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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,220 --> 00:00:07,380 Our world is not always the same. 2 00:00:09,480 --> 00:00:11,040 Hidden from our view 3 00:00:11,160 --> 00:00:12,910 lies a different world. 4 00:00:14,080 --> 00:00:16,400 Creatures utterly unlike us. 5 00:00:16,520 --> 00:00:18,280 THUNDER RUMBLES 6 00:00:18,600 --> 00:00:20,099 Almost alien. 7 00:00:22,140 --> 00:00:23,580 Yet they are more numerous 8 00:00:23,687 --> 00:00:25,646 than any other group on the planet. 9 00:00:30,760 --> 00:00:35,000 Welcome to the fascinating world of the arthropods - 10 00:00:35,120 --> 00:00:36,600 spiders, 11 00:00:36,720 --> 00:00:38,280 scorpions 12 00:00:38,400 --> 00:00:40,000 and insects. 13 00:00:40,320 --> 00:00:43,080 Today we have new camera techniques 14 00:00:43,200 --> 00:00:47,200 that will allow us to reveal in greater detail than ever before 15 00:00:47,720 --> 00:00:49,080 their lives. 16 00:00:49,200 --> 00:00:53,120 The way they fight and feed and reproduce. 17 00:00:53,240 --> 00:00:57,040 This series uses specially developed 3D camera technology 18 00:00:57,160 --> 00:01:00,840 to study the micro world in extraordinary detail, 19 00:01:00,960 --> 00:01:05,240 both on location and in specially constructed environments. 20 00:01:05,760 --> 00:01:07,200 We'll witness their births, 21 00:01:07,320 --> 00:01:08,869 the challenges they face 22 00:01:09,191 --> 00:01:12,410 and the moments when their lives hang in the balance. 23 00:01:13,520 --> 00:01:17,200 And that may help us understand how it is that today 24 00:01:17,420 --> 00:01:23,860 over 80% of all animal species on this planet are arthropods. 25 00:01:24,280 --> 00:01:27,320 In this series we'll see the way they have evolved, 26 00:01:27,640 --> 00:01:31,320 from the comparative simplicity of the millipede 27 00:01:31,640 --> 00:01:33,040 to vast colonies 28 00:01:33,160 --> 00:01:35,838 that contain hundreds, even millions, of individuals. 29 00:01:37,960 --> 00:01:40,600 We'll witness the most extraordinary transformations 30 00:01:41,020 --> 00:01:43,700 in the animal kingdom. 31 00:01:44,020 --> 00:01:46,620 We'll meet ants that farm, 32 00:01:46,740 --> 00:01:49,020 spiders that can cast their webs... 33 00:01:51,280 --> 00:01:54,840 ..and the bug that wears the bodies of its victims as a disguise. 34 00:01:57,380 --> 00:02:00,420 Welcome to a strange and dangerous world. 35 00:02:18,460 --> 00:02:21,020 The struggle for survival amongst arthropods 36 00:02:21,140 --> 00:02:22,620 is often brutal 37 00:02:22,840 --> 00:02:25,440 but that's a key to their success - 38 00:02:25,660 --> 00:02:29,420 the strongest survive to produce the next generation. 39 00:02:32,160 --> 00:02:37,915 The birth of offspring is not always an end to parental responsibilities. 40 00:02:38,760 --> 00:02:42,080 Whilst most arthropods leave their young to fend for themselves, 41 00:02:42,200 --> 00:02:45,320 a small minority look after them. 42 00:02:45,640 --> 00:02:47,560 They become families. 43 00:02:47,980 --> 00:02:50,060 And in the tropical forests of Australia 44 00:02:50,380 --> 00:02:52,463 lives one of the most surprising. 45 00:03:00,260 --> 00:03:03,334 This is the giant burrowing cockroach. 46 00:03:04,620 --> 00:03:07,060 It is one of the largest cockroaches in the world. 47 00:03:09,260 --> 00:03:13,620 If you were to hold it, it would fill the palm of your hand. 48 00:03:14,140 --> 00:03:16,860 Despite its appearance, it isn't a pest. 49 00:03:16,980 --> 00:03:20,701 In fact, it's one of the most useful insects in the forest. 