38,506 --> 02:16:42,712 But the Barn owl has wings specially adapted for stealth, 1183 02:16:44,961 --> 02:16:48,282 and senses that can penetrate darkness. 1184 02:17:06,058 --> 02:17:11,611 Its eyes are very sensitive in low light, but even if the mouse is out of sight, 1185 02:17:11,690 --> 02:17:16,859 it's still not safe, the owl's hearing is also very acute. 1186 02:17:17,599 --> 02:17:23,018 Those two disks on its face channel sound into its two ears, 1187 02:17:23,299 --> 02:17:26,523 which are on a slightly different level on the head, 1188 02:17:26,913 --> 02:17:31,533 and that difference enables the bird to pinpoint the source of the sound, 1189 02:17:31,675 --> 02:17:35,103 whether it's in the air, or down on the ground. 1190 02:17:35,571 --> 02:17:41,888 But in order to hear that sound, its wing beats have to be very very quiet, 1191 02:17:42,634 --> 02:17:47,139 and the way to achieve that, we can see when it go hunting. 1192 02:18:08,538 --> 02:18:13,844 The key reason for it silent flight lies in the nature of its wing feathers. 1193 02:18:15,441 --> 02:18:19,865 Along the back edge, their fringe is frayed and tatty. 1194 02:18:21,741 --> 02:18:24,426 Most birds wings have a hard edge, 1195 02:18:24,678 --> 02:18:27,553 and this can cause quite a loud noise. 1196 02:18:27,695 --> 02:18:33,588 The source is turbulents produce when air flowing over the wing rub against its surface. 1197 02:18:34,323 --> 02:18:37,455 When this swirling air meet a hard back edge, 1198 02:18:37,581 --> 02:18:41,423 the sudden drop-off hugely amplifies the noise. 1199 02:18:43,361 --> 02:18:49,233 But the Barn Owl tatty feathers avoid that, by creating a softer edge, 1200 02:18:49,414 --> 02:18:53,523 they cushion the turbulent air and so reduce noise. 1201 02:19:02,692 --> 02:19:07,241 So, silent flight allow the owl to hear its prey, 1202 02:19:08,549 --> 02:19:11,049 and conceal its approach. 1203 02:19:14,547 --> 02:19:19,958 But to position itself for the kill it need to fly extremely slowly, 1204 02:19:20,608 --> 02:19:24,995 and to achieve that it has particularly broad wings. 1205 02:19:33,458 --> 02:19:39,121 This slow silent approach leaves a field mouse little chance of escape. 1206 02:20:02,837 --> 02:20:05,895 On nights, when there is thick clouds or no moon, 1207 02:20:06,270 --> 02:20:09,559 even an owl sensitive eyes struggle. 1208 02:20:16,199 --> 02:20:20,163 But there are creatures that have such highly specialise senses 1209 02:20:20,391 --> 02:20:24,200 that they able to navigate in total darkness. 1210 02:20:26,254 --> 02:20:30,365 Among insects, there are some moths who their elaborate antenna 1211 02:20:30,426 --> 02:20:33,633 are able to pick-up the scent of food or a mate. 1212 02:20:37,756 --> 02:20:40,039 And there are those nocturnal animals, 1213 02:20:40,199 --> 02:20:44,643 the last group of flying creatures to appear on Earth, the bats. 1214 02:20:46,758 --> 02:20:51,514 To see how they battle with the insects for dominate of the night skies, 1215 02:20:51,787 --> 02:20:55,243 we heading into the rainforests of Borneo. 1216 02:21:12,014 --> 02:21:15,914 Many bats find their food not by sight or smell, 1217 02:21:16,078 --> 02:21:20,436 but by using a very different and highly advance guiding system. 1218 02:21:22,296 --> 02:21:26,780 One way to find them, is to search for their ideal home, 1219 02:21:27,639 --> 02:21:32,150 a place like that deep black cave beneath me. 1220 02:21:33,424 --> 02:21:37,622 If you fly at night, there is no better place to spend the day 1221 02:21:38,331 --> 02:21:40,831 than in a cave like that. 1222 02:21:46,103 --> 02:21:48,670 This is Gomantong. 1223 02:21:57,996 --> 02:22:04,044 The cave is a vast network of underground tunnels and cathedrals size cabins. 1224 02:22:13,589 --> 02:22:18,206 It was carve out by streams of water over millions of years. 