All language subtitles for Wild Down Under 5of6 Island Arks

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish Download
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:42,808 --> 00:00:48,041 In the seas around Australia, cataclysmic forces have formed thousands of islands - 2 00:00:48,480 --> 00:00:50,004 of all shapes and sizes, 3 00:00:50,449 --> 00:00:55,512 from tiny tropical ones to giants with huge snow capped peaks. 4 00:00:58,724 --> 00:01:01,284 They stretch from Australia in a great arc, 5 00:01:01,627 --> 00:01:04,653 from New Guinea in the north, right out into the Pacific 6 00:01:05,030 --> 00:01:07,260 and down to New Zealand. 7 00:01:10,035 --> 00:01:12,196 If Australia itself seems strange, 8 00:01:12,438 --> 00:01:16,875 its island relatives and their unique creatures are stranger still. 9 00:01:23,949 --> 00:01:25,576 No other continent has given birth 10 00:01:25,751 --> 00:01:31,553 to such an explosion of fabulous island landscapes and their weird wildlife. 11 00:01:42,034 --> 00:01:44,764 So how did the dry, old giant, Australia, 12 00:01:45,004 --> 00:01:50,408 end up surrounded by such a glittering necklace of wild ocean jewels? 13 00:02:01,253 --> 00:02:04,552 Just a few thousand years ago, the tip of Northern Australia 14 00:02:04,723 --> 00:02:09,990 oozed out into a vast swampy plain that stretched all the way to New Guinea. 15 00:02:18,470 --> 00:02:20,370 Today, in Australia's Top End, 16 00:02:20,739 --> 00:02:23,367 you can still get an idea of that great swamp 17 00:02:23,542 --> 00:02:27,137 in a watery landscape called Kakadu. 18 00:02:28,480 --> 00:02:33,315 It's an oasis for water birds, including huge flocks of magpie geese. 19 00:02:41,627 --> 00:02:45,427 Kakadu's swamps are created every year by monsoon floods. 20 00:02:45,831 --> 00:02:48,698 They transform the parched landscape into a rich, 21 00:02:48,867 --> 00:02:52,894 living broth and millions of water birds find it irresistible. 22 00:02:53,605 --> 00:02:56,472 And something else finds them irresistible too... 23 00:02:59,178 --> 00:03:01,203 ...the salt-water crocodile. 24 00:03:22,301 --> 00:03:25,793 Muddy water provides the perfect camouflage for these huge, 25 00:03:25,971 --> 00:03:28,201 six metre long reptiles. 26 00:03:59,104 --> 00:04:02,198 A magpie goose makes a nice bite-sized snack. 27 00:04:02,641 --> 00:04:04,438 It will probably last him a week. 28 00:04:17,022 --> 00:04:18,990 Kakadu may be full of life, 29 00:04:19,358 --> 00:04:21,223 but it can give us only a tiny glimpse of 30 00:04:21,393 --> 00:04:25,625 what those enormous swamps of thousands of years ago must have been like. 31 00:04:31,570 --> 00:04:34,164 In those days, sea levels were much lower. 32 00:04:35,841 --> 00:04:39,470 But about 10,000 years ago, world sea levels rose 33 00:04:39,812 --> 00:04:41,712 and the swamp was drowned by the ocean, 34 00:04:41,880 --> 00:04:45,043 completely cutting off New Guinea from Australia. 35 00:04:53,292 --> 00:04:55,886 The tops of a few hills survived the flooding, 36 00:04:57,663 --> 00:04:59,824 and today, like stepping stones, 37 00:05:00,065 --> 00:05:04,559 they lead a path from Australia to the giant new island of New Guinea. 38 00:05:07,873 --> 00:05:10,637 It was connected to the mainland for millions of years - 39 00:05:11,310 --> 00:05:14,370 but now, it couldn't look more different. 40 00:05:18,150 --> 00:05:20,516 While much of Australia is dusty and dry, 41 00:05:20,819 --> 00:05:24,915 most of New Guinea is covered in lush tropical rainforest. 42 00:05:25,557 --> 00:05:27,548 The landscape may look very different, 43 00:05:27,826 --> 00:05:28,952 but the wildlife still has 44 00:05:29,128 --> 00:05:34,065 that eccentric Australian blend of the improbable and the ingenious... 45 00:05:41,073 --> 00:05:43,007 This is the long beaked echidna. 46 00:05:43,275 --> 00:05:46,108 It's about twice the size of its Australian cousin. 47 00:05:49,548 --> 00:05:53,917 It's also called the giant spiny anteater, but it doesn't eat ants. 48 00:05:57,856 --> 00:06:00,984 Instead, it uses its long nose to probe for worms, 49 00:06:01,160 --> 00:06:04,254 sniffing for them as it wanders through the forest. 50 00:06:11,436 --> 00:06:15,736 When it catches the merest whiff of a worm, it uses its nose like a dibber, 51 00:06:15,908 --> 00:06:19,275 poking it in and out of the ground until it finds a snack. 