50 00:03:24,060 --> 00:03:26,500 Australians call it the litter bug 51 00:03:26,620 --> 00:03:31,321 because it cleans up the forest floor, eating leaves and detritus. 52 00:03:37,740 --> 00:03:39,460 This one is a female. 53 00:03:39,580 --> 00:03:43,540 She's pregnant and she's digging a tunnel in order to create 54 00:03:43,660 --> 00:03:47,233 a safe place where she can produce her young. 55 00:03:53,740 --> 00:03:55,900 Her tunnel is a metre deep, 56 00:03:56,320 --> 00:04:00,160 the equivalent of you or me digging down more than 20 metres. 57 00:04:04,360 --> 00:04:06,403 And here she gives birth. 58 00:04:11,580 --> 00:04:14,700 Having done so, most insects would leave, 59 00:04:14,820 --> 00:04:17,731 and their young would be left to fend for themselves. 60 00:04:19,480 --> 00:04:20,640 But not her. 61 00:04:22,680 --> 00:04:25,480 She will care for her young for months, 62 00:04:25,600 --> 00:04:28,386 keeping them moist and warm under her shell. 63 00:04:38,840 --> 00:04:43,199 Occasionally, she'll return to the surface to collect eucalyptus leaves 64 00:04:43,224 --> 00:04:44,992 for them to eat. 65 00:04:55,220 --> 00:04:58,194 This cockroach will live for eight years or more. 66 00:04:59,700 --> 00:05:04,053 During that time, she will produce around 150 young. 67 00:05:08,400 --> 00:05:12,120 And by caring for them for the first six months of their lives, 68 00:05:12,340 --> 00:05:16,714 she ensures that every one of them gets the best possible start. 69 00:05:20,900 --> 00:05:25,060 Eventually, they will leave the nest, and begin life on their own. 70 00:05:32,740 --> 00:05:36,140 But some creatures have taken social living a step further. 71 00:05:36,460 --> 00:05:39,260 Their youngsters never leave. 72 00:05:39,380 --> 00:05:42,683 The family stays together for life. 73 00:05:47,820 --> 00:05:53,448 This mass of white silk is home to a very unusual spider. 74 00:06:01,160 --> 00:06:03,480 Spiders are usually solitary. 75 00:06:03,600 --> 00:06:05,920 But these spiders are different - 76 00:06:06,140 --> 00:06:08,260 they're social. 77 00:06:08,380 --> 00:06:10,540 They live in groups of up to 100 78 00:06:10,660 --> 00:06:12,140 and they are all related - 79 00:06:12,260 --> 00:06:15,140 brothers and sisters, parents, uncles and aunts - 80 00:06:15,260 --> 00:06:17,330 all on the same web. 81 00:06:20,680 --> 00:06:24,470 They live side-by-side, and hunt together. 82 00:06:30,220 --> 00:06:32,140 Here, too, the mothers care for their young. 83 00:06:33,960 --> 00:06:37,280 Once these eggs have hatched, she'll feed the spiderlings 84 00:06:37,400 --> 00:06:41,744 by regurgitating food until they're old enough to hunt for themselves. 85 00:06:44,220 --> 00:06:47,300 For now, with so many spiders guarding the web, 86 00:06:47,420 --> 00:06:51,113 it's safe for her to leave the eggs in search of food. 87 00:06:55,260 --> 00:07:00,517 This mantis is far too large for any single spider to attack. 88 00:07:09,640 --> 00:07:12,280 So instead, they collaborate. 89 00:07:12,400 --> 00:07:15,598 All the nearby spiders help to hold it down. 90 00:07:22,520 --> 00:07:26,243 Even the smaller, young spiders lend a hand. 91 00:07:36,480 --> 00:07:41,080 Eventually when their prey is exhausted the spiders feed. 92 00:07:50,380 --> 00:07:53,980 It's not unusual for spiderlings to eat the bodies of older spiders 93 00:07:54,100 --> 00:07:56,063 that have died in the web. 94 00:07:58,336 --> 00:08:01,136 In fact, in some species of social spider, 95 00:08:01,400 --> 00:08:04,520 the mother always dies when the spiderlings hatch 96 00:08:04,640 --> 00:08:07,413 and they feed on her corpse. 97 00:08:10,960 --> 00:08:14,960 So the generations pass, and the family thrives. 