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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:29,320 --> 00:00:34,439 Our isles were once covered by ice. 2 00:00:34,440 --> 00:00:36,840 As the Earth warmed, 3 00:00:36,841 --> 00:00:41,361 grasses became the first plants to reclaim the land. 4 00:00:43,561 --> 00:00:44,840 Today, 5 00:00:44,841 --> 00:00:48,522 they cover more than 40% of it. 6 00:00:50,162 --> 00:00:53,041 Most of that is farmed, 7 00:00:53,042 --> 00:00:55,881 but when these lands are well managed, 8 00:00:55,882 --> 00:00:59,042 they still provide homes for wildlife. 9 00:01:04,003 --> 00:01:06,363 It's early spring. 10 00:01:07,683 --> 00:01:09,362 In a field of barley, 11 00:01:09,363 --> 00:01:12,924 a male brown hare is searching for a female. 12 00:01:15,844 --> 00:01:18,483 Using his excellent sense of smell, 13 00:01:18,484 --> 00:01:21,524 he can tell that there is one nearby. 14 00:01:29,845 --> 00:01:33,085 But getting to mate with her won't be easy 15 00:01:38,966 --> 00:01:42,325 He must deal with three challenges, 16 00:01:42,326 --> 00:01:44,326 before she'll consider him. 17 00:01:47,287 --> 00:01:48,606 First... 18 00:01:48,607 --> 00:01:49,966 DRUM ROLL 19 00:01:49,967 --> 00:01:51,127 ..boxing. 20 00:01:52,847 --> 00:01:54,366 To impress her, 21 00:01:54,367 --> 00:01:56,486 he must match her strength, 22 00:01:56,487 --> 00:02:00,687 but be careful not to hurt her. 23 00:02:00,688 --> 00:02:03,647 Only if he can hold his own, 24 00:02:03,648 --> 00:02:06,608 will he be allowed to move to the next stage. 25 00:02:14,449 --> 00:02:18,729 He puts up a good fight and, so, passes her first test. 26 00:02:20,329 --> 00:02:21,609 Her second test? 27 00:02:22,889 --> 00:02:24,570 Stamina. 28 00:02:27,370 --> 00:02:30,529 Hares are Britain's fastest mammal, 29 00:02:30,530 --> 00:02:34,050 and can reach speeds of 45mph. 30 00:02:37,251 --> 00:02:40,210 The chase attracts other males, 31 00:02:40,211 --> 00:02:43,011 all fired up and eager to mate. 32 00:02:48,892 --> 00:02:50,411 His final test 33 00:02:50,412 --> 00:02:52,411 is to get rid of his rivals. 34 00:02:52,412 --> 00:02:55,052 HIGH-SPIRITED MUSIC PLAYS 35 00:03:00,653 --> 00:03:03,572 Despite their competition, 36 00:03:03,573 --> 00:03:06,253 he hangs on to the top spot. 37 00:03:11,094 --> 00:03:14,094 But distracted hares must be careful. 38 00:03:15,814 --> 00:03:18,574 OMINOUS MUSIC PLAYS 39 00:03:23,495 --> 00:03:27,255 Their courtship competitions have made them conspicuous. 40 00:03:32,655 --> 00:03:37,376 A golden eagle can spot one from two miles away. 41 00:03:41,936 --> 00:03:45,015 In a straight line, the eagle is faster, 42 00:03:45,016 --> 00:03:47,016 but by twisting and turning, 43 00:03:47,017 --> 00:03:49,737 the hare dodges its attacks. 44 00:03:52,097 --> 00:03:55,816 Nonetheless, she is relentless. 45 00:03:55,817 --> 00:03:58,978 DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS 46 00:04:11,019 --> 00:04:14,258 Golden eagles once chased hares 47 00:04:14,259 --> 00:04:16,939 across all of our isles. 48 00:04:18,659 --> 00:04:21,538 But as our wild grasslands have diminished, 49 00:04:21,539 --> 00:04:24,860 these contests have become a rare sight. 50 00:04:44,501 --> 00:04:49,621 When I was a boy, back in the 1930s, growing up in Leicester, 51 00:04:49,622 --> 00:04:56,261 I spent days on my bicycle exploring the local countryside. 52 00:04:56,262 --> 00:05:01,302 Back then, it was easy to find hay meadows like this one, 53 00:05:01,303 --> 00:05:04,102 rich with wild flowers 54 00:05:04,103 --> 00:05:06,702 and swarming with butterflies 55 00:05:06,703 --> 00:05:09,702 and insects of all kinds. 56 00:05:09,703 --> 00:05:14,303 But since then, we have lost more than 95% 57 00:05:14,304 --> 00:05:17,103 of these wonderful habitats. 58 00:05:17,104 --> 00:05:19,543 In this episode, 59 00:05:19,544 --> 00:05:25,064 we will show why our wildlife needs rich, wild grasslands 60 00:05:25,065 --> 00:05:28,904 and take you on a journey from the rare coastal flower meadows 61 00:05:28,905 --> 00:05:31,424 of the Scottish Hebrides, 62 00:05:31,425 --> 00:05:33,904 right up to the heather moorlands 63 00:05:33,905 --> 00:05:36,425 in the high mountains. 64 00:05:36,426 --> 00:05:39,146 WIND WHISTLES 65 00:05:43,106 --> 00:05:47,907 Few things can tame this fierce landscape... 66 00:05:54,987 --> 00:05:58,106 ..but grasses can. 67 00:05:58,107 --> 00:06:01,307 Here in the Outer Hebrides, 68 00:06:01,308 --> 00:06:04,587 their roots have bound the loose grains together 69 00:06:04,588 --> 00:06:08,068 and created a formidable barrier. 70 00:06:11,349 --> 00:06:15,588 Miles of sand dunes form a natural sea wall, 71 00:06:15,589 --> 00:06:20,548 protecting one of the most important habitats in the world - 72 00:06:20,549 --> 00:06:22,869 the machair grassland. 73 00:06:22,870 --> 00:06:25,030 BIRDSONG AND BUZZING 74 00:06:27,550 --> 00:06:31,669 5,500 years of traditional, non-intensive farming 75 00:06:31,670 --> 00:06:36,990 on shell-sand soils has created these rich, wild flower meadows, 76 00:06:36,991 --> 00:06:39,831 unique to Scotland and Ireland. 77 00:06:42,191 --> 00:06:44,150 Free from pesticides, 78 00:06:44,151 --> 00:06:47,871 they are home to hundreds of rare flowers and insects. 79 00:06:47,872 --> 00:06:50,592 BUZZING 80 00:06:52,112 --> 00:06:58,071 Each spring, the machair becomes a nursery for ground-nesting birds. 81 00:06:58,072 --> 00:07:00,473 CHIRPING 82 00:07:01,633 --> 00:07:03,832 It's alive with chicks, 83 00:07:03,833 --> 00:07:07,793 all doing their best to escape from their parents. 