1225 02:22:23,314 --> 02:22:29,201 And now, it's home to a remarkable community of cave dwelling specialists. 1226 02:22:40,999 --> 02:22:46,415 To find the creatures I'm looking for, I'm been winch high up towards the ceiling, 1227 02:22:46,811 --> 02:22:51,576 where the towering walls make ideal roost sites for flying animals. 1228 02:23:02,002 --> 02:23:05,888 These little birds fly pass me are Swiftlets 1229 02:23:06,012 --> 02:23:10,112 that have made their nests on the walls of the cave. 1230 02:23:11,850 --> 02:23:16,782 They are active during the day, and they leave the cave to hunt insects. 1231 02:23:19,122 --> 02:23:23,880 The bats, that are I'm interesting in, are further behind me in the semidarkness, 1232 02:23:24,027 --> 02:23:26,527 and there are sleep now, during the day. 1233 02:23:27,711 --> 02:23:30,890 The bats are scarcely the size of mice, 1234 02:23:31,225 --> 02:23:34,956 their wings are constructed with very long fingers, 1235 02:23:35,138 --> 02:23:38,219 and they hang by their feet from the rock. 1236 02:23:40,366 --> 02:23:42,663 Although there are few of the bats there, 1237 02:23:42,832 --> 02:23:45,993 deeper in this cave they exist in huge numbers. 1238 02:23:53,592 --> 02:23:58,698 To find their roosts we heading still deeper into Gomantong cave. 1239 02:24:12,578 --> 02:24:17,750 High on the rocky cave ceiling above me, hidden in the darkness, 1240 02:24:17,853 --> 02:24:21,069 there are vast numbers of bats. 1241 02:24:21,377 --> 02:24:24,140 You can get some idea of how many there must be, 1242 02:24:24,406 --> 02:24:30,839 because of this huge dune behind me, that form of their droppings, 1243 02:24:31,222 --> 02:24:35,398 and if you see little moving glimpse on the surface, 1244 02:24:36,169 --> 02:24:40,947 that comes from an army of cockroachs which are chewing their way 1245 02:24:41,099 --> 02:24:45,379 through the bats droppings to extract the last particles of nutriment. 1246 02:24:51,273 --> 02:24:56,414 Some pepole think there are a million bats up here in this cave. 1247 02:25:00,442 --> 02:25:03,264 It's impossible to see them in the gloom, 1248 02:25:05,290 --> 02:25:08,494 but special night vision cameras can reveal them, 1249 02:25:08,773 --> 02:25:12,078 densely pack crowds hanging form the ceiling. 1250 02:25:17,412 --> 02:25:23,013 Their tiny eyes are adapted to low light, but they cannot penetrate the blackness. 1251 02:25:24,620 --> 02:25:27,623 Millions of years ago however, these bats evolve 1252 02:25:27,721 --> 02:25:32,896 an extraordinary guiding system known as echolocation or sonar. 1253 02:25:38,524 --> 02:25:44,442 A bat produces extremely hyper sounds in its throat, and then project them forward. 1254 02:25:47,214 --> 02:25:50,973 We have slow the sounds down, but can still only hear them 1255 02:25:51,166 --> 02:25:54,107 by converting them to lower frequencies. 1256 02:25:56,182 --> 02:26:01,539 They bounce of the walls as echoes and are detected by the bat huge ears. 1257 02:26:04,601 --> 02:26:07,541 These are in constant movement and enable the bat 1258 02:26:07,613 --> 02:26:10,876 to map its surroundings with remarkable precision. 1259 02:26:22,994 --> 02:26:26,283 But these bats not only need to find their way in the dark, 1260 02:26:26,482 --> 02:26:29,584 they also need to find their food. 1261 02:26:30,748 --> 02:26:33,248 Night flying insects. 1262 02:26:33,996 --> 02:26:36,496 And among them are moths. 1263 02:26:37,727 --> 02:26:41,640 Locking-on to these moving targets is a supreme test 1264 02:26:41,847 --> 02:26:44,347 for the bats echolocation system. 1265 02:26:46,067 --> 02:26:50,723 As one homes in, its sonar beam switches into attack mode, 1266 02:26:50,872 --> 02:26:53,372 increasing the rate of its pulses. 