98 00:08:19,140 --> 00:08:23,420 This vast web will persist for perhaps five years, 99 00:08:23,540 --> 00:08:26,652 until eventually the family moves on. 100 00:08:31,860 --> 00:08:34,380 By living together as an extended family, 101 00:08:34,500 --> 00:08:36,340 and all looking out for each other, 102 00:08:36,460 --> 00:08:40,767 these social spiders have helped guarantee their survival. 103 00:08:44,560 --> 00:08:48,840 But some insects have taken this practice a stage further. 104 00:08:48,960 --> 00:08:52,013 Family members have begun to specialise. 105 00:08:58,140 --> 00:09:00,020 In the rainforests of Australia, 106 00:09:00,340 --> 00:09:03,944 green ants live in groups of up to half a million. 107 00:09:08,800 --> 00:09:11,360 But these communities have small beginnings. 108 00:09:14,640 --> 00:09:18,021 This family consists of just a few hundred ants. 109 00:09:20,200 --> 00:09:24,068 And they're searching for a place to build their home. 110 00:09:47,000 --> 00:09:50,085 The family seems to have found a suitable location. 111 00:09:57,460 --> 00:10:00,098 Now they can start construction. 112 00:10:02,500 --> 00:10:04,500 Climbing on each other's backs, 113 00:10:04,720 --> 00:10:07,440 the strongest ants reach across the gaps... 114 00:10:07,760 --> 00:10:09,480 and pull the leaves together. 115 00:10:21,680 --> 00:10:25,500 Their nest will be made by joining these leaves. 116 00:10:35,000 --> 00:10:39,720 But to do that, they need help from the youngest members of the family - 117 00:10:39,840 --> 00:10:40,920 the larvae. 118 00:10:45,380 --> 00:10:48,740 These tiny white youngsters are immobile, 119 00:10:48,860 --> 00:10:51,260 but they have a remarkable ability, 120 00:10:51,380 --> 00:10:54,562 which the worker ants have the skills to stimulate. 121 00:10:57,394 --> 00:11:00,514 When the adult workers stroke them with their antennae, 122 00:11:00,600 --> 00:11:02,440 the young larvae produce silk. 123 00:11:07,560 --> 00:11:11,132 The workers use the silk to stitch the leaves together. 124 00:11:18,720 --> 00:11:20,960 Some workers pull the leaves into position... 125 00:11:23,000 --> 00:11:25,871 ..and the delicate silk weaving continues. 126 00:11:37,500 --> 00:11:40,201 Finally, the nest is complete. 127 00:11:47,100 --> 00:11:52,117 It will provide a strong, waterproof, safe home for the ants. 128 00:11:52,980 --> 00:11:58,351 But it serves an even more important purpose, as home to their leader. 129 00:11:59,720 --> 00:12:01,520 Their queen. 130 00:12:01,740 --> 00:12:04,420 She is the mother of the entire family, 131 00:12:04,540 --> 00:12:06,940 and the sole producer of young. 132 00:12:07,460 --> 00:12:10,765 Without her, the community will fail. 133 00:12:16,218 --> 00:12:21,098 Arthropods typically produce their young in huge numbers. 134 00:12:21,218 --> 00:12:24,887 Some look after their offspring, and stay together as families. 135 00:12:26,258 --> 00:12:29,731 As these families grow in size, they need organisation. 136 00:12:31,618 --> 00:12:34,578 And many have a central figure, their mother. 137 00:12:37,898 --> 00:12:39,515 Their queen. 138 00:12:44,718 --> 00:12:46,638 Across Europe and North America 139 00:12:46,758 --> 00:12:48,518 there is an insect that starkly 140 00:12:48,638 --> 00:12:50,078 illustrates the process 141 00:12:50,198 --> 00:12:53,384 by which insect families choose their queen. 142 00:12:55,078 --> 00:12:57,499 These are paper wasps, 143 00:12:57,638 --> 00:13:01,109 and they live in family groups of no more than 80 individuals. 144 00:13:03,198 --> 00:13:06,518 The small size of the group makes them easy to observe. 