84 00:07:10,313 --> 00:07:12,513 Since 1960, 85 00:07:12,514 --> 00:07:14,553 lapwing numbers in Britain and Ireland 86 00:07:14,554 --> 00:07:17,554 have dropped by 80%... 87 00:07:20,194 --> 00:07:23,514 ..which makes every one of these chicks 88 00:07:23,515 --> 00:07:24,955 very valuable. 89 00:07:26,795 --> 00:07:30,474 Just a day old, this youngster is starting off on 90 00:07:30,475 --> 00:07:33,195 its first food-finding mission. 91 00:07:40,676 --> 00:07:43,515 Common gulls patrol the nursery, 92 00:07:43,516 --> 00:07:45,876 hoping to pick off an unwary chick. 93 00:07:52,877 --> 00:07:56,396 Adult lapwings have excellent eyesight, 94 00:07:56,397 --> 00:07:59,797 and attack at the first sign of threat. 95 00:07:59,798 --> 00:08:01,197 DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS 96 00:08:01,198 --> 00:08:03,118 SQUAWKING 97 00:08:07,798 --> 00:08:11,199 And there are other wading birds here, too... 98 00:08:14,359 --> 00:08:19,039 ..and a multi-species air force takes to the wing. 99 00:08:24,200 --> 00:08:26,879 Alarm calls warn all the chicks, 100 00:08:26,880 --> 00:08:29,759 whatever their species, to stay hidden. 101 00:08:29,760 --> 00:08:31,040 SIREN CALL 102 00:08:46,562 --> 00:08:50,721 But the gull knows that the grass is full of chicks 103 00:08:50,722 --> 00:08:53,001 and won't give up. 104 00:08:53,002 --> 00:08:54,442 CHIRPING 105 00:08:56,922 --> 00:08:58,602 SQUAWKING 106 00:08:58,603 --> 00:09:01,283 This time, it takes a young oystercatcher... 107 00:09:06,723 --> 00:09:10,403 ..and the lapwing chick gets back to its mother. 108 00:09:10,404 --> 00:09:12,924 MELANCHOLY MUSIC PLAYS 109 00:09:14,364 --> 00:09:15,523 SQUAWKING 110 00:09:15,524 --> 00:09:17,603 Across Britain and Ireland, 111 00:09:17,604 --> 00:09:19,963 habitat loss to intensive agriculture 112 00:09:19,964 --> 00:09:24,765 has caused numbers of birds like these to greatly reduce. 113 00:09:28,445 --> 00:09:31,884 But thanks to nature-friendly farming methods, 114 00:09:31,885 --> 00:09:35,045 the Outer Hebrides remain a vital sanctuary 115 00:09:35,046 --> 00:09:38,646 for our most endangered ground-nesting species. 116 00:09:46,367 --> 00:09:50,727 All our grasslands are now managed by people. 117 00:09:52,527 --> 00:09:55,087 But they weren't always like this. 118 00:09:58,328 --> 00:10:01,807 Once there were vast scrub-covered wildernesses, 119 00:10:01,808 --> 00:10:04,328 studded with patches of grassland. 120 00:10:10,449 --> 00:10:12,808 Roaming freely across them 121 00:10:12,809 --> 00:10:15,608 were herds of wild cattle 122 00:10:15,609 --> 00:10:17,489 and wild horses. 123 00:10:19,329 --> 00:10:21,168 HORSES WHINNY 124 00:10:21,169 --> 00:10:25,929 In some areas, such species are being reintroduced 125 00:10:25,930 --> 00:10:31,209 in the hope of recreating these once extensive grasslands. 126 00:10:31,210 --> 00:10:33,130 HORSES NEIGH 127 00:10:41,171 --> 00:10:46,572 In Cambridgeshire, there are large free-ranging herds of horses. 128 00:10:54,092 --> 00:10:57,132 There are five family units in this herd... 129 00:10:59,333 --> 00:11:03,012 ..each ruled by a dominant stallion. 130 00:11:03,013 --> 00:11:06,413 THEY GRUNT AND WHINNY 131 00:11:19,134 --> 00:11:21,493 They're regularly on the move, 132 00:11:21,494 --> 00:11:24,414 searching for the best food. 133 00:11:24,415 --> 00:11:26,974 They eat young trees, 134 00:11:26,975 --> 00:11:30,975 and so prevent grassland turning into forest. 135 00:11:33,215 --> 00:11:35,175 By disturbing the ground, 136 00:11:35,176 --> 00:11:39,975 they allow many species that were once common in such places, 137 00:11:39,976 --> 00:11:41,776 to return. 138 00:11:47,977 --> 00:11:50,016 It's late spring, 139 00:11:50,017 --> 00:11:53,657 and the herd's numbers are increasing. 140 00:11:56,577 --> 00:12:01,978 Just 24 hours old, this youngster is taking his first faltering steps. 141 00:12:07,578 --> 00:12:10,418 The stallion guards the mare closely. 142 00:12:10,419 --> 00:12:12,459 WHINNIES 143 00:12:15,299 --> 00:12:17,178 Having just given birth, 144 00:12:17,179 --> 00:12:19,859 she will soon be ready to mate again. 145 00:12:30,020 --> 00:12:33,579 A rival stallion notices her condition 146 00:12:33,580 --> 00:12:36,180 and tensions begin to rise. 147 00:12:36,181 --> 00:12:38,541 WHINNYING AND SNORTING 148 00:12:41,261 --> 00:12:44,421 Looks might be tolerated by the dominant stallion... 149 00:12:46,422 --> 00:12:48,261 WHINNIES 150 00:12:48,262 --> 00:12:51,062 ..but anything else will bring trouble. 151 00:12:59,863 --> 00:13:02,662 A well-placed kick 152 00:13:02,663 --> 00:13:04,662 could do serious damage. 153 00:13:04,663 --> 00:13:06,503 DRAMATIC MUSIC 154 00:13:08,983 --> 00:13:10,024 NEIGHING 155 00:13:19,464 --> 00:13:21,344 GRUNTING AND BRAYING 156 00:13:28,225 --> 00:13:31,785 This time, the challenger retreats. 157 00:13:35,666 --> 00:13:40,225 Traditional breeds of horses are now being gradually reintroduced 158 00:13:40,226 --> 00:13:44,026 to isolated grasslands across the British Isles. 159 00:13:46,267 --> 00:13:49,146 By expanding and connecting these reserves, 160 00:13:49,147 --> 00:13:53,386 we could restore large swathes of our lost wilderness, 161 00:13:53,387 --> 00:13:55,226 if we wanted to. 162 00:13:55,227 --> 00:13:57,508 HORSE NEIGHS 163 00:14:02,268 --> 00:14:05,707 Grasses, when allowed to grow tall and wild, 164 00:14:05,708 --> 00:14:09,789 can conceal animals that few people get to see. 165 00:14:12,189 --> 00:14:15,468 Here, there is a network of hidden trails, 166 00:14:15,469 --> 00:14:18,789 made by Britain's most abundant mammal. 