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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,200 --> 00:00:07,960 Our world is not always the same. 2 00:00:09,280 --> 00:00:12,440 Hidden from our view lies a different world. 3 00:00:13,840 --> 00:00:16,600 Creatures utterly unlike us... 4 00:00:16,720 --> 00:00:18,080 (THUNDER RUMBLES) 5 00:00:18,800 --> 00:00:19,720 ..almost alien. 6 00:00:22,240 --> 00:00:25,480 Yet they are more numerous than any other group on the planet. 7 00:00:30,760 --> 00:00:35,160 Welcome to the fascinating world of the arthropods - 8 00:00:35,280 --> 00:00:39,680 spiders, scorpions and insects. 9 00:00:40,300 --> 00:00:44,300 Today we have new camera techniques that will allow us 10 00:00:44,420 --> 00:00:48,820 to reveal in greater detail than ever before their lives. 11 00:00:49,408 --> 00:00:53,448 The way they fight and feed and reproduce. 12 00:00:53,600 --> 00:00:58,080 This series uses specially developed 3D camera technology to study 13 00:00:58,200 --> 00:01:02,240 the micro world in extraordinary detail, both on location 14 00:01:02,360 --> 00:01:05,400 and in specially constructed environments. 15 00:01:06,220 --> 00:01:09,220 We'll witness their births, the challenges they face, 16 00:01:09,340 --> 00:01:12,278 and the moments when their lives hang in the balance. 17 00:01:13,620 --> 00:01:17,020 And that may help us understand how it is that today 18 00:01:17,608 --> 00:01:23,248 over 80% of all animal species on this planet, are arthropods. 19 00:01:24,440 --> 00:01:27,240 In this series we'll see the way they have evolved, 20 00:01:27,860 --> 00:01:31,980 from the comparative simplicity of the millipede, to vast 21 00:01:32,100 --> 00:01:35,860 colonies that contain hundreds, even millions of individuals. 22 00:01:38,340 --> 00:01:41,060 We'll witness the most extraordinary transformations 23 00:01:41,180 --> 00:01:42,540 in the animal kingdom... 24 00:01:44,020 --> 00:01:46,620 We'll meet ants that farm... 25 00:01:46,974 --> 00:01:49,654 Spiders that can cast their webs. 26 00:01:51,280 --> 00:01:55,320 And the bug that wears the bodies of its victims as a disguise. 27 00:01:57,680 --> 00:02:01,125 Welcome to a strange and dangerous world. 28 00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:24,080 Every species of animal must reproduce. 29 00:02:24,600 --> 00:02:27,080 If it didn't it would go extinct. 30 00:02:27,200 --> 00:02:31,120 Arthropods have developed many ways of doing so. 31 00:02:36,120 --> 00:02:38,000 From courtship and mating... 32 00:02:41,280 --> 00:02:43,080 ..to egg laying. 33 00:02:44,320 --> 00:02:46,040 The hatching of larvae... 34 00:02:47,980 --> 00:02:50,100 ..to caring for the newly-born young. 35 00:02:56,320 --> 00:02:59,600 And some insects meet the reproductive challenge 36 00:02:59,720 --> 00:03:02,120 by splitting their life cycle in two. 37 00:03:03,740 --> 00:03:06,100 And all in order to produce offspring 38 00:03:06,220 --> 00:03:09,140 and ensure they get the best possible start in life. 39 00:03:13,780 --> 00:03:14,740 (THUNDER RUMBLES) 40 00:03:15,460 --> 00:03:18,260 The arthropods' success in doing so has lead them 41 00:03:18,380 --> 00:03:22,660 to becoming one of the most abundant forms of animals on this planet. 42 00:03:25,500 --> 00:03:29,140 In the woodlands of Madagascar and parts of Southern Africa lives 43 00:03:29,260 --> 00:03:34,380 a spider that has to rely on stealth in order to mate and father young. 44 00:03:36,280 --> 00:03:40,040 This is the male golden orb web spider. 45 00:03:40,360 --> 00:03:43,920 He hatched two months ago and is now looking for a mate. 46 00:03:45,120 --> 00:03:48,600 He's found a female's web and he's lurking at its edge. 47 00:03:52,740 --> 00:03:55,100 This is the female. 48 00:03:55,220 --> 00:03:57,540 As spiders go, she's huge. 49 00:03:57,960 --> 00:04:03,785 Her body alone is as long as your thumb and her legs span some 15cm. 50 00:04:08,820 --> 00:04:11,780 She's about 20 times the size of the male. 51 00:04:15,720 --> 00:04:18,520 Not only that, she's a deadly predator... 52 00:04:21,640 --> 00:04:23,599 ..with a voracious appetite. 