1267 02:27:04,542 --> 02:27:08,992 This enables it to precisely pinpoint the location of its prey. 1268 02:27:11,127 --> 02:27:15,871 But in the battle of the nightskies the bats don't have it all in their own way. 1269 02:27:17,749 --> 02:27:23,267 A team of scientists in Borneo is studing the way bats interact with their pray. 1270 02:27:25,524 --> 02:27:27,993 First, they catch the bat into the trap 1271 02:27:28,168 --> 02:27:32,285 that uses thin wires to divert to main in the pouch below. 1272 02:27:33,333 --> 02:27:35,833 There it is. - Nice. 1273 02:27:37,416 --> 02:27:39,916 Ye this is gorgeous. 1274 02:27:47,112 --> 02:27:51,589 Bats and moths have could evolved for almost 60 million years 1275 02:27:51,728 --> 02:27:55,685 and so what we doing here with this giant tent and all these cameras 1276 02:27:55,892 --> 02:28:00,923 is to trying figure out what's happening in this ancient battle. 1277 02:28:03,191 --> 02:28:08,487 Trying to understand how moths survive a bat attack. 1278 02:28:08,687 --> 02:28:11,187 Everything set up here? - Yes, everything ready to go. - Awesome. 1279 02:28:15,034 --> 02:28:18,292 This tent acts as an controlled flight arena, 1280 02:28:18,385 --> 02:28:23,153 in which every movement and sound can be recorded in minute detail. 1281 02:28:23,996 --> 02:28:28,639 Filming these interactions with multiple cameras in 3-D and ultrasonic microphones, 1282 02:28:28,707 --> 02:28:33,733 we can see how these interaction unfold, and hear how they unfold. 1283 02:28:36,105 --> 02:28:41,838 These studies have revealed that moths do not always fall prey to the bat attacks. 1284 02:28:43,282 --> 02:28:46,879 We know that many moths have bat detecting ears 1285 02:28:47,069 --> 02:28:51,678 they can hear the bats coming, they hear their echolocation cries 1286 02:28:51,790 --> 02:28:55,018 and dive out of the sky stop flying. 1287 02:28:55,920 --> 02:28:58,420 You got it? - There you go. 1288 02:29:00,315 --> 02:29:05,702 But the teams works identified a moth, with very different defence strategy. 1289 02:29:06,783 --> 02:29:12,141 Playing recordings of a bat sounds to this moth reveals a remarkable ability. 1290 02:29:14,258 --> 02:29:17,973 Here in Borneo, we recently discover that Hawk Moths 1291 02:29:18,048 --> 02:29:23,264 respond to these echolocation cries with their own sounds. 1292 02:29:24,840 --> 02:29:27,340 Hawk Moth is now direction. 1293 02:29:29,349 --> 02:29:33,698 Hawk Moths do with the tip of their abdomen with modified genitals, 1294 02:29:33,910 --> 02:29:37,416 they rub the genitals against the inside of the abdomen, 1295 02:29:37,655 --> 02:29:40,873 and reply to this bat attack. 1296 02:29:41,732 --> 02:29:45,779 The moth is tether to keep it in range of the cameras and microphones, 1297 02:29:46,632 --> 02:29:49,284 then a bat is released. 1298 02:29:59,849 --> 02:30:05,497 As the bat approaches the moth, its sonar pulse switches to attack mode, 1299 02:30:07,181 --> 02:30:09,596 but now the Hawk Moth responds, 1300 02:30:09,696 --> 02:30:14,914 sending its own rasping sound back with astonishing effect. 1301 02:30:15,878 --> 02:30:21,813 At the last moment, the bat appears to lose track of the moth, and fails to catch it. 1302 02:30:22,910 --> 02:30:27,552 We have shown that these moth sounds actually jam the bat sonar, 1303 02:30:27,663 --> 02:30:31,616 they interfere with the returning echoes from the insect, 1304 02:30:31,750 --> 02:30:34,943 and causes the bat to miss the moth. 1305 02:30:38,367 --> 02:30:42,079 The team has discovered that insects are fighting back 1306 02:30:42,171 --> 02:30:45,399 in the ongoing battle for the night skies. 1307 02:30:48,142 --> 02:30:53,947 But there are, of course, plenty of other flying insects with no such defenses. 