145 00:13:07,638 --> 00:13:10,444 And shows that the queen is constantly under threat 146 00:13:10,518 --> 00:13:12,758 from her daughters. 147 00:13:12,878 --> 00:13:14,358 The queen's role is to lay eggs 148 00:13:14,478 --> 00:13:17,398 and keep her unruly daughters in line. 149 00:13:22,698 --> 00:13:24,698 The daughters tend the young, 150 00:13:24,818 --> 00:13:26,865 their newly-born sisters. 151 00:13:30,238 --> 00:13:31,894 They clean them. 152 00:13:33,238 --> 00:13:35,175 And water them. 153 00:13:39,798 --> 00:13:42,282 They even chop up their food for them... 154 00:13:47,878 --> 00:13:50,358 ..and feed it to them piece by piece. 155 00:13:54,558 --> 00:13:57,118 And the queen constantly bullies her daughters 156 00:13:57,238 --> 00:13:58,870 to make sure they do their job. 157 00:14:02,338 --> 00:14:06,378 But in this small family the role of queen is not fixed. 158 00:14:06,498 --> 00:14:11,588 And deciding who is queen is settled by aggression. 159 00:14:26,838 --> 00:14:30,199 These tests of strength have a purpose. 160 00:14:35,578 --> 00:14:38,583 The strongest will become the queen. 161 00:14:55,198 --> 00:14:57,558 To avoid unnecessary fights 162 00:14:57,678 --> 00:15:01,803 the wasps have evolved the ability to recognise each other by smell. 163 00:15:02,938 --> 00:15:06,418 Some have even learned to recognise faces, much like humans. 164 00:15:08,598 --> 00:15:13,318 This enables them to constantly keep track of who has beaten whom, 165 00:15:13,438 --> 00:15:16,488 maintaining this uneasy truce. 166 00:15:24,178 --> 00:15:28,004 But the system only works because the family is so small. 167 00:15:29,898 --> 00:15:31,218 Just a few more wasps, 168 00:15:31,738 --> 00:15:34,504 and the queen would no longer be able to fight them all. 169 00:15:46,538 --> 00:15:49,938 Bumblebees have found a way around this obstacle. 170 00:15:53,418 --> 00:15:56,218 Instead of dominating by brute force, 171 00:15:56,338 --> 00:15:59,778 their queen controls her family with chemicals. 172 00:16:03,678 --> 00:16:07,558 Bumblebees are able to live in larger families of about 300. 173 00:16:10,238 --> 00:16:11,878 The majority are workers, 174 00:16:11,998 --> 00:16:15,556 who collect nectar and pollen to feed the rest of the family. 175 00:16:24,118 --> 00:16:26,258 And this is their queen. 176 00:16:29,438 --> 00:16:32,278 Her swollen abdomen is full of eggs. 177 00:16:34,118 --> 00:16:35,758 She alone lays... 178 00:16:38,598 --> 00:16:42,453 ..so she is the mother of every bee in the family. 179 00:16:49,833 --> 00:16:52,873 To prevent competition from her offspring, 180 00:16:52,916 --> 00:16:54,958 she releases a chemical - a pheromone - 181 00:16:55,078 --> 00:16:59,088 that renders the workers unwilling to lay eggs themselves. 182 00:17:01,938 --> 00:17:03,422 Unable to produce larvae, 183 00:17:03,564 --> 00:17:06,084 these offspring become the queen's workers, 184 00:17:06,338 --> 00:17:08,938 looking after the day-to-day running of their home. 185 00:17:12,598 --> 00:17:15,198 They clean up the debris at the bottom of the nest. 186 00:17:19,338 --> 00:17:22,738 And build and repair the nest walls using wax. 187 00:17:26,218 --> 00:17:30,642 They fill and look after special food stores called honey pots. 188 00:17:33,258 --> 00:17:37,618 They use this honey to feed new larvae produced by their queen, 189 00:17:37,738 --> 00:17:39,424 their own sisters. 190 00:17:41,878 --> 00:17:44,278 And if any larvae aren't perfect, 191 00:17:44,398 --> 00:17:46,822 the workers will kill them. 192 00:17:58,958 --> 00:18:03,206 The queen's chemical control of her family is total. 193 00:18:09,078 --> 00:18:14,253 But by the standard of some insect families, this one is small. 