53 00:04:26,349 --> 00:04:30,337 And all this makes mating a risky business for the male. 54 00:04:39,660 --> 00:04:42,460 The start of their courtship is triggered by the insect 55 00:04:42,580 --> 00:04:44,628 the female has already captured. 56 00:04:52,320 --> 00:04:56,680 She is distracted by it, so he seizes his opportunity. 57 00:05:00,640 --> 00:05:03,280 He cautiously begins an approach... 58 00:05:24,860 --> 00:05:28,580 He climbs very tentatively onto her abdomen. 59 00:05:33,200 --> 00:05:36,960 Now he's in position, he deposits his sperm. 60 00:05:46,280 --> 00:05:47,800 Success! 61 00:05:47,920 --> 00:05:51,920 His alertness has saved him from becoming the female's next meal. 62 00:05:53,720 --> 00:05:57,400 He will only mate once in his short life 63 00:05:58,520 --> 00:06:01,360 and this is his reward. 64 00:06:01,480 --> 00:06:06,120 He is father to the 400 or so eggs in this egg sac. 65 00:06:12,401 --> 00:06:15,760 A few weeks later the young emerge from it. 66 00:06:20,341 --> 00:06:23,640 The spiderlings are each no bigger than a pinhead. 67 00:06:28,880 --> 00:06:29,880 To begin with, 68 00:06:30,000 --> 00:06:32,920 they stay close to the egg sac from which they emerged. 69 00:06:35,460 --> 00:06:39,620 They moult and then, after 30 days, they start to disperse. 70 00:06:46,960 --> 00:06:50,400 Golden orb web spiders live for only a year. 71 00:06:51,840 --> 00:06:54,280 Mating is the culmination of their lives. 72 00:07:03,320 --> 00:07:08,240 For some creatures though, time is simply too short for mating, 73 00:07:08,860 --> 00:07:12,100 so the females reproduce without a male. 74 00:07:13,500 --> 00:07:18,460 Spring is the season when most arthropod eggs hatch. 75 00:07:18,580 --> 00:07:21,260 But in colder climates, spring arrives late 76 00:07:21,580 --> 00:07:23,140 and the summer is short, 77 00:07:23,260 --> 00:07:24,740 leaving little time to mate 78 00:07:24,960 --> 00:07:28,320 and for the young to grow strong enough to survive the coming winter. 79 00:07:32,900 --> 00:07:37,260 Megabunus, a species of harvestmen, has a way of dealing with that. 80 00:07:40,460 --> 00:07:42,980 The female lives in Alpine forests 81 00:07:43,100 --> 00:07:46,420 and spends the freezing winter sheltered in the leaf litter. 82 00:07:47,880 --> 00:07:52,000 She emerges in spring and starts to hunt. 83 00:07:52,120 --> 00:07:55,320 Her long legs help her to clamber over the moss. 84 00:07:57,700 --> 00:07:59,820 In fact, her legs are so long, that she 85 00:07:59,940 --> 00:08:03,540 has breathing holes in them to supply them directly with oxygen. 86 00:08:08,500 --> 00:08:12,460 But she must reproduce if the species is to survive. 87 00:08:18,200 --> 00:08:21,440 So she does so without mating. 88 00:08:23,560 --> 00:08:28,720 She lays unfertilised eggs which hatch into exact genetic 89 00:08:28,840 --> 00:08:30,920 copies of herself - 90 00:08:31,540 --> 00:08:33,220 clones. 91 00:08:35,660 --> 00:08:39,900 She adapted her reproduction to the harsh climate and 92 00:08:40,020 --> 00:08:45,020 so sacrificed the genetic variation that could've come with sex. 93 00:08:48,580 --> 00:08:51,700 But other plant-eaters in gentler climates use the same 94 00:08:51,820 --> 00:08:56,620 technique to take advantage of the glut of food that comes with spring. 95 00:09:00,420 --> 00:09:03,700 Aphids also clone their offspring, and what is more, 96 00:09:03,820 --> 00:09:06,620 a female produces her young alive. 97 00:09:11,000 --> 00:09:15,960 And she can do so ten times a day or more. 98 00:09:16,080 --> 00:09:19,360 Not only that, each of her offspring will start producing 99 00:09:19,480 --> 00:09:21,578 young of their own within days. 100 00:09:23,280 --> 00:09:26,360 If the descendants of a single female all survived, 101 00:09:26,558 --> 00:09:30,992 they would, by the end of summer, number 600 billion. 102 00:09:32,120 --> 00:09:34,806 All of them identical clones. 103 00:09:42,660 --> 00:09:45,300 But as the winter approaches the aphids 104 00:09:45,420 --> 00:09:47,853 change their way of reproducing. 105 00:09:51,900 --> 00:09:53,835 They lay eggs. 106 00:09:57,580 --> 00:10:01,340 Aphids cannot survive the cold of the winter, 107 00:10:01,460 --> 00:10:05,380 but the eggs are hardy and will hatch next spring. 