52 00:06:27,920 --> 00:06:31,356 To haul the worm in, it spears it on a special barbed tongue... 53 00:06:37,663 --> 00:06:40,689 ...then up it goes, like a piece of spaghetti. 54 00:06:50,209 --> 00:06:53,235 Because New Guinea was connected to Australia for so long, 55 00:06:53,512 --> 00:06:55,480 it has a lot of familiar Australian animals, 56 00:06:55,647 --> 00:06:57,342 like kangaroos. 57 00:06:58,483 --> 00:07:02,681 But these are not your typical roos - they live up in the forest canopy. 58 00:07:10,229 --> 00:07:12,663 Although they spend most of their time in trees, 59 00:07:13,098 --> 00:07:15,464 they don't look very sure-footed. 60 00:07:23,542 --> 00:07:25,032 But it's worth the effort. 61 00:07:25,277 --> 00:07:27,802 There are no monkeys or squirrels to compete with here, 62 00:07:27,980 --> 00:07:29,607 so if the kangaroos can reach it, 63 00:07:29,781 --> 00:07:33,239 the entire canopy of leaves is there for the taking. 64 00:07:44,596 --> 00:07:47,690 This baby will learn from its mother about which leaves to eat... 65 00:07:49,101 --> 00:07:52,070 ...and which fruit or lichen to round off the meal. 66 00:08:07,886 --> 00:08:10,855 It's not an easy world for Joeys to learn to move about in 67 00:08:11,223 --> 00:08:13,453 and they'll stick by their mothers for up to two years 68 00:08:13,625 --> 00:08:15,855 before they're ready to live on their own. 69 00:08:26,138 --> 00:08:29,596 New Guinea is covered in dramatic mountains and it has Australia, 70 00:08:29,775 --> 00:08:32,642 one of the flattest continents on earth, to thank. 71 00:08:32,878 --> 00:08:35,813 Over millions of years, Australia has been drifting northwards 72 00:08:36,081 --> 00:08:39,016 and New Guinea has buckled up under the pressure. 73 00:08:45,257 --> 00:08:50,490 Some of these rise as high as 5000 metres, into peaks of ice and snow. 74 00:08:59,738 --> 00:09:01,467 These huge mountains have divided 75 00:09:01,640 --> 00:09:04,768 the island into hundreds of ridges and valleys. 76 00:09:08,447 --> 00:09:12,508 Within these, an endless variety of different landscapes have been created, 77 00:09:12,884 --> 00:09:17,844 many with isolated pockets of extraordinary and unique wildlife. 78 00:09:20,258 --> 00:09:24,251 And you don't get much more extraordinary than the birds of paradise. 79 00:09:33,372 --> 00:09:35,363 Like animated neon signs, 80 00:09:35,540 --> 00:09:38,475 these fabulously adorned males advertise to females 81 00:09:38,844 --> 00:09:41,278 in an explosion of colour and sound. 82 00:09:43,448 --> 00:09:47,111 And in case this isn't eye catching enough, they dance as well. 83 00:09:51,556 --> 00:09:57,324 38 of the world's 42 species of bird of paradise live only here. 84 00:10:03,135 --> 00:10:07,572 Of all of these, the Raggiana must be amongst the most dazzling. 85 00:10:13,211 --> 00:10:16,237 Males dance together on a specially prepared stage, 86 00:10:16,448 --> 00:10:18,848 which they've completely cleared of leaves. 87 00:10:19,684 --> 00:10:22,653 And this is who they're desperate to please. 88 00:10:23,054 --> 00:10:27,582 When these drab females arrive, the males give it everything they've got. 89 00:10:31,263 --> 00:10:33,231 Females are hard to satisfy 90 00:10:33,565 --> 00:10:36,898 and they'll only mate with the male who impresses them the most. 91 00:10:47,012 --> 00:10:52,245 When a female flies in for a closer look, it sends the males into a frenzy. 92 00:11:03,361 --> 00:11:07,457 And when she finally makes her choice - he's unstoppable. 93 00:11:26,151 --> 00:11:27,778 He's laying it on a bit thick here... 94 00:11:30,956 --> 00:11:32,685 ...but she seems to like it. 95 00:11:47,339 --> 00:11:48,499 These beautiful feathers 96 00:11:48,673 --> 00:11:51,972 also make fabulous costumes for the people of New Guinea. 97 00:11:53,478 --> 00:11:56,811 Each year, tribes from all over the highlands gather in displays 98 00:11:56,982 --> 00:12:00,884 that almost outdo the showmanship of the birds themselves. 99 00:12:18,303 --> 00:12:20,999 Hundreds of isolated cultures have evolved here, 100 00:12:21,273 --> 00:12:22,865 with as many different languages - 101 00:12:23,575 --> 00:12:25,805 more than any other place on earth. 102 00:12:34,586 --> 00:12:38,989 The dry landscape of Australia couldn't support great numbers of Aborigines, 103 00:12:39,391 --> 00:12:41,359 but the fertile mountains of New Guinea 104 00:12:41,526 --> 00:12:43,926 allowed the development of settled agriculture 105 00:12:44,095 --> 00:12:47,258 and a huge explosion of peoples and cultures. 