167 00:14:25,070 --> 00:14:29,070 Yet, despite there being more than 50-million of them... 168 00:14:30,150 --> 00:14:33,030 ..this little rodent is tricky to spot. 169 00:14:35,231 --> 00:14:36,911 It's NOT a mouse. 170 00:14:38,591 --> 00:14:43,430 It's a vole - a small rodent with teeth specially adapted 171 00:14:43,431 --> 00:14:44,911 for chewing grass. 172 00:14:53,832 --> 00:14:56,911 This female is in a hurry... 173 00:14:56,912 --> 00:14:59,273 ANIMATED MUSIC PLAYS 174 00:15:04,353 --> 00:15:10,033 ..because it's time to feed her babies. 175 00:15:10,034 --> 00:15:11,194 SQUEAKING 176 00:15:15,154 --> 00:15:16,433 She has six. 177 00:15:16,434 --> 00:15:18,673 They're just ten-days-old 178 00:15:18,674 --> 00:15:22,834 and still reliant on her for milk and body heat. 179 00:15:22,835 --> 00:15:24,274 She doesn't leave them 180 00:15:24,275 --> 00:15:26,475 for more than half an hour at a time. 181 00:15:29,915 --> 00:15:32,114 But to feed them all and herself, 182 00:15:32,115 --> 00:15:35,915 she must eat almost her entire body weight in grass 183 00:15:35,916 --> 00:15:37,316 every day. 184 00:15:42,756 --> 00:15:46,316 Knowing every turn in her maze of trails, 185 00:15:46,317 --> 00:15:50,796 she can reach her favourite feeding spots without being seen... 186 00:15:50,797 --> 00:15:52,397 CRUNCHING 187 00:15:54,117 --> 00:15:55,637 ..but she can be heard. 188 00:16:00,078 --> 00:16:03,517 Short-eared owls have excellent hearing, 189 00:16:03,518 --> 00:16:07,238 and field voles make up 90% of their diet. 190 00:16:21,200 --> 00:16:23,639 At the slightest hint of danger, 191 00:16:23,640 --> 00:16:26,279 the mother vole deploys her best defence. 192 00:16:26,280 --> 00:16:28,440 DRAMATIC MUSIC CRESCENDOS 193 00:16:36,201 --> 00:16:37,761 She freezes. 194 00:16:44,881 --> 00:16:49,642 Short-eared owls can hear a whisker scratching against grass. 195 00:17:02,163 --> 00:17:05,762 But she must get back to her babies. 196 00:17:05,763 --> 00:17:07,283 SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC 197 00:17:37,286 --> 00:17:42,445 Field voles breed successfully when grasses aren't cut short, 198 00:17:42,446 --> 00:17:46,247 meaning the owl's next meal won't be far away. 199 00:17:52,127 --> 00:17:53,646 BELL TOLLS 200 00:17:53,647 --> 00:17:56,606 In southern England, a few precious pockets 201 00:17:56,607 --> 00:18:01,648 of chalk grassland have remained unchanged for thousands of years. 202 00:18:03,368 --> 00:18:08,648 Light grazing by livestock maintains their rich variety of plants. 203 00:18:11,249 --> 00:18:13,688 On a hillside near Dorchester, 204 00:18:13,689 --> 00:18:17,808 an apparently empty snail shell is moving. 205 00:18:17,809 --> 00:18:19,969 JOCULAR MUSIC 206 00:18:23,210 --> 00:18:24,890 A mason bee. 207 00:18:28,570 --> 00:18:32,730 There are a dozen different species of mason bee in Britain. 208 00:18:33,931 --> 00:18:36,650 Most nest in holes. 209 00:18:36,651 --> 00:18:39,250 But this one, the two-coloured mason bee, 210 00:18:39,251 --> 00:18:43,211 prefers to rear her family in snail shells. 211 00:18:50,572 --> 00:18:54,092 Many of those, of course, are still occupied. 212 00:18:58,013 --> 00:18:59,533 She needs help. 213 00:19:05,573 --> 00:19:09,134 Glow worm larvae are always hungry. 214 00:19:10,494 --> 00:19:13,693 These little insects might be slow... 215 00:19:13,694 --> 00:19:16,653 ..but that doesn't matter 216 00:19:16,654 --> 00:19:19,893 when you're hunting a snail. 217 00:19:19,894 --> 00:19:21,775 SINISTER MUSIC 218 00:19:27,855 --> 00:19:29,854 The meal may take a week, 219 00:19:29,855 --> 00:19:34,576 but once it's finished, all that is left is an empty shell. 220 00:19:40,216 --> 00:19:42,335 And that is perfect 221 00:19:42,336 --> 00:19:44,336 for the bee. 222 00:19:46,017 --> 00:19:48,176 Fresh shells are the strongest 223 00:19:48,177 --> 00:19:50,977 and will give her young the best chance of survival. 224 00:19:55,217 --> 00:19:58,217 She sets about filling it with pollen, 225 00:19:58,218 --> 00:20:03,377 food for her young, when the egg she lays inside hatches. 226 00:20:03,378 --> 00:20:05,458 BUZZING 227 00:20:10,139 --> 00:20:15,018 Using tiny pieces of rubble, and glue made from chewed-up leaves, 228 00:20:15,019 --> 00:20:18,259 she carefully seals the front door. 229 00:20:25,220 --> 00:20:28,100 But that isn't the end of this mother's care. 230 00:20:30,780 --> 00:20:33,701 And her last trick is extraordinary... 231 00:20:37,461 --> 00:20:41,501 ..because this bee is something of a witch! 232 00:20:44,501 --> 00:20:48,701 There are more than 250 species of wild bees in Britain, 233 00:20:48,702 --> 00:20:53,182 but this is the only one that rides a broomstick! 234 00:20:58,183 --> 00:21:01,342 She's collecting hundreds of dry grass stems 235 00:21:01,343 --> 00:21:04,583 to hide her snail-shell nests. 236 00:21:12,344 --> 00:21:14,824 She may build up to 20 of them. 237 00:21:18,864 --> 00:21:25,104 About a third of our food comes from plants pollinated by bees, 238 00:21:25,105 --> 00:21:28,504 but due to habitat loss and use of pesticides, 239 00:21:28,505 --> 00:21:32,465 wild bee species are in decline. 240 00:21:38,186 --> 00:21:40,105 We can help them recover, 241 00:21:40,106 --> 00:21:44,507 by restoring wild areas between our intensively-managed fields. 242 00:21:57,988 --> 00:22:03,588 If grasslands are to be rich and diverse, they have to be grazed. 243 00:22:06,308 --> 00:22:10,348 And we can thank the Romans and the Normans for bringing with them 244 00:22:10,349 --> 00:22:13,389 one of nature's best lawnmowers... 