108 00:10:05,900 --> 00:10:10,804 And then, once again, the aphid population will explode. 109 00:10:19,980 --> 00:10:23,660 The million or so species of arthropod on our planet have matched 110 00:10:23,780 --> 00:10:26,460 the way they reproduce to suit the particular 111 00:10:26,580 --> 00:10:28,864 environment in which they live. 112 00:10:36,700 --> 00:10:38,420 Most of them lay eggs. 113 00:10:40,500 --> 00:10:44,455 And some do so in scarcely believable numbers. 114 00:10:52,680 --> 00:10:56,172 Once such lives on a hedgehog. 115 00:11:00,500 --> 00:11:03,460 Ixodes is a tick - a parasite. 116 00:11:04,780 --> 00:11:08,060 The female is so well adapted to life on a hedgehog that she 117 00:11:08,180 --> 00:11:10,660 rarely lives anywhere else. 118 00:11:11,080 --> 00:11:14,840 She has a limitless supply of food immediately beside her - 119 00:11:15,760 --> 00:11:17,106 blood. 120 00:11:20,200 --> 00:11:23,880 She stays on the hedgehog until she's ready to lay her eggs. 121 00:11:26,640 --> 00:11:29,320 Then she lets go, falls to the ground... 122 00:11:31,560 --> 00:11:35,200 ..and starts to deposit her eggs in the undergrowth. 123 00:11:41,040 --> 00:11:45,040 The eggs make up 50% of her entire body weight. 124 00:11:48,280 --> 00:11:51,360 She can lay around 1,500 of them 125 00:11:51,480 --> 00:11:55,068 and it takes her up to 20 days to lay them all. 126 00:12:00,020 --> 00:12:03,700 Producing so many is her way of ensuring that at least one or 127 00:12:03,820 --> 00:12:07,736 two of her young will find their own hedgehog host. 128 00:12:10,460 --> 00:12:13,849 For those that do the cycle can begin again. 129 00:12:17,380 --> 00:12:19,540 By the time Ixodes has produced them all, 130 00:12:19,960 --> 00:12:25,908 her once plump body is deflated and she dies. 131 00:12:34,640 --> 00:12:37,880 Some insects, among them butterflies, have developed 132 00:12:38,000 --> 00:12:42,911 a way of growing that involves a truly astonishing transformation. 133 00:12:45,340 --> 00:12:48,380 This is a Heliconius butterfly. 134 00:12:50,120 --> 00:12:52,772 And THIS is its offspring - 135 00:12:52,909 --> 00:12:54,360 a caterpillar. 136 00:12:54,480 --> 00:12:57,360 The two look as though they're completely different creatures, 137 00:12:57,480 --> 00:12:59,480 but of course, they're not. 138 00:12:59,600 --> 00:13:03,520 The butterfly has divided its life into two halves. 139 00:13:03,640 --> 00:13:05,840 The first half, the caterpillar, 140 00:13:06,160 --> 00:13:11,120 is devoted almost exclusively to gathering food and growing. 141 00:13:11,740 --> 00:13:14,220 And the second, the adult, 142 00:13:14,340 --> 00:13:17,660 is devoted almost entirely to reproduction. 143 00:13:36,200 --> 00:13:39,560 Adult butterflies feed on nectar which they locate 144 00:13:39,680 --> 00:13:44,680 with their antennae, taste through their feet 145 00:13:45,400 --> 00:13:48,660 and collect with long, tube-like mouthparts. 146 00:13:52,860 --> 00:13:56,406 This sugar-rich food fuels their search for a mate. 147 00:14:02,440 --> 00:14:06,800 Once a male and female have found one another, the male uses special 148 00:14:06,920 --> 00:14:11,760 claspers at the end of his abdomen to transfer his sperm to her. 149 00:14:19,060 --> 00:14:22,620 Once fertilised, the female Heliconius lays her 150 00:14:22,740 --> 00:14:25,780 eggs on the leaves of the passion flower plant. 151 00:14:27,877 --> 00:14:30,757 Her young, the caterpillars, are fussy eaters 152 00:14:31,080 --> 00:14:34,560 and these leaves are almost the only ones they will eat. 153 00:14:39,100 --> 00:14:42,660 She lays around 50 eggs and then her work is done. 154 00:14:49,420 --> 00:14:52,540 About a week later the caterpillars emerge. 155 00:14:56,780 --> 00:14:59,500 They are little more than eating machines 156 00:14:59,820 --> 00:15:02,284 and they get down to work immediately. 157 00:15:06,800 --> 00:15:12,634 Some, over a month or two, can grow to 40 times their original size. 158 00:15:19,060 --> 00:15:22,900 They have protective spines to ward off their predators, 159 00:15:23,020 --> 00:15:25,093 but no reproductive organs. 160 00:15:35,240 --> 00:15:38,880 Then, when they've grown enough, their behaviour changes. 