106 00:12:47,732 --> 00:12:48,960 On this one island, 107 00:12:49,267 --> 00:12:54,637 there are as many different ways of life as there are valleys and mountainsides. 108 00:13:14,426 --> 00:13:16,587 Many of these tribes were so isolated, 109 00:13:16,761 --> 00:13:20,527 they weren't discovered by Europeans until the middle of the 20th century. 110 00:13:36,414 --> 00:13:39,713 While Australia was a harsh, unpredictable place to survive in, 111 00:13:40,051 --> 00:13:42,747 these mountain slopes could not be more hospitable. 112 00:13:43,321 --> 00:13:46,848 Over 9,000 years ago, people started gardens here. 113 00:13:48,026 --> 00:13:50,324 From plots like this, of sweet potato, 114 00:13:50,562 --> 00:13:55,556 they've now manicured entire hillsides into a patchwork of allotments. 115 00:13:59,104 --> 00:14:02,767 Even so, large parts of the island are too steep to cultivate. 116 00:14:03,141 --> 00:14:07,373 Rugged cliffs and a lot of rain keep these areas thick with forest. 117 00:14:10,281 --> 00:14:15,241 Where there are gaps, waterfalls plummet down to join streams below. 118 00:14:16,154 --> 00:14:20,887 With so much rainfall, these streams very quickly swell into rivers. 119 00:14:46,851 --> 00:14:52,812 It's such a wet place; the rivers are huge, twisting across vast floodplains. 120 00:14:53,124 --> 00:14:53,647 The largest of them 121 00:14:53,825 --> 00:14:58,194 has more water in it than all the rivers in Australia put together. 122 00:15:11,509 --> 00:15:16,071 Eventually, they flow through extensive deltas until they meet the ocean. 123 00:15:22,120 --> 00:15:26,352 In these seas around New Guinea, hundreds of smaller island stretch out - 124 00:15:26,991 --> 00:15:32,224 to the west, towards Indonesia, and eastwards, into the Pacific. 125 00:15:35,433 --> 00:15:38,493 Almost all of them are highly volcanic. 126 00:15:48,680 --> 00:15:53,049 Violent eruptions literally blasted new islands out of the sea. 127 00:16:08,266 --> 00:16:11,565 These are some of the most volcanically active islands on earth - 128 00:16:12,003 --> 00:16:16,565 Vanuatu, the Solomons, New Ireland and New Britain. 129 00:16:27,886 --> 00:16:30,980 The volcanoes are on a sort of geological conveyor belt - 130 00:16:31,890 --> 00:16:35,382 new ones are continually being born, and then worn away - 131 00:16:35,794 --> 00:16:40,288 creating thousands of miles of coastline for coral to grow on. 132 00:16:54,145 --> 00:16:57,740 And as these islands begin to die and sink back beneath the waves, 133 00:16:58,016 --> 00:17:02,385 the tips of extinct volcanoes form more coral reefs. 134 00:17:05,824 --> 00:17:08,725 In just a single bay on any of these reefs, 135 00:17:09,027 --> 00:17:12,360 you could find as many coral species and different kinds of fish 136 00:17:12,664 --> 00:17:16,100 as there are on the whole of the Great Barrier Reef. 137 00:17:21,072 --> 00:17:25,839 It's a kaleidoscope of life and colour, with layer upon layer of species, 138 00:17:26,244 --> 00:17:29,407 like an intricately constructed Russian doll. 139 00:17:30,648 --> 00:17:32,980 Barrel sponges live on the corals... 140 00:17:34,018 --> 00:17:36,714 ...feather stars live on the barrel sponges... 141 00:17:37,088 --> 00:17:40,216 ...and tiny fish live on the feather stars. 142 00:17:50,835 --> 00:17:56,296 Anemones here have anemone fish and tiny little transparent shrimps. 143 00:18:01,346 --> 00:18:05,112 And on some parts of the reef, creatures move about in costume. 144 00:18:05,583 --> 00:18:08,347 This little prawn masquerades as a sea whip. 145 00:18:10,154 --> 00:18:14,818 This tadpole sized pygmy sea horse is disguised as a piece of coral. 146 00:18:25,103 --> 00:18:28,300 From a distance, it's virtually invisible. 147 00:18:31,743 --> 00:18:34,644 Some animals take this deception even further. 148 00:18:35,013 --> 00:18:39,416 These razor fish already wear beautiful striped costumes to look like sea whips, 149 00:18:39,884 --> 00:18:42,478 but they add to the disguise by swimming vertically, 150 00:18:42,987 --> 00:18:45,751 like a weird piece of performance art. 151 00:18:53,364 --> 00:18:58,165 They only swim horizontally to dash from one group of whips, to another. 