245 00:22:15,469 --> 00:22:16,829 ..rabbits. 246 00:22:21,870 --> 00:22:23,349 Unlike their cousins, 247 00:22:23,350 --> 00:22:26,029 the larger hares, 248 00:22:26,030 --> 00:22:28,470 they dig tunnels. 249 00:22:30,110 --> 00:22:32,511 Bolt holes are essential... 250 00:22:34,031 --> 00:22:36,670 ..if you're the favourite food of a buzzard. 251 00:22:36,671 --> 00:22:38,271 OMINOUS MUSIC 252 00:22:39,431 --> 00:22:43,071 A foot-thump raises the alarm. 253 00:22:47,032 --> 00:22:49,232 But not everyone pays attention. 254 00:23:00,593 --> 00:23:02,553 DRAMATIC MUSIC CRESCENDOS 255 00:23:16,754 --> 00:23:18,314 One less youngster, 256 00:23:19,674 --> 00:23:23,155 ..but then, rabbits are rather good at breeding. 257 00:23:30,875 --> 00:23:33,755 A male - a buck - 258 00:23:33,756 --> 00:23:37,316 offers a female two kinds of gift. 259 00:23:40,036 --> 00:23:42,596 First, perfume. 260 00:23:45,717 --> 00:23:50,637 A gland under his chin produces a cocktail of pheromones. 261 00:24:00,238 --> 00:24:03,918 His second gift is rather less romantic. 262 00:24:08,479 --> 00:24:10,878 He pees on her. 263 00:24:10,879 --> 00:24:13,279 JOCULAR MUSIC PLAYS 264 00:24:16,279 --> 00:24:20,199 His particular smell helps her decide whether or not 265 00:24:20,200 --> 00:24:22,400 she will let him father her babies. 266 00:24:25,080 --> 00:24:28,439 His choice of aftershave, however, 267 00:24:28,440 --> 00:24:30,640 hasn't yet convinced her. 268 00:24:41,201 --> 00:24:43,240 Darkness does nothing 269 00:24:43,241 --> 00:24:45,642 to dampen his enthusiasm. 270 00:24:53,802 --> 00:24:57,323 Finally, the buck is in luck! 271 00:25:01,643 --> 00:25:04,122 This giant warren in Dorset 272 00:25:04,123 --> 00:25:06,243 is one of the largest in Britain. 273 00:25:08,204 --> 00:25:09,923 OWL HOOTS 274 00:25:09,924 --> 00:25:13,683 It's home to more than a thousand rabbits... 275 00:25:13,684 --> 00:25:16,683 ..and at night, they all feel sufficiently confident 276 00:25:16,684 --> 00:25:18,764 to leave their burrows. 277 00:25:22,045 --> 00:25:24,605 And foxes know that. 278 00:25:26,685 --> 00:25:29,365 So this is when they usually hunt. 279 00:25:32,606 --> 00:25:34,766 DROLL MUSIC PLAYS 280 00:25:42,686 --> 00:25:44,727 That was just a vole. 281 00:25:46,767 --> 00:25:48,086 Back at the den, 282 00:25:48,087 --> 00:25:51,726 his vixen is looking after their four hungry pups. 283 00:25:51,727 --> 00:25:53,647 PUPS WHINE 284 00:25:58,568 --> 00:26:00,488 Make that five! 285 00:26:12,649 --> 00:26:15,449 The rabbits watch the fox closely. 286 00:26:19,809 --> 00:26:22,409 As long as they can see him, 287 00:26:22,410 --> 00:26:24,290 they can outrun him. 288 00:26:33,571 --> 00:26:35,531 But they can't hide. 289 00:26:40,091 --> 00:26:44,172 It's a mistake to think that you are always safe in a burrow. 290 00:26:46,852 --> 00:26:48,731 If there is only one way out, 291 00:26:48,732 --> 00:26:51,891 a tunnel could become a trap. 292 00:26:51,892 --> 00:26:53,172 SHRIEK 293 00:26:55,252 --> 00:26:57,093 SOMBRE MUSIC 294 00:27:21,655 --> 00:27:24,775 A rabbit's life is full of danger. 295 00:27:26,855 --> 00:27:30,094 A big warren can lose hundreds each year, 296 00:27:30,095 --> 00:27:33,135 but without losses to foxes and buzzards, 297 00:27:33,136 --> 00:27:37,336 rabbits could soon eat themselves into starvation. 298 00:27:44,057 --> 00:27:46,057 BIRDSONG 299 00:27:48,137 --> 00:27:50,536 As farming has intensified, 300 00:27:50,537 --> 00:27:54,337 most of our traditional meadows have disappeared. 301 00:27:57,178 --> 00:28:02,617 Species-rich grasslands now occupy only about 1% of the land. 302 00:28:02,618 --> 00:28:04,458 BUZZING 303 00:28:06,658 --> 00:28:09,938 Their reduction in numbers is one of the reasons 304 00:28:09,939 --> 00:28:14,179 why half of our butterfly species are now at risk of extinction. 305 00:28:18,579 --> 00:28:22,380 But, in Gloucestershire, one species is making a comeback. 306 00:28:24,940 --> 00:28:30,500 It has one of the most extraordinary lifecycles of any insect anywhere. 307 00:28:34,661 --> 00:28:38,101 Most caterpillars find their food among flowers. 308 00:28:41,301 --> 00:28:45,582 This particular species, however, feeds in an entirely different way. 309 00:28:51,462 --> 00:28:54,502 A way that is full of risks. 310 00:28:58,343 --> 00:29:00,503 Ants eat caterpillars. 311 00:29:02,823 --> 00:29:06,663 But this caterpillar is a master trickster. 312 00:29:12,624 --> 00:29:17,584 First, she releases a droplet of honeydew from a gland on her back... 313 00:29:20,585 --> 00:29:23,385 ..encouraging the worker ant to tend to her. 314 00:29:28,305 --> 00:29:32,146 Next, she does something even more remarkable. 315 00:29:35,106 --> 00:29:37,305 She takes in air, 316 00:29:37,306 --> 00:29:39,106 inflating her body... 317 00:29:45,507 --> 00:29:48,346 ..and then she releases it... 318 00:29:48,347 --> 00:29:49,986 MIMICS CHIRRUPING 319 00:29:49,987 --> 00:29:54,227 ..making a sound that resembles the distress call of a queen ant... 320 00:29:56,868 --> 00:30:01,108 ..whilst bathing the worker in intoxicating pheromones. 321 00:30:04,588 --> 00:30:08,188 In response, the worker ant picks up the caterpillar 322 00:30:08,189 --> 00:30:11,829 and takes it back to the nest - as if rescuing it. 323 00:30:15,909 --> 00:30:19,670 But will the other ants accept the caterpillar as a queen? 324 00:30:21,590 --> 00:30:23,469 SQUEAKS 325 00:30:23,470 --> 00:30:25,949 She continues her royal squeaking 326 00:30:25,950 --> 00:30:28,670 and, amazingly, they do. 327 00:30:32,151 --> 00:30:34,070 Once inside the nest, 328 00:30:34,071 --> 00:30:36,831 the caterpillar can go wherever she likes. 