161 00:15:41,080 --> 00:15:45,080 They stop eating and settle in a suitable resting place. 162 00:15:45,400 --> 00:15:48,807 Then their skins hardens to form a shell. 163 00:15:54,300 --> 00:15:56,660 This is a chrysalis. 164 00:15:56,780 --> 00:16:00,260 If we could see inside we would witness one of the most 165 00:16:00,380 --> 00:16:03,300 extraordinary changes in the animal kingdom... 166 00:16:04,500 --> 00:16:06,863 ..metamorphosis. 167 00:16:13,361 --> 00:16:16,521 Some parts of the caterpillar are transformed 168 00:16:17,120 --> 00:16:19,800 and others disappear completely. 169 00:16:21,160 --> 00:16:25,080 The caterpillar had a massive gut for processing food, 170 00:16:25,500 --> 00:16:29,420 that shrinks for nectar will be easier to digest than 171 00:16:29,540 --> 00:16:32,243 the leaves the caterpillar consume. 172 00:16:35,740 --> 00:16:40,060 The mouth parts must change - the adult needs not munching jaws, 173 00:16:40,180 --> 00:16:41,900 but a tube-like tongue. 174 00:16:46,700 --> 00:16:49,860 And the caterpillar's simple eyes are also transformed. 175 00:16:50,080 --> 00:16:54,120 Searching for a mate needs better eyesight than finding leaves. 176 00:16:56,200 --> 00:16:58,640 Antennae sprout form its head. 177 00:16:58,760 --> 00:17:02,720 It will use them to sniff out the scent of a female or a flower. 178 00:17:04,900 --> 00:17:08,500 And finally, its wings, their shape and colour will 179 00:17:08,620 --> 00:17:12,980 warn off predators and enable it to find and select a suitable mate. 180 00:17:20,240 --> 00:17:23,040 An adult Heliconius butterfly emerges after 181 00:17:23,160 --> 00:17:25,920 eight days of transformation. 182 00:17:51,540 --> 00:17:54,940 Its delicate wings are crumpled and wet. 183 00:17:55,060 --> 00:17:57,980 It stretches them by pumping blood along their veins 184 00:17:58,600 --> 00:18:02,360 and then waits for them to dry before attempting to fly. 185 00:18:11,220 --> 00:18:15,060 From this point on its body will not grow or change... 186 00:18:17,780 --> 00:18:20,060 It will live for just a month or two 187 00:18:20,180 --> 00:18:23,420 and feed just enough to keep itself going. 188 00:18:23,840 --> 00:18:26,600 This body is purely for mating. 189 00:18:31,420 --> 00:18:34,940 A male's antennae can detect females' scent from more than 190 00:18:35,060 --> 00:18:36,780 a kilometre away. 191 00:18:50,320 --> 00:18:52,720 And he's off to find a female. 192 00:19:15,160 --> 00:19:18,800 Success for this butterfly is reproduction, 193 00:19:18,920 --> 00:19:21,600 as it is for all species. 194 00:19:21,820 --> 00:19:26,500 And that need has shaped the bodies, the behaviour, 195 00:19:26,620 --> 00:19:30,540 the entire life cycle of all arthropods, and produced 196 00:19:30,660 --> 00:19:35,154 the dazzling range of forms that we see around the world today. 197 00:19:39,580 --> 00:19:42,860 Every generation must reproduce itself, 198 00:19:42,980 --> 00:19:45,540 if it does not a species will disappear. 199 00:19:48,240 --> 00:19:51,840 From the cunning, tiny make golden orb web spider... 200 00:19:54,520 --> 00:19:58,280 ..to the amazingly fertile aphids that clone themselves to make 201 00:19:58,400 --> 00:19:59,680 the most of summer. 202 00:20:03,380 --> 00:20:07,020 And the tick that leaves its hedgehog host to lay its eggs. 203 00:20:09,820 --> 00:20:13,100 The arthropods have evolved reproductive strategies 204 00:20:13,520 --> 00:20:16,000 that are surely among the most fascinating, 205 00:20:16,120 --> 00:20:20,090 almost unbelievable stories, in the natural world. 206 00:20:27,820 --> 00:20:29,020 In our next programme, 207 00:20:29,340 --> 00:20:32,732 I'll be looking at what happens after reproduction. 208 00:20:37,580 --> 00:20:42,189 Over 400 million years ago some early arthropods began to 209 00:20:42,300 --> 00:20:45,900 care for their young and to live in groups. 210 00:20:51,080 --> 00:20:56,080 And for these too, life was about more than just staying alive, 211 00:20:56,400 --> 00:20:59,120 it was about giving the next generation the best 212 00:20:59,240 --> 00:21:01,348 chance of survival.17915

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