152 00:19:01,673 --> 00:19:04,073 It's safer to move about in disguise, 153 00:19:04,375 --> 00:19:07,708 because this busy neighbourhood attracts plenty of predators - 154 00:19:08,046 --> 00:19:10,276 like these jacks. 155 00:19:13,284 --> 00:19:17,084 They work the reef in gangs, trying to flush out smaller fry. 156 00:19:17,755 --> 00:19:22,488 But as they muscle in on a patch, the neighbourhood dives for cover. 157 00:19:35,873 --> 00:19:39,741 One bully heads underneath, scaring all the fish out through the top, 158 00:19:39,911 --> 00:19:43,904 while the other members of the gang wait above... mouths open. 159 00:19:51,122 --> 00:19:52,987 The gang does well with these tactics, 160 00:19:53,157 --> 00:19:55,523 but they're just a bunch of small time thugs - 161 00:19:55,994 --> 00:19:59,486 not even in the same league as some of the predators here... 162 00:20:03,501 --> 00:20:06,902 Huge saltwater crocodiles roam these seas. 163 00:20:10,308 --> 00:20:13,903 They are capable of swimming great distances to find new territories - 164 00:20:14,345 --> 00:20:18,145 large ones have been seen several hundred kilometres out to sea. 165 00:20:22,620 --> 00:20:23,746 With this sort of range, 166 00:20:23,921 --> 00:20:28,654 it's been easy for them to colonise many of the volcanic islands of the pacific. 167 00:20:50,348 --> 00:20:53,476 But while these islands have attracted all sorts of marine life, 168 00:20:53,718 --> 00:20:54,878 including crocodiles, 169 00:20:55,286 --> 00:20:59,313 land creatures like mammals have found it harder to get here. 170 00:21:05,596 --> 00:21:07,723 Unless they can raft across or swim, 171 00:21:07,899 --> 00:21:09,628 they're too far out. 172 00:21:12,737 --> 00:21:14,796 But there has been one exception... 173 00:21:16,774 --> 00:21:19,072 An invasion by air. 174 00:21:19,710 --> 00:21:23,578 Squadrons of bats, especially the larger fruit bats. 175 00:21:27,185 --> 00:21:28,550 In fact, New Guinea and the islands 176 00:21:28,719 --> 00:21:32,450 that surround it are probably the fruit bat capital of the world. 177 00:21:32,924 --> 00:21:35,984 There are more species here than anywhere else on earth. 178 00:21:38,529 --> 00:21:41,020 These large fruit bats are strong travellers - 179 00:21:41,399 --> 00:21:44,926 they can fly fifty kilometres in an evening in search of food. 180 00:21:46,637 --> 00:21:50,198 Island hopping across the pacific is all in a night's work. 181 00:21:52,643 --> 00:21:54,167 It's well worth the journey 182 00:21:54,378 --> 00:21:58,178 because the island forests are full of all sorts of fruit. 183 00:22:11,028 --> 00:22:15,294 With such a wide selection, there's room for lots of different fruit specialists - 184 00:22:16,000 --> 00:22:19,026 this tube nosed bat is a professional fig eater. 185 00:22:24,175 --> 00:22:26,541 As these bats move about from island to island, 186 00:22:26,811 --> 00:22:29,371 they can also act as seed couriers. 187 00:22:34,685 --> 00:22:36,812 They make unorthodox postmen though, 188 00:22:37,088 --> 00:22:38,919 opening their parcels with strong teeth 189 00:22:39,090 --> 00:22:40,455 and either dropping their contents 190 00:22:40,625 --> 00:22:43,822 where they eat, or swallowing and depositing them, 191 00:22:44,061 --> 00:22:46,222 perhaps on another island. 192 00:22:58,276 --> 00:23:02,474 Beyond this chain of islands, the explosive activity begins to die away. 193 00:23:02,947 --> 00:23:07,281 And further out in the Pacific, there's a graveyard of extinct volcanoes. 194 00:23:09,787 --> 00:23:11,778 One of these is Lord Howe Island. 195 00:23:12,023 --> 00:23:16,756 It retired from life as an active volcano about 6 million years ago. 196 00:23:19,897 --> 00:23:22,593 A small speck in a vast expanse of ocean, 197 00:23:22,934 --> 00:23:26,870 it's become a valuable service station for thousands of sea birds. 198 00:23:35,379 --> 00:23:38,746 Each Spring, it transforms into seabird city. 199 00:23:39,116 --> 00:23:42,210 Fourteen different species stop here to nest and breed, 200 00:23:43,020 --> 00:23:44,612 like this booby... 201 00:23:47,592 --> 00:23:49,787 ...and noddy terns too. 202 00:23:55,233 --> 00:23:58,600 Above them, the skies are filled with acrobatic tumblers, 203 00:23:58,803 --> 00:24:00,998 Tropic birds in full display. 204 00:24:01,372 --> 00:24:04,466 The males are busy trying to impress a mate and outdo each other, 205 00:24:04,842 --> 00:24:08,175 by performing a series of extraordinary backward loops. 