329 00:30:40,111 --> 00:30:43,751 Surrounded by thousands of ants that could easily kill her, 330 00:30:43,752 --> 00:30:46,992 she finally gets the reward for her trickery. 331 00:30:52,952 --> 00:30:57,112 This caterpillar is one of the very few in the world 332 00:30:57,113 --> 00:31:00,032 that becomes carnivorous. 333 00:31:00,033 --> 00:31:02,433 DRAMATIC MUSIC 334 00:31:07,514 --> 00:31:09,073 Over the next six months, 335 00:31:09,074 --> 00:31:13,833 this fake queen eats the defenceless ant larvae, 336 00:31:13,834 --> 00:31:18,834 until she's 100 times her original size. 337 00:31:28,675 --> 00:31:32,196 Then, having consumed almost the entire ant colony... 338 00:31:34,996 --> 00:31:36,596 ..she pupates... 339 00:31:38,516 --> 00:31:40,276 ..and becomes a chrysalis. 340 00:31:46,117 --> 00:31:48,116 Nearly a year later, 341 00:31:48,117 --> 00:31:51,357 on one warm spring day... 342 00:31:52,597 --> 00:31:55,597 ..she performs her final trick. 343 00:31:55,598 --> 00:31:57,518 ENTHRALLING MUSIC 344 00:32:08,159 --> 00:32:11,238 She emerges from the shroud of her chrysalis 345 00:32:11,239 --> 00:32:14,279 as an adult Large Blue butterfly. 346 00:32:24,200 --> 00:32:28,280 40 years ago, the Large Blue was extinct in Britain. 347 00:32:29,840 --> 00:32:33,680 But once its extraordinary life cycle was understood, 348 00:32:33,681 --> 00:32:38,320 it was reintroduced from Europe to restored meadows here 349 00:32:38,321 --> 00:32:43,522 and now we have one of the densest populations to be found anywhere. 350 00:32:53,762 --> 00:32:57,922 Throughout the British Isles there are rugged uplands, 351 00:32:57,923 --> 00:33:01,283 where grasses are replaced by other kinds of plants. 352 00:33:03,643 --> 00:33:08,683 For thousands of years, people have farmed these seemingly wild places, 353 00:33:08,684 --> 00:33:12,284 creating a landscape that is now dominated by heather. 354 00:33:13,844 --> 00:33:16,363 And in the wilder parts, 355 00:33:16,364 --> 00:33:18,404 lives one of Britain's rarest birds... 356 00:33:20,365 --> 00:33:22,365 ..black grouse. 357 00:33:25,845 --> 00:33:29,804 The males come here at dawn to display competitively 358 00:33:29,805 --> 00:33:33,526 throughout the spring in special places called leks. 359 00:33:35,886 --> 00:33:40,645 Each male competes to claim a small area in the centre of the lek 360 00:33:40,646 --> 00:33:44,046 and then invites females to visit him 361 00:33:44,047 --> 00:33:47,606 by producing an extraordinary bubbling song. 362 00:33:47,607 --> 00:33:49,767 GROUSE SINGS 363 00:33:58,168 --> 00:34:00,967 This particular lek in the Cairngorms 364 00:34:00,968 --> 00:34:03,487 is dominated by a formidable male, 365 00:34:03,488 --> 00:34:05,287 nicknamed The Boss. 366 00:34:05,288 --> 00:34:06,328 DRAMATIC MUSIC 367 00:34:09,529 --> 00:34:12,888 Each morning, he fights off challengers. 368 00:34:12,889 --> 00:34:15,449 IRATE COOING 369 00:34:20,170 --> 00:34:24,769 But now, a new cock on the block has arrived... 370 00:34:24,770 --> 00:34:26,289 HISSING 371 00:34:26,290 --> 00:34:27,690 ..Half Tail. 372 00:34:30,530 --> 00:34:32,770 He's no stranger to a fight, 373 00:34:32,771 --> 00:34:35,890 having already lost some of his tail feathers 374 00:34:35,891 --> 00:34:38,571 in a close shave with a golden eagle. 375 00:34:40,611 --> 00:34:44,612 And now, he's set his sights on The Boss's crown. 376 00:34:50,692 --> 00:34:54,973 For the past week, the two of them have been sizing each other up. 377 00:34:57,813 --> 00:35:00,493 And now, it's the showdown. 378 00:35:02,813 --> 00:35:05,053 DRAMATIC MUSIC 379 00:35:38,336 --> 00:35:40,576 Half Tail has triumphed. 380 00:35:42,016 --> 00:35:44,697 This lek has a new boss. 381 00:35:46,377 --> 00:35:48,697 And his timing couldn't be better. 382 00:35:50,617 --> 00:35:53,376 A female has arrived. 383 00:35:53,377 --> 00:35:55,298 HALF TAIL COOS 384 00:35:57,898 --> 00:36:01,017 This is his chance to impress. 385 00:36:01,018 --> 00:36:04,777 She might only visit this lek once this year. 386 00:36:04,778 --> 00:36:06,979 COOING CONTINUES 387 00:36:24,420 --> 00:36:26,539 He's been lucky this morning, 388 00:36:26,540 --> 00:36:30,900 but Half Tail must hold his position at the centre of the lek 389 00:36:30,901 --> 00:36:33,341 if he's to get another chance. 390 00:36:41,421 --> 00:36:44,142 Our uplands have harsh winters. 391 00:36:46,262 --> 00:36:49,661 But there are some sheltered and undisturbed places 392 00:36:49,662 --> 00:36:53,622 that suit one surprising year-round resident. 393 00:36:56,823 --> 00:37:00,423 As the spring sun warms these slopes in Northumbria... 394 00:37:03,783 --> 00:37:06,744 ..a rare reptile becomes active. 395 00:37:13,224 --> 00:37:16,943 A male adder sheds his winter skin, 396 00:37:16,944 --> 00:37:19,704 revealing his zigzag stripe, 397 00:37:19,705 --> 00:37:22,624 the distinctive pattern that identifies 398 00:37:22,625 --> 00:37:25,105 Britain's only venomous snake. 399 00:37:30,426 --> 00:37:33,186 Now, he needs to find a female. 400 00:37:37,106 --> 00:37:39,625 Guided by an acute sense of smell, 401 00:37:39,626 --> 00:37:43,947 this 40cm long male sets off to find a female. 402 00:37:46,907 --> 00:37:49,627 He may have to travel a mile or more. 403 00:37:51,267 --> 00:37:53,186 But he's in luck. 404 00:37:53,187 --> 00:37:56,908 A female, newly emerged from hibernation. 405 00:38:04,188 --> 00:38:06,429 Sliding over her back... 406 00:38:08,629 --> 00:38:11,309 ..he begins a delicate courtship. 