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Our isles were once
covered by ice.
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00:00:34,440 --> 00:00:36,840
As the Earth warmed,
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00:00:36,841 --> 00:00:41,361
grasses became the first plants
to reclaim the land.
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00:00:43,561 --> 00:00:44,840
Today,
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00:00:44,841 --> 00:00:48,522
they cover more than 40% of it.
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00:00:50,162 --> 00:00:53,041
Most of that is farmed,
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00:00:53,042 --> 00:00:55,881
but when these lands are
well managed,
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00:00:55,882 --> 00:00:59,042
they still provide homes
for wildlife.
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00:01:04,003 --> 00:01:06,363
It's early spring.
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00:01:07,683 --> 00:01:09,362
In a field of barley,
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a male brown hare
is searching for a female.
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00:01:15,844 --> 00:01:18,483
Using his excellent sense of smell,
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00:01:18,484 --> 00:01:21,524
he can tell that there is one
nearby.
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00:01:29,845 --> 00:01:33,085
But getting to mate with her won't
be easy
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He must deal with three challenges,
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before she'll consider him.
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First...
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DRUM ROLL
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..boxing.
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To impress her,
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he must match her strength,
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but be careful not to hurt her.
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Only if he can hold his own,
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will he be allowed to move
to the next stage.
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00:02:14,449 --> 00:02:18,729
He puts up a good fight
and, so, passes her first test.
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00:02:20,329 --> 00:02:21,609
Her second test?
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00:02:22,889 --> 00:02:24,570
Stamina.
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00:02:27,370 --> 00:02:30,529
Hares are Britain's
fastest mammal,
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00:02:30,530 --> 00:02:34,050
and can reach speeds of 45mph.
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00:02:37,251 --> 00:02:40,210
The chase attracts other males,
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all fired up and eager to mate.
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His final test
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is to get rid of his rivals.
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00:02:52,412 --> 00:02:55,052
HIGH-SPIRITED MUSIC PLAYS
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00:03:00,653 --> 00:03:03,572
Despite their competition,
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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.
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00:03:15,814 --> 00:03:18,574
OMINOUS MUSIC PLAYS
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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.
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00:03:41,936 --> 00:03:45,015
In a straight line,
the eagle is faster,
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but by twisting and turning,
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the hare dodges its attacks.
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Nonetheless, she is relentless.
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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
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across all of our isles.
48
00:04:18,659 --> 00:04:21,538
But as our wild grasslands
have diminished,
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00:04:21,539 --> 00:04:24,860
these contests have become
a rare sight.
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00:04:44,501 --> 00:04:49,621
When I was a boy, back in the
1930s, growing up in Leicester,
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00:04:49,622 --> 00:04:56,261
I spent days on my bicycle
exploring the local countryside.
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Back then, it was easy to find hay
meadows like this one,
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rich with wild flowers
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00:05:04,103 --> 00:05:06,702
and swarming with butterflies
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and insects of all kinds.
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But since then, we have lost more
than 95%
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of these wonderful habitats.
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In this episode,
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we will show why our wildlife needs
rich, wild grasslands
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00:05:25,065 --> 00:05:28,904
and take you on a journey from the
rare coastal flower meadows
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00:05:28,905 --> 00:05:31,424
of the Scottish Hebrides,
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00:05:31,425 --> 00:05:33,904
right up to the heather moorlands
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in the high mountains.
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WIND WHISTLES
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Few things can tame this
fierce landscape...
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..but grasses can.
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Here in the Outer Hebrides,
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their roots have bound the loose
grains together
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and created a formidable barrier.
70
00:06:11,349 --> 00:06:15,588
Miles of sand dunes
form a natural sea wall,
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protecting one of the most important
habitats in the world -
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the machair grassland.
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BIRDSONG AND BUZZING
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5,500 years of traditional,
non-intensive farming
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00:06:31,670 --> 00:06:36,990
on shell-sand soils has created
these rich, wild flower meadows,
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unique to Scotland and Ireland.
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Free from pesticides,
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they are home to hundreds of rare
flowers and insects.
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00:06:47,872 --> 00:06:50,592
BUZZING
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Each spring, the machair becomes
a nursery for ground-nesting birds.
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CHIRPING
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It's alive with chicks,
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all doing their best to escape
from their parents.
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00:07:10,313 --> 00:07:12,513
Since 1960,
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00:07:12,514 --> 00:07:14,553
lapwing numbers in Britain
and Ireland
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have dropped by 80%...
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..which makes every one
of these chicks
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very valuable.
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00:07:26,795 --> 00:07:30,474
Just a day old, this youngster is
starting off on
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its first food-finding mission.
91
00:07:40,676 --> 00:07:43,515
Common gulls patrol the nursery,
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hoping to pick off an unwary chick.
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00:07:52,877 --> 00:07:56,396
Adult lapwings have excellent
eyesight,
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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.
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SIREN CALL
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But the gull knows that the grass is
full of chicks
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and won't give up.
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00:08:53,002 --> 00:08:54,442
CHIRPING
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SQUAWKING
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This time, it takes a young
oystercatcher...
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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
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SQUAWKING
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Across Britain and Ireland,
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00:09:17,604 --> 00:09:19,963
habitat loss to intensive
agriculture
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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,
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00:09:31,885 --> 00:09:35,045
the Outer Hebrides
remain a vital sanctuary
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00:09:35,046 --> 00:09:38,646
for our most endangered
ground-nesting species.
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All our grasslands
are now managed by people.
117
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But they weren't always like this.
118
00:09:58,328 --> 00:10:01,807
Once there were vast scrub-covered
wildernesses,
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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,
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00:11:35,176 --> 00:11:39,975
they allow many species that
were once common in such places,
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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.
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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
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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,
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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.
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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,
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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,
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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
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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...
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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.
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00:15:10,034 --> 00:15:11,194
SQUEAKING
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00:15:15,154 --> 00:15:16,433
She has six.
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00:15:16,434 --> 00:15:18,673
They're just ten-days-old
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00:15:18,674 --> 00:15:22,834
and still reliant on her for milk
and body heat.
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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.
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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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