206 00:24:38,242 --> 00:24:40,107 The sooty tern is more graceful. 207 00:24:48,486 --> 00:24:52,149 They arrive in their thousands, to breed and bring up their chicks. 208 00:24:55,426 --> 00:24:57,485 But with so many crammed onto this island, 209 00:24:57,828 --> 00:25:01,389 how on earth does a parent find the right mouth to feed? 210 00:25:03,534 --> 00:25:07,026 And how does this chick make sure it doesn't miss out on a meal? 211 00:25:14,211 --> 00:25:16,042 That one's getting pilchard... 212 00:25:21,485 --> 00:25:23,715 And another's got a lump of squid... 213 00:25:24,655 --> 00:25:26,816 This is getting difficult to watch... 214 00:25:30,428 --> 00:25:32,555 He's got squid as well. 215 00:25:38,302 --> 00:25:41,169 At last, the hungry chick calls out for room service, 216 00:25:41,572 --> 00:25:44,132 and he's located by one of his parents. 217 00:25:48,612 --> 00:25:53,140 The response is instant, and at last he gets a lump of his own to choke on. 218 00:26:01,125 --> 00:26:05,562 Australia has island relatives further out, even than Lord Howe. 219 00:26:09,100 --> 00:26:12,228 This is New Caledonia - Captain Cook called it 220 00:26:12,403 --> 00:26:14,894 that because it reminded him of Scotland. 221 00:26:15,539 --> 00:26:18,508 Jurassic Park might be more appropriate. 222 00:26:19,176 --> 00:26:23,078 New Caledonia didn't erupt from the seabed, like the other islands. 223 00:26:24,048 --> 00:26:26,448 It's an ancient chunk of eastern Australia, 224 00:26:26,684 --> 00:26:29,084 that broke off about 80 million years ago - 225 00:26:29,320 --> 00:26:32,255 a lost world, so old and strange, 226 00:26:32,556 --> 00:26:36,424 you could almost believe that dinosaurs still live here. 227 00:26:41,165 --> 00:26:43,258 In fact, at the time it broke away, 228 00:26:43,501 --> 00:26:46,664 many of these plants would have been eaten by dinosaurs. 229 00:26:59,150 --> 00:27:03,177 But this island is so remote, there are no land mammals here. 230 00:27:03,721 --> 00:27:05,746 After 80 million years of isolation, 231 00:27:05,923 --> 00:27:10,724 New Caledonia is still ruled by reptiles. 232 00:27:14,432 --> 00:27:18,459 Its modern masters are lizards, geckos and skinks. 233 00:27:22,473 --> 00:27:24,498 New Caledonia has more species of lizard 234 00:27:24,675 --> 00:27:28,372 for its size than probably anywhere else on earth. 235 00:27:37,021 --> 00:27:41,458 And New Caledonia has its own monster - the giant gecko. 236 00:27:41,625 --> 00:27:44,822 It's as big as a rat, the largest gecko in the world, 237 00:27:45,062 --> 00:27:47,690 with a ferocious reputation to match. 238 00:27:53,270 --> 00:27:55,636 This really is the land of the lizard. 239 00:27:55,806 --> 00:27:59,139 Over 80 per cent of the species here are unique. 240 00:28:14,024 --> 00:28:16,652 At the same time that New Caledonia broke away, 241 00:28:16,894 --> 00:28:18,589 an even larger chunk of Australia 242 00:28:18,762 --> 00:28:22,425 drifted off and floated right down towards the southern ocean. 243 00:28:23,300 --> 00:28:26,463 It eventually became New Zealand. 244 00:28:31,942 --> 00:28:34,877 It lies on the edge of the Australian continental plate, 245 00:28:36,347 --> 00:28:40,215 which drops away into the really deep water of the Pacific Ocean proper - 246 00:28:41,218 --> 00:28:45,655 so deep that sperm whales come to feed right on its doorstep. 247 00:28:53,697 --> 00:28:57,360 And because New Zealand sits at a crossroads of cold and warm currents, 248 00:28:57,635 --> 00:29:00,263 it's a magnet for all sorts of marine life. 249 00:29:05,109 --> 00:29:09,978 Dusky dolphins are one of many species of dolphin that play in these deep waters. 250 00:29:26,597 --> 00:29:29,157 They are some of the most acrobatic of all dolphins - 251 00:29:29,533 --> 00:29:32,331 if one starts to somersault and spin out of the water, 252 00:29:32,536 --> 00:29:34,504 the whole group joins in. 253 00:30:02,032 --> 00:30:05,729 Although New Zealand broke off from Australia about eighty million years ago, 254 00:30:05,970 --> 00:30:10,839 it's still drifting across the ocean creating huge geological forces. 255 00:30:14,411 --> 00:30:17,346 It's a highly active piece of the earth's crust. 256 00:30:18,549 --> 00:30:21,643 Fire and steam seep to the surface from volcanoes, 257 00:30:21,919 --> 00:30:25,320 mud pools and explosive geysers. 