407 00:38:28,830 --> 00:38:33,391 But he's not the only one around here searching for a mate. 408 00:38:47,312 --> 00:38:49,791 Rearing up as high as he can, 409 00:38:49,792 --> 00:38:54,153 he uses his whole body to try and pin his opponent to the ground. 410 00:39:03,673 --> 00:39:06,554 These duels can last for up to an hour. 411 00:39:22,875 --> 00:39:26,515 Eventually, the challenger gives way. 412 00:39:31,596 --> 00:39:34,075 The male continues his courtship, 413 00:39:34,076 --> 00:39:36,835 gently tapping the female with his head 414 00:39:36,836 --> 00:39:39,516 while using his coils to massage her... 415 00:39:40,796 --> 00:39:43,437 ..until she allows him to mate. 416 00:39:48,397 --> 00:39:51,237 But then, more eager males arrive. 417 00:39:56,438 --> 00:40:00,838 He must stay attached to her long enough to transfer his sperm. 418 00:40:01,998 --> 00:40:05,477 And fortunately, he has just the equipment needed 419 00:40:05,478 --> 00:40:07,639 to help him do that... 420 00:40:10,559 --> 00:40:12,759 ..a penis with barbs. 421 00:40:16,719 --> 00:40:18,639 Once mating has started, 422 00:40:18,640 --> 00:40:22,280 the adders remain locked together for up to an hour. 423 00:40:23,760 --> 00:40:27,039 And that means wherever the female goes, 424 00:40:27,040 --> 00:40:30,361 the male is also dragged along. 425 00:40:39,681 --> 00:40:43,042 She will mate with many males in the coming months. 426 00:40:44,802 --> 00:40:47,321 So for her other suitors, 427 00:40:47,322 --> 00:40:49,242 all is not lost. 428 00:40:54,843 --> 00:40:59,162 At the end of spring, a more relaxed courtship takes place 429 00:40:59,163 --> 00:41:02,323 in the skies of the Scottish Highlands. 430 00:41:07,284 --> 00:41:09,723 A sky dance. 431 00:41:09,724 --> 00:41:11,884 SOARING VIOLIN MUSIC 432 00:41:22,045 --> 00:41:24,605 A male hen harrier. 433 00:41:36,686 --> 00:41:39,365 Weaving and rolling through the air, 434 00:41:39,366 --> 00:41:42,927 he's doing his best to catch the attention of a female. 435 00:41:51,127 --> 00:41:54,768 But conspicuous behaviour can bring danger. 436 00:41:57,208 --> 00:42:02,047 Decades of illegal persecution of hen harriers on some grouse moors 437 00:42:02,048 --> 00:42:06,209 has meant that this dance almost vanished from our skies. 438 00:42:13,369 --> 00:42:16,528 Fortunately, in a few protected places, 439 00:42:16,529 --> 00:42:19,570 hen harriers are now slowly starting to recover. 440 00:42:23,170 --> 00:42:26,329 And this male's efforts have paid off. 441 00:42:26,330 --> 00:42:28,290 CHIRPING 442 00:42:32,571 --> 00:42:36,131 But being a great aerial dancer isn't enough. 443 00:42:41,732 --> 00:42:45,212 He must also provide his mate with a meal. 444 00:42:48,252 --> 00:42:51,652 And he must deliver it in exactly the right way. 445 00:42:55,453 --> 00:42:58,053 CHIRPING 446 00:43:06,454 --> 00:43:08,534 Convinced by his performance... 447 00:43:09,734 --> 00:43:13,014 ..she chooses a nest deep in the heather. 448 00:43:18,375 --> 00:43:23,455 Six weeks later, it's full of hungry mouths waiting for food. 449 00:43:25,935 --> 00:43:28,815 The female has chosen a good mate. 450 00:43:35,096 --> 00:43:37,975 Only with both parents working full-time 451 00:43:37,976 --> 00:43:41,576 will the chicks get enough food to enable them to fledge 452 00:43:41,577 --> 00:43:45,857 and eventually help these rare birds to recover their numbers. 453 00:44:04,738 --> 00:44:07,338 Even in our crowded isles, 454 00:44:07,339 --> 00:44:10,979 there are still places that retain their wildness. 455 00:44:15,059 --> 00:44:20,740 In Ireland's County Kerry lies a land that looks almost untouched. 456 00:44:28,500 --> 00:44:32,861 This is a landscape being returned to wilderness. 457 00:44:35,501 --> 00:44:38,861 And it's the scene of an age-old battle. 458 00:44:46,182 --> 00:44:51,262 This red deer stag has spent his summer feeding in the mountains. 459 00:44:53,142 --> 00:44:56,702 HE BELLOWS 460 00:44:56,703 --> 00:44:58,622 But as autumn approaches, 461 00:44:58,623 --> 00:45:01,462 he comes down to lower ground 462 00:45:01,463 --> 00:45:05,584 to compete in the rut and fight for females. 463 00:45:14,104 --> 00:45:16,143 But a more experienced stag 464 00:45:16,144 --> 00:45:19,424 has already claimed this group of females. 465 00:45:19,425 --> 00:45:21,385 STAG GRUNTS 466 00:45:23,545 --> 00:45:26,785 The newcomer declares his intentions. 467 00:45:31,266 --> 00:45:33,506 To win these females however... 468 00:45:35,266 --> 00:45:37,305 ..he will have to fight. 469 00:45:37,306 --> 00:45:38,586 DRAMATIC MUSIC 470 00:45:44,147 --> 00:45:46,907 An antler in the eye would blind him. 471 00:45:48,507 --> 00:45:51,307 An antler to the body could kill him. 472 00:45:53,708 --> 00:45:55,428 ANTLERS CLATTER 473 00:46:13,469 --> 00:46:17,310 His inexperience has cost him this victory. 474 00:46:18,550 --> 00:46:22,189 But losing one battle doesn't necessarily mean 475 00:46:22,190 --> 00:46:24,590 that he's lost his chance to mate. 476 00:46:33,431 --> 00:46:36,630 Over the next few weeks, the dominant stag 477 00:46:36,631 --> 00:46:41,031 is so busy guarding his harem of females, that he doesn't eat. 478 00:46:43,912 --> 00:46:46,432 And that leaves him weak. 479 00:46:49,472 --> 00:46:53,153 This is the opportunity the newcomer has been waiting for. 480 00:46:56,553 --> 00:46:58,712 The dominant stag is tired, 481 00:46:58,713 --> 00:47:03,313 but he has to fight once again if he is to keep his females. 482 00:47:13,514 --> 00:47:16,954 For the newcomer, it's now or never. 