1308 02:30:55,208 --> 02:31:00,460 and they live in vast numbers in the forest outside Gomantong cave. 1309 02:31:02,579 --> 02:31:05,569 So, every evening as dusk arrive, 1310 02:31:06,542 --> 02:31:11,053 the bats leave the safety of their secluded home to hunt. 1311 02:31:17,602 --> 02:31:21,352 And now, the bats are been in use their echolocation skill 1312 02:31:21,724 --> 02:31:25,284 to fly out from their roosts in the depths of the cave, 1313 02:31:25,558 --> 02:31:30,161 coming close to the ceiling and then wheezing out through this little entrance here. 1314 02:31:38,619 --> 02:31:41,288 They don't collide with the roof, they don't collide with one another, 1315 02:31:41,611 --> 02:31:45,359 or even with me, all to that echolocation. There they go! 1316 02:31:56,595 --> 02:32:00,328 But this is just a trickle, the main exodus 1317 02:32:00,406 --> 02:32:03,816 is taking place up a chimney that's deeper in the cave. 1318 02:32:08,552 --> 02:32:13,595 To watch close-up the way the bats achieve their million strong mass departure, 1319 02:32:13,932 --> 02:32:19,742 I'm being hold-up 200 feet into the tunnel which serves as one of the cave main exits. 1320 02:32:23,764 --> 02:32:26,849 At the top, there is a gaping hole. 1321 02:32:29,794 --> 02:32:33,159 And now, the bats are preparing to leave. 1322 02:32:40,993 --> 02:32:45,195 They have assemble in a relatively small chamber close to the exit, 1323 02:32:45,515 --> 02:32:49,245 and are flying round and round in a great swirling crowd, 1324 02:32:49,691 --> 02:32:52,191 waiting dor day light to fade. 1325 02:32:55,182 --> 02:32:57,682 And now, off they go. 1326 02:33:42,186 --> 02:33:46,467 This refire of dusk is the moment when the two communities, 1327 02:33:46,621 --> 02:33:51,614 the day flyers and the night flyers may encounter one another in the air. 1328 02:33:53,787 --> 02:33:57,023 Outside danger awaits, 1329 02:33:57,487 --> 02:34:00,825 hunters belonging to that other great group of animals 1330 02:34:00,917 --> 02:34:04,810 with which their shares the skies... birds. 1331 02:34:07,752 --> 02:34:11,010 Hawks, Eagles and Kites. 1332 02:34:18,923 --> 02:34:21,875 They are why the bats were reluctant to leave, 1333 02:34:22,791 --> 02:34:28,496 and why they now do so in one continuous torrent, there is safety in numbers. 1334 02:34:32,021 --> 02:34:34,557 But some will pay the price. 1335 02:35:18,070 --> 02:35:22,567 The vast majority, of course, make it out over the forest canopy, 1336 02:35:22,885 --> 02:35:27,569 and there they can use that skill of echolocation to find food. 1337 02:35:45,443 --> 02:35:48,822 The way that different animals have colonise the skies 1338 02:35:49,209 --> 02:35:53,677 is surely one of the most remarkable stories in the natural world. 1339 02:36:00,303 --> 02:36:05,872 First to do so, over 320 million years ago, were the insects. 1340 02:36:07,879 --> 02:36:11,766 They had no competition for about 100 million years. 1341 02:36:13,742 --> 02:36:19,864 But then, much larger flying animals took in the air. Reptiles. The pterosaurs. 1342 02:36:22,703 --> 02:36:28,819 Around 70 million years later still, one branch of the dinosaurs acquired feathers, 1343 02:36:29,226 --> 02:36:32,995 and that enable their owners to get airborne. 1344 02:36:33,717 --> 02:36:36,217 The birds had arrived. 1345 02:36:37,866 --> 02:36:41,196 And last in, about 60 million years ago, 1346 02:36:41,357 --> 02:36:46,115 the night skies where invaded by mammals, the bats. 1347 02:36:48,748 --> 02:36:53,580 And here, in Gomantong cave, the three surviving groups of flyers, 1348 02:36:53,761 --> 02:37:00,251 insects, birds and bats, are still lock together in an ongoing evolutionary struggle. 1349 02:37:07,412 --> 02:37:10,342 So, the battle for the supremacy of the skies, 1350 02:37:10,648 --> 02:37:13,355 that started over 300 million years ago, 1351 02:37:13,590 --> 02:37:18,158 still continues every day around the world. 1352 02:37:25,696 --> 02:37:29,886 Written and Presented by David Attenborough 1353 02:37:33,886 --> 02:37:49,886 Texting: Bobiko, danel32. Timing: danel32.130038

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