258 00:30:40,571 --> 00:30:43,335 This long history of violent geology has contorted 259 00:30:43,507 --> 00:30:47,204 the islands into a spectacular variety of landscapes. 260 00:31:03,827 --> 00:31:08,196 These Southern Alps are 4000 metres high and still rising. 261 00:31:36,694 --> 00:31:40,255 It's as if this part of New Zealand never escaped the Ice Age. 262 00:31:48,472 --> 00:31:51,134 It could not be more inhospitable here. 263 00:31:55,179 --> 00:31:56,476 And yet... 264 00:31:57,081 --> 00:31:59,015 ...It's a mountain parrot. 265 00:31:59,183 --> 00:32:03,017 The only alpine parrot in the world to live right up in the snow. 266 00:32:04,755 --> 00:32:06,484 And they seem to enjoy it. 267 00:32:08,892 --> 00:32:13,158 They're called Keas and to survive up here, these birds aren't just hardy. 268 00:32:13,497 --> 00:32:16,762 They need to be sharp operators to live on these harsh mountains. 269 00:32:25,509 --> 00:32:27,409 To learn all the tricks they'll need to survive, 270 00:32:27,578 --> 00:32:31,674 they have extended childhoods and live for up to 20 years. 271 00:32:32,049 --> 00:32:34,517 So there's plenty of time to play. 272 00:32:42,493 --> 00:32:44,518 Monkeying around on the slopes like this, 273 00:32:44,762 --> 00:32:47,390 they seem more like primates than parrots. 274 00:33:04,448 --> 00:33:07,246 These alpine Keas are unique to New Zealand... 275 00:33:07,618 --> 00:33:09,950 In fact, after such long isolation, 276 00:33:10,254 --> 00:33:13,815 most of New Zealand's wildlife and plants are unique. 277 00:33:15,425 --> 00:33:19,259 This is a place that does weird wildlife better than anywhere else... 278 00:33:19,830 --> 00:33:24,631 and one of the strangest creatures of all, hunts in the forest, at night. 279 00:33:30,340 --> 00:33:34,436 It has fur-like feathers and it sniffs out its food like a mammal. 280 00:33:34,845 --> 00:33:38,178 It even keeps its body temperature at the level of a mammal. 281 00:33:38,448 --> 00:33:40,643 But it's a flightless bird. 282 00:33:42,386 --> 00:33:45,651 New Zealand seems to excel in these oddball birds - 283 00:33:46,023 --> 00:33:50,983 and the Kiwi has to be one of the oddest balls of fluff on the forest floor. 284 00:33:54,932 --> 00:33:56,923 There are no ground living mammals here, 285 00:33:57,167 --> 00:34:00,364 so when the Kiwi auditioned for the part of hedgehog or badger, 286 00:34:00,537 --> 00:34:05,668 it got the job - sniffing out grubs and worms, just like they would. 287 00:34:08,579 --> 00:34:12,276 Sometimes it goes fishing for shrimp in the forest streams. 288 00:34:15,719 --> 00:34:18,085 It even has whiskers, like a cat. 289 00:34:35,172 --> 00:34:36,366 And like many mammals, 290 00:34:36,607 --> 00:34:39,974 the males hold territories, and defend them by calling. 291 00:34:56,426 --> 00:34:58,223 But when it comes to looking after the eggs, 292 00:34:58,395 --> 00:35:01,364 male Kiwis are different from most animals. 293 00:35:01,665 --> 00:35:04,657 The males take on the job of incubating them, all alone. 294 00:35:04,835 --> 00:35:07,599 And they do this in underground burrows. 295 00:35:13,110 --> 00:35:15,340 This father has a newly hatched youngster 296 00:35:15,612 --> 00:35:18,274 and an egg that still needs incubating. 297 00:35:20,984 --> 00:35:22,884 Kiwis lay enormous eggs - 298 00:35:23,153 --> 00:35:26,020 the largest of any bird, relative to its size - 299 00:35:26,323 --> 00:35:28,518 and they take ten weeks to hatch. 300 00:35:29,593 --> 00:35:31,424 It's not always easy to sit still, 301 00:35:31,595 --> 00:35:34,564 with a toddler constantly messing up the nursery. 302 00:35:45,142 --> 00:35:47,337 This chick is probably pestering for food - 303 00:35:47,844 --> 00:35:49,903 and if it is, it'll be disappointed. 304 00:35:50,180 --> 00:35:54,879 Male kiwis are dedicated incubators, but meals are not included. 305 00:35:59,756 --> 00:36:03,317 Eventually, this youngster will become hungry enough to leave the nest 306 00:36:03,560 --> 00:36:05,721 and look for food itself. 307 00:36:20,110 --> 00:36:24,376 Some of New Zealand's strangest creatures live down here on the forest floor. 308 00:36:25,182 --> 00:36:27,878 The Weta - the world's largest cricket. 309 00:36:34,324 --> 00:36:36,884 Just as the Kiwi fills the role of a hedgehog, 310 00:36:37,227 --> 00:36:39,991 the Weta is New Zealand's answer to a mouse. 311 00:36:40,731 --> 00:36:44,667 And just like a mouse, it forages around amongst the leaf litter. 