483 00:47:22,755 --> 00:47:23,955 DRAMATIC MUSIC 484 00:47:53,158 --> 00:47:54,638 MUSIC CRESCENDOS 485 00:48:06,239 --> 00:48:08,799 BELLOWING 486 00:48:11,959 --> 00:48:15,999 The harem has been taken over by the newcomer. 487 00:48:18,440 --> 00:48:20,599 At the end of this season, 488 00:48:20,600 --> 00:48:24,640 he will return to the mountains, victorious. 489 00:48:32,721 --> 00:48:35,520 Almost all the grasslands in our isles 490 00:48:35,521 --> 00:48:38,561 are now managed by and for people. 491 00:48:39,801 --> 00:48:44,402 Whether in the future we choose to make room in them for wildlife... 492 00:48:45,362 --> 00:48:47,402 ..is up to us. 493 00:48:59,963 --> 00:49:03,923 Wild eagles have never been filmed hunting in the UK before. 494 00:49:05,124 --> 00:49:07,763 The challenge was to capture this behaviour 495 00:49:07,764 --> 00:49:09,843 with not just golden eagles, 496 00:49:09,844 --> 00:49:13,604 but also the larger and rarer white-tailed eagles. 497 00:49:14,804 --> 00:49:18,524 The team travelled to Islay in the Scottish Hebrides. 498 00:49:18,525 --> 00:49:21,484 The eagle numbers here have been increasing year-on-year 499 00:49:21,485 --> 00:49:24,764 and in a good year, you can have eight or ten different eagles 500 00:49:24,765 --> 00:49:27,364 visiting this reserve during the winter. 501 00:49:27,365 --> 00:49:30,205 The reserve is part of a working farm 502 00:49:30,206 --> 00:49:33,045 and managed in a way that benefits nature. 503 00:49:33,046 --> 00:49:36,725 Reserve manager James How was the first to witness 504 00:49:36,726 --> 00:49:40,966 the returning white-tailed eagles doing something extraordinary. 505 00:49:40,967 --> 00:49:43,286 It was probably four years ago 506 00:49:43,287 --> 00:49:46,646 that we started to see the eagles coming in 507 00:49:46,647 --> 00:49:48,606 and having a look at the geese. 508 00:49:48,607 --> 00:49:50,766 At that stage it was just one eagle. 509 00:49:50,767 --> 00:49:54,247 Over the last few years, that behaviour has just increased. 510 00:49:54,248 --> 00:49:57,167 So you've got these phenomenal flocks of geese here 511 00:49:57,168 --> 00:50:00,567 and now we have apex predators hunting them, which... 512 00:50:00,568 --> 00:50:02,488 It feels complete somehow. 513 00:50:03,528 --> 00:50:05,688 But it wasn't always like this. 514 00:50:05,689 --> 00:50:09,568 White-tailed eagles once lived across Britain and Ireland, 515 00:50:09,569 --> 00:50:13,048 but were so heavily persecuted that they became extinct 516 00:50:13,049 --> 00:50:15,209 at the start of the 20th century. 517 00:50:16,369 --> 00:50:20,050 These giants needed a helping hand to return. 518 00:50:21,250 --> 00:50:24,730 The first attempt at releases was back in 1968. 519 00:50:26,210 --> 00:50:28,169 I was, crikey, 520 00:50:28,170 --> 00:50:30,730 27, on the island of Fiaraidh. 521 00:50:30,731 --> 00:50:32,330 And my boss said, 522 00:50:32,331 --> 00:50:36,050 "Look, I'm going to get four young white-tailed eagles from Norway 523 00:50:36,051 --> 00:50:38,770 "and I want you to reintroduce them to the island." 524 00:50:38,771 --> 00:50:43,572 Back then, re-introductions were new and not always welcome. 525 00:50:44,732 --> 00:50:47,931 But these early efforts eventually paid off 526 00:50:47,932 --> 00:50:52,372 and today, there are more than 100 breeding pairs across Scotland. 527 00:50:53,933 --> 00:50:58,612 On Islay, the team focus their work around the eagles' favourite prey - 528 00:50:58,613 --> 00:51:01,492 brown hares and barnacle geese. 529 00:51:01,493 --> 00:51:05,013 What we're trying to attempt is so difficult here 530 00:51:05,014 --> 00:51:07,173 because we are filming birds 531 00:51:07,174 --> 00:51:10,453 that can be over two mountains in five or ten minutes. 532 00:51:10,454 --> 00:51:12,293 And to get ahead of them 533 00:51:12,294 --> 00:51:15,013 and try and work out where their pray are going to be, 534 00:51:15,014 --> 00:51:16,253 there's no choice, 535 00:51:16,254 --> 00:51:18,174 you just have to put hours and hours and hours into it. 536 00:51:18,175 --> 00:51:22,575 The team spread out to watch as many geese and hares as possible. 537 00:51:24,095 --> 00:51:27,534 We have to have static camera teams, hide camera teams, 538 00:51:27,535 --> 00:51:29,455 roving camera teams. 539 00:51:29,456 --> 00:51:31,975 And we also have to have a huge team of spotters. 540 00:51:31,976 --> 00:51:34,896 But the famous Hebridean weather had other ideas. 541 00:51:37,416 --> 00:51:41,576 Ouch! These hailstones are about 2mm or 3mm across. 542 00:51:41,577 --> 00:51:43,297 They are like being hit with BB pellets! 543 00:51:48,617 --> 00:51:50,816 How are we supposed to film in this? 544 00:51:50,817 --> 00:51:53,697 No wonder there are no eagles this morning! 545 00:51:53,698 --> 00:51:58,297 And one team member couldn't even make it across from the mainland. 546 00:51:58,298 --> 00:52:00,137 We've been grounded. 547 00:52:00,138 --> 00:52:02,537 Because the bad weather and the storm, 548 00:52:02,538 --> 00:52:04,698 the ferries are not going any more. 549 00:52:04,699 --> 00:52:08,618 But all I can do is wait until the storm finishes 550 00:52:08,619 --> 00:52:11,418 and then I can head over and see them. 551 00:52:11,419 --> 00:52:16,058 Once the storm blows through and the whole team are safely on the island, 552 00:52:16,059 --> 00:52:18,380 filming can finally begin. 553 00:52:20,260 --> 00:52:23,779 The tower hides enable views right across the grassland 554 00:52:23,780 --> 00:52:26,260 where the eagles' prey congregate. 