194 00:18:23,158 --> 00:18:25,998 Bumblebees are found all over the northern hemisphere, 195 00:18:26,118 --> 00:18:29,038 there are about 200 different species of them. 196 00:18:29,158 --> 00:18:31,238 But pheromones released by the queen 197 00:18:31,358 --> 00:18:36,198 can only control a certain number of individuals - 100 or so at the most. 198 00:18:36,718 --> 00:18:38,678 To organise bigger colonies, 199 00:18:38,798 --> 00:18:42,038 workers need to be able to send messages to one another. 200 00:18:42,458 --> 00:18:46,833 It's no longer about control, it's about communication. 201 00:18:53,838 --> 00:18:55,878 In the rainforests of Africa, 202 00:18:55,998 --> 00:18:59,432 some insects live in immense families. 203 00:19:02,878 --> 00:19:05,478 By solving the issue of communication, 204 00:19:05,598 --> 00:19:09,204 their size has become almost limitless. 205 00:19:13,918 --> 00:19:16,501 These are driver ants. 206 00:19:18,798 --> 00:19:21,198 With up to 50 million individuals, 207 00:19:21,318 --> 00:19:24,921 this is more than just a family. It's a colony. 208 00:19:29,094 --> 00:19:32,156 the queen is the mother of them all 209 00:19:33,427 --> 00:19:37,027 She is the only individual that's able to reproduce. 210 00:19:38,947 --> 00:19:42,147 And the entire community, in their millions, 211 00:19:42,267 --> 00:19:45,325 exists purely in order to support her. 212 00:19:48,727 --> 00:19:50,807 Like all of the simpler families we've seen, 213 00:19:51,127 --> 00:19:53,887 their success is built on hierarchy, 214 00:19:54,007 --> 00:19:57,116 and is made possible by division of labour. 215 00:19:59,287 --> 00:20:01,967 Every ant has a specific role, 216 00:20:02,087 --> 00:20:04,807 whether it's tending to larvae, 217 00:20:04,927 --> 00:20:06,847 guarding the nest, 218 00:20:06,967 --> 00:20:10,931 or guiding a column of its sisters to a source of food. 219 00:20:13,627 --> 00:20:16,067 But the distance over which they can operate 220 00:20:16,187 --> 00:20:22,014 - and the sheer size of the family - is made possible by communication. 221 00:20:28,975 --> 00:20:35,026 Communication is the key to making a simple family a complex colony. 222 00:20:37,347 --> 00:20:42,384 A collection of insects that is far greater than the sum of its parts. 223 00:20:43,627 --> 00:20:48,993 And capable of achieving feats equal to those of far larger animals. 224 00:20:52,007 --> 00:20:54,567 Of all the arthropod innovations, 225 00:20:54,687 --> 00:20:59,647 the most revolutionary has been the ability to live in immense colonies. 226 00:20:59,767 --> 00:21:02,327 That has enabled them to hunt en masse, 227 00:21:02,747 --> 00:21:05,747 to build huge constructions for their homes, 228 00:21:05,867 --> 00:21:08,287 and to dominate their surroundings. 229 00:21:12,487 --> 00:21:16,807 Next time, I want to look at this pinnacle of arthropod achievement. 230 00:21:18,287 --> 00:21:22,187 Vast colonies capable of shaping the world around them. 231 00:21:23,767 --> 00:21:27,407 Termites that build castles that, on our scale, 232 00:21:27,527 --> 00:21:29,747 would be two kilometres tall. 233 00:21:31,407 --> 00:21:34,006 Bees that communicate by dancing. 234 00:21:35,707 --> 00:21:39,771 And the ants that farm fungus on a grand scale. 235 00:21:41,867 --> 00:21:44,347 These creatures are individually tiny, 236 00:21:44,567 --> 00:21:47,959 yet they live in colonies that are truly immense. 237 00:21:50,567 --> 00:21:52,767 And they act entirely as one. 238 00:21:54,207 --> 00:21:58,733 Together they form a single super-organism. 19569

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