312 00:36:52,676 --> 00:36:54,166 But whatever role it fills, 313 00:36:54,344 --> 00:36:58,872 it still looks like a big juicy insect and it had better watch out. 314 00:36:59,216 --> 00:37:03,152 In this strange forest, even the bats do things differently. 315 00:37:08,959 --> 00:37:13,089 These short-tailed bats are beginning to spend less and less time in the air, 316 00:37:13,296 --> 00:37:18,324 and more and more time on the ground - doing their impression of a mole. 317 00:37:21,338 --> 00:37:24,603 Just like some of the birds, they seem to be becoming flightless 318 00:37:24,841 --> 00:37:28,709 and prefer burrowing under the leaf litter for grubs and insects. 319 00:37:38,555 --> 00:37:40,819 These bats are hardly bigger than the wetas, 320 00:37:41,058 --> 00:37:45,222 but a jumbo-sized snack like this is too good to miss. 321 00:37:57,407 --> 00:38:02,276 The weta puts up quite a fight, but eventually the bat gets its meal. 322 00:38:12,255 --> 00:38:14,280 New Zealand's strangeness has a lot to do 323 00:38:14,458 --> 00:38:17,621 with its long isolation from the rest of the world. 324 00:38:18,095 --> 00:38:21,963 And that's also why it took so long to be discovered by people. 325 00:38:29,306 --> 00:38:31,035 It was only a thousand years ago 326 00:38:31,308 --> 00:38:36,302 that the first Polynesians paddled their way from Hawaii and settled here. 327 00:38:46,156 --> 00:38:48,750 They began to make changes to the landscape 328 00:38:49,226 --> 00:38:52,161 but nothing like what was to come later on... 329 00:38:58,902 --> 00:39:02,030 Europeans arrived here only 200 years ago, 330 00:39:02,239 --> 00:39:04,969 but in that time, they have transformed it. 331 00:39:05,175 --> 00:39:10,078 Forests have been replaced by fields and roads, towns and modern cities. 332 00:39:16,052 --> 00:39:18,179 Almost every corner of New Zealand 333 00:39:18,488 --> 00:39:21,013 now has felt the influence of the modern world - 334 00:39:21,558 --> 00:39:25,858 even the remote southern alps are now buzzing with skiers. 335 00:39:33,336 --> 00:39:38,239 And the wildlife, once so isolated, has had to adapt. 336 00:39:46,850 --> 00:39:49,580 For the Keas, at least, this has not been difficult. 337 00:39:49,853 --> 00:39:54,347 An invasion of brightly coloured human beings is like a dream come true. 338 00:39:54,858 --> 00:39:59,022 The arrival of crowds like these just widens their scope for fun. 339 00:40:06,236 --> 00:40:08,170 And always on the lookout for something to eat 340 00:40:08,538 --> 00:40:10,904 they've learnt some new tricks as well. 341 00:40:40,870 --> 00:40:44,397 Younger keas roam about like gangs of delinquent teenagers. 342 00:40:44,774 --> 00:40:46,765 And of course, as any teenager will tell you, 343 00:40:47,077 --> 00:40:49,807 the place to hang out is the car park. 344 00:40:57,887 --> 00:41:00,014 There are plenty of things to dismantle here - 345 00:41:00,457 --> 00:41:01,788 rubber trim is easy... 346 00:41:03,927 --> 00:41:06,794 ...but these ski racks are more difficult. 347 00:41:14,471 --> 00:41:16,462 They're just doing what comes naturally - 348 00:41:16,740 --> 00:41:20,540 making a detailed investigation of the world around them. 349 00:41:33,189 --> 00:41:34,884 But even though they enjoy the party, 350 00:41:35,058 --> 00:41:38,755 New Zealand is becoming too crowded, even for Keas. 351 00:41:47,637 --> 00:41:52,665 For many of the rest of New Zealand's birds, man's arrival has been devastating. 352 00:41:56,012 --> 00:41:59,743 Even though humans rarely visit valleys and forests like these, 353 00:41:59,949 --> 00:42:03,578 the cats, stoats and rats they brought with them have all 354 00:42:03,753 --> 00:42:06,847 but massacred the local bird population. 355 00:42:08,024 --> 00:42:11,425 And another animal has invaded forests throughout New Zealand... 356 00:42:19,369 --> 00:42:22,236 ...the Australian Brush-tailed possum. 357 00:42:22,405 --> 00:42:23,736 It may look cuddly - 358 00:42:24,040 --> 00:42:27,567 but when 90 million of them bulldoze their way through every forest, 359 00:42:27,744 --> 00:42:32,044 eating eggs and chicks, they cause complete havoc. 360 00:42:35,585 --> 00:42:37,109 None of these animals belong here 361 00:42:37,454 --> 00:42:40,719 and all of them have had a devastating effect on the wildlife, 362 00:42:40,890 --> 00:42:43,256 especially on the unique birds. 