555 00:52:27,540 --> 00:52:31,340 But first, the team need to learn the habits of the individual birds 556 00:52:31,341 --> 00:52:33,981 and each day, the challenge is to find them. 557 00:52:35,461 --> 00:52:38,660 OK, I think I've got them very distant, way to the east. 558 00:52:38,661 --> 00:52:42,581 The white-tails went off with an escort of jackdaws, over. 559 00:52:42,582 --> 00:52:45,701 OK. One's taken off and is flying south-east now 560 00:52:45,702 --> 00:52:49,262 towards the fields. Hamza, be much closer to you now. 561 00:52:50,582 --> 00:52:53,142 No, we don't have eyes on it just yet. 562 00:52:53,143 --> 00:52:56,183 If you guys can direct me to it, that would be ace. 563 00:52:57,303 --> 00:52:59,502 Still just going over the field. 564 00:52:59,503 --> 00:53:02,422 It doesn't look like it's got any hunting on the brain 565 00:53:02,423 --> 00:53:04,142 at the moment though. 566 00:53:04,143 --> 00:53:06,703 Eagles don't always hunt for their food. 567 00:53:06,704 --> 00:53:09,903 Young birds often scavenge for an easy meal. 568 00:53:09,904 --> 00:53:13,943 So learning when they are in hunt mode is key for the team. 569 00:53:13,944 --> 00:53:15,823 Getting the hang of who's who, 570 00:53:15,824 --> 00:53:18,624 because we can recognise four different young eagles now 571 00:53:18,625 --> 00:53:21,544 and they do have a pattern and they do have favourite places. 572 00:53:21,545 --> 00:53:24,344 There is a hierarchy where they boss each other around. 573 00:53:24,345 --> 00:53:26,704 We've had four different golden eagles today. 574 00:53:26,705 --> 00:53:28,865 We've had six different white-tailed eagles. 575 00:53:28,866 --> 00:53:31,345 And we're still expecting more to come in. 576 00:53:31,346 --> 00:53:34,225 As the team get to know these birds intimately, 577 00:53:34,226 --> 00:53:37,545 it becomes clear how special this place is. 578 00:53:37,546 --> 00:53:39,745 You can only really describe it as an eagle school. 579 00:53:39,746 --> 00:53:43,106 You know, these young birds are coming here to learn to hunt. 580 00:53:43,107 --> 00:53:45,227 It's basically Top Gun for eagles. 581 00:53:46,707 --> 00:53:49,827 We are surrounded by eagles. That is amazing. 582 00:53:51,467 --> 00:53:53,547 We've just had birds fighting. 583 00:53:53,548 --> 00:53:57,188 Really, really lovely footage of all of them, kind of, like, tumbling. 584 00:53:59,468 --> 00:54:03,027 After six weeks, Jesse captures their first hunt. 585 00:54:03,028 --> 00:54:07,229 A young golden eagle flushes a hare out on the flats. 586 00:54:09,469 --> 00:54:12,468 He bolted straight out across the short grass. 587 00:54:12,469 --> 00:54:14,588 He jinked from side to side. 588 00:54:14,589 --> 00:54:17,789 The power that the eagle would have had in a straight line, 589 00:54:17,790 --> 00:54:20,349 he could have just mown down the hare. 590 00:54:20,350 --> 00:54:23,029 Who needs lions? Who needs polar bears? 591 00:54:23,030 --> 00:54:25,429 This is just as impressive. 592 00:54:25,430 --> 00:54:29,430 After weeks of watching and learning the eagles' routines, 593 00:54:29,431 --> 00:54:34,270 the white-tails finally begin hunting in range of the cameras. 594 00:54:34,271 --> 00:54:35,910 Eagle! 595 00:54:35,911 --> 00:54:38,471 Eagle on the flats just going down. 596 00:54:39,591 --> 00:54:40,911 Whoa! 597 00:54:40,912 --> 00:54:45,391 Jesse's patience in the hide gives him a front row seat 598 00:54:45,392 --> 00:54:47,191 at the start of the chase. 599 00:54:47,192 --> 00:54:51,632 And in the tower, John and Rachael can pick up where he left off. 600 00:54:53,353 --> 00:54:57,432 Oh, he caught it by its tail and then claws at the goose 601 00:54:57,433 --> 00:55:01,112 and is now carrying it by its neck and its head. 602 00:55:01,113 --> 00:55:02,873 Whoa, that's incredible! 603 00:55:04,354 --> 00:55:06,513 That was something else. 604 00:55:06,514 --> 00:55:09,153 She just took off and went straight into the flock. 605 00:55:09,154 --> 00:55:10,873 One went up, singled one out, 606 00:55:10,874 --> 00:55:13,433 plucked it out of mid air and landed with it. 607 00:55:13,434 --> 00:55:16,034 That was a very special thing to witness. 608 00:55:16,035 --> 00:55:19,234 The team's dogged persistence has paid off 609 00:55:19,235 --> 00:55:23,594 and they film these wild eagles hunting for the first time. 610 00:55:23,595 --> 00:55:26,915 I feel so happy that we managed to get it. Like... 611 00:55:27,956 --> 00:55:31,676 ..words can't explain how excited I am. 612 00:55:33,156 --> 00:55:37,635 The return of these majestic hunters has taken decades of effort 613 00:55:37,636 --> 00:55:42,476 and Roy is now broadening his horizons to the south of England. 614 00:55:42,477 --> 00:55:45,676 This is a young female white-tailed eagle 615 00:55:45,677 --> 00:55:48,556 and it's come from the island of Skye. 616 00:55:48,557 --> 00:55:52,157 Two more will arrive from the Hebrides tomorrow. 617 00:55:52,158 --> 00:55:55,118 And then they will go by plane to the Isle of Wight. 618 00:55:56,358 --> 00:55:59,557 In the early part of my life, nature was losing. 619 00:55:59,558 --> 00:56:02,398 And suddenly in this last 20 years... 620 00:56:03,358 --> 00:56:07,639 ..people have realised that we can't live a future without nature. 621 00:56:09,039 --> 00:56:12,278 Top predators like eagles play a key role 622 00:56:12,279 --> 00:56:16,160 in maintaining healthy, robust, natural habitats. 623 00:56:17,680 --> 00:56:21,759 This crucial work will ensure eagles might once again 624 00:56:21,760 --> 00:56:25,080 be seen across all of Britain and Ireland. 48131

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