363 00:42:46,963 --> 00:42:49,193 When explorers first came to New Zealand, 364 00:42:49,466 --> 00:42:51,900 they described the dawn chorus as deafening - 365 00:42:52,335 --> 00:42:56,396 now, these same forests are almost silent. 366 00:43:03,913 --> 00:43:08,350 But New Zealand has 700 smaller islands scattered around its coastline. 367 00:43:08,985 --> 00:43:11,317 Many of these are rarely visited by people, 368 00:43:11,688 --> 00:43:14,851 and on some the cats, stoats, possums and rats 369 00:43:15,024 --> 00:43:18,255 that have exterminated so much wildlife everywhere else, 370 00:43:18,561 --> 00:43:20,426 have been kept way. 371 00:43:21,698 --> 00:43:26,965 These islands are now the last refuge for some of New Zealand's rarest birds. 372 00:43:28,471 --> 00:43:32,805 This is the Kakapo and it has every reason to look depressed. 373 00:43:33,243 --> 00:43:35,404 It's a flightless relative of the Kea, 374 00:43:35,712 --> 00:43:37,873 and although it's the world's largest parrot, 375 00:43:38,114 --> 00:43:41,015 it's also the world's slowest breeding bird. 376 00:43:41,484 --> 00:43:45,682 It may raise a chick successfully only once every ten years. 377 00:43:51,661 --> 00:43:55,028 Today, it survives on just a couple of offshore islands, 378 00:43:55,331 --> 00:43:59,165 and only because of a huge conservation campaign to keep it alive. 379 00:44:00,570 --> 00:44:02,800 Biologists feed the adults... 380 00:44:03,773 --> 00:44:06,640 ...and monitor their chicks round the clock. 381 00:44:11,948 --> 00:44:16,715 In fact, they keep the entire population of kakapos in intensive care. 382 00:44:20,824 --> 00:44:26,387 Every nest has its own 24-hour security, complete with CCTV. 383 00:44:27,964 --> 00:44:31,593 Miniature cameras inside the nest record every last move. 384 00:44:31,768 --> 00:44:34,862 Each bird gets its own personal diary. 385 00:44:39,576 --> 00:44:42,568 This military style campaign is beginning to work. 386 00:44:42,812 --> 00:44:44,279 By giving them this backup, 387 00:44:44,514 --> 00:44:46,209 the kakapo population has increased 388 00:44:46,382 --> 00:44:51,843 from just a handful of birds to over 100 in just a few years. 389 00:45:02,298 --> 00:45:07,326 These offshore islands are also vital for many more of New Zealand's unique birds. 390 00:45:10,206 --> 00:45:12,003 This is a kokako... 391 00:45:20,416 --> 00:45:23,044 ...and this is a nectar eating Tui. 392 00:45:31,794 --> 00:45:34,092 And here's yet another relative of the Kea - 393 00:45:34,397 --> 00:45:35,864 a Kaka. 394 00:45:36,099 --> 00:45:40,092 It's a forest parrot, and it lives nowhere else but New Zealand. 395 00:45:43,640 --> 00:45:47,633 In these island forests there are even penguins amongst the trees. 396 00:45:55,852 --> 00:45:58,616 The New Zealand that so excited early explorers, 397 00:45:58,888 --> 00:46:01,550 with its bustling variety and deafening choruses, 398 00:46:01,858 --> 00:46:05,726 seems to have found a last sanctuary on these smaller offshore islands. 399 00:46:12,535 --> 00:46:15,368 This is what much of New Zealand might have been like 400 00:46:15,538 --> 00:46:17,563 before the invaders arrived. 401 00:46:17,740 --> 00:46:20,004 Even ground nesting birds, like penguins, 402 00:46:20,176 --> 00:46:22,201 can relax as they used to. 403 00:46:30,086 --> 00:46:33,055 They can raise their chicks here in relative peace. 404 00:46:43,666 --> 00:46:46,794 Some of these islands seem almost overloaded with birds - 405 00:46:48,204 --> 00:46:52,504 here the bushes bubble with thousand upon thousand of shearwaters. 406 00:46:56,512 --> 00:46:59,675 They still live in massive colonies. 407 00:47:07,190 --> 00:47:11,593 New Zealand's offshore islands are bursting with unique wildlife. 408 00:47:12,362 --> 00:47:14,922 They're like a microcosm of the whole extraordinary island 409 00:47:15,098 --> 00:47:16,998 chain around Australia. 410 00:47:31,447 --> 00:47:36,441 Strung out across the sea, from the cold southern ocean almost to the equator, 411 00:47:37,153 --> 00:47:38,677 nowhere else in the world can you see 412 00:47:38,855 --> 00:47:41,585 such a variety of different kinds of islands. 413 00:47:53,036 --> 00:47:55,834 Lost worlds, full of ancient treasures. 414 00:47:59,642 --> 00:48:02,076 Every one of them a unique gem - 415 00:48:02,745 --> 00:48:05,578 the island jewels of Australia. 37541

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.