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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:09,595 --> 00:00:12,347 When you look down on the Earth's surface, 2 00:00:12,431 --> 00:00:14,808 it's impossible not to be impressed 3 00:00:14,892 --> 00:00:18,478 by the sheer grandeur, splendour and power 4 00:00:18,562 --> 00:00:20,105 of the natural world. 5 00:00:26,945 --> 00:00:30,115 It's been ten years since we explored these wonders 6 00:00:30,199 --> 00:00:32,784 in the first series of Planet Earth. 7 00:00:35,454 --> 00:00:38,123 And since then, much has changed. 8 00:00:40,250 --> 00:00:42,461 We can now show life on our planet 9 00:00:42,544 --> 00:00:44,588 in entirely new ways, 10 00:00:47,132 --> 00:00:50,802 bring you closer to animals than ever before, 11 00:00:53,972 --> 00:00:59,186 and reveal new wildlife dramas for the very first time. 12 00:01:03,065 --> 00:01:04,399 But that is not all. 13 00:01:05,651 --> 00:01:07,986 The planet has changed, too. 14 00:01:08,445 --> 00:01:11,907 Never have our wildernesses been as fragile 15 00:01:11,990 --> 00:01:14,409 and as precious as they are today. 16 00:01:18,163 --> 00:01:21,124 At this crucial time for the natural world, 17 00:01:21,208 --> 00:01:24,211 we will journey to every corner of the globe 18 00:01:26,129 --> 00:01:29,800 to explore the greatest treasures of our living planet, 19 00:01:36,348 --> 00:01:41,561 and reveal the extreme lengths animals go to to survive. 20 00:01:57,119 --> 00:02:01,206 Finally, we will explore our cities 21 00:02:01,290 --> 00:02:06,378 to see how life is adapting to the newest habitat on Earth. 22 00:02:08,839 --> 00:02:11,425 This is Planet Earth II. 23 00:02:53,467 --> 00:02:57,596 There are hundreds of thousands of islands, 24 00:02:57,679 --> 00:03:00,140 each one a world in miniature. 25 00:03:01,433 --> 00:03:04,603 A microcosm of our living planet. 26 00:03:06,521 --> 00:03:09,691 The struggles to survive on these remote lands 27 00:03:09,775 --> 00:03:14,071 reflect the challenges faced by all life on Earth. 28 00:03:25,332 --> 00:03:29,628 The tiny island of Escudo off the coast of Panama, 29 00:03:31,922 --> 00:03:35,967 home to the pygmy three-toed sloth. 30 00:03:39,763 --> 00:03:43,475 This is a male, and life here suits him well. 31 00:03:46,853 --> 00:03:51,149 Mangroves provide all the leaves he can eat 32 00:03:51,274 --> 00:03:53,944 and there are no predators to worry him. 33 00:03:55,987 --> 00:03:58,824 Island life may seem idyllic, 34 00:03:58,949 --> 00:04:01,159 but it comes at a price. 35 00:04:02,869 --> 00:04:06,665 There are only a few hundred pygmy sloths in existence, 36 00:04:08,166 --> 00:04:10,836 and he needs a mate. 37 00:04:15,215 --> 00:04:17,342 That's an enticing call... 38 00:04:19,511 --> 00:04:20,971 ...from a female 39 00:04:23,557 --> 00:04:25,725 somewhere out there. 40 00:04:28,979 --> 00:04:34,025 And this, for a sloth, is a quick reaction. 41 00:04:57,174 --> 00:05:01,219 The problem is there's deep water between them. 42 00:05:02,846 --> 00:05:06,099 So what should any red-blooded sloth do? 43 00:05:11,730 --> 00:05:13,273 Swim, of course. 44 00:05:45,263 --> 00:05:46,973 Could this be her? 45 00:05:54,314 --> 00:05:58,109 He does his best to put on a turn of speed. 46 00:06:08,954 --> 00:06:11,039 But she's not the one. 47 00:06:11,122 --> 00:06:12,999 She already has a baby 48 00:06:13,124 --> 00:06:16,169 and she won't mate again until it leaves her 49 00:06:16,294 --> 00:06:18,088 in about six months' time. 50 00:06:25,637 --> 00:06:30,308 Even life on a paradise island can have its limitations. 51 00:06:36,273 --> 00:06:39,442 But at least she can't be faraway. 52 00:06:44,489 --> 00:06:47,951 The world's entire population of pygmy sloths 53 00:06:48,034 --> 00:06:53,665 is isolated on a speck of land no bigger than New York's Central Park. 54 00:06:56,960 --> 00:07:00,213 The size of an island has a huge influence 55 00:07:00,338 --> 00:07:03,383 on the fate of those cast away there. 56 00:07:08,513 --> 00:07:12,475 The island of Komodo in Indonesia. 57 00:07:23,403 --> 00:07:25,697 Home to dragons. 58 00:07:43,840 --> 00:07:48,261 Three metres long and weighing a massive 70 kilos, 59 00:07:49,054 --> 00:07:53,516 these are the largest living lizards on the planet. 60 00:08:05,737 --> 00:08:09,199 It's unusual to find large predators on islands. 61 00:08:13,036 --> 00:08:17,916 Yet, for four million years, the Komodo dragon has dominated here. 62 00:08:28,551 --> 00:08:30,595 It might seem there wouldn't be enough food 63 00:08:30,720 --> 00:08:34,307 to support such giants on this relatively small island, 64 00:08:36,810 --> 00:08:39,396 but reptiles, being cold-blooded, 65 00:08:39,479 --> 00:08:43,942 need only about a tenth of the food a carnivorous mammal would. 66 00:08:48,446 --> 00:08:52,117 A single meal will last a dragon a month. 67 00:08:55,453 --> 00:08:59,249 They're so successful, that their only serious competition 68 00:08:59,332 --> 00:09:01,918 comes from others of their own kind, 69 00:09:02,961 --> 00:09:05,964 and there are some 2,000 of them here. 70 00:09:30,321 --> 00:09:33,283 This giant, however, isn't looking for food. 71 00:09:33,825 --> 00:09:35,827 He's looking for a mate. 72 00:09:40,039 --> 00:09:43,668 Female dragons come into season only once a year. 73 00:09:54,637 --> 00:09:56,055 She is receptive. 74 00:10:04,564 --> 00:10:06,858 So far, so good. 75 00:10:11,362 --> 00:10:14,199 But he strayed into someone else's patch. 76 00:10:20,205 --> 00:10:25,043 Another huge male thinks he is the king here. 77 00:10:29,756 --> 00:10:34,719 Space being limited on islands, dragon territories overlap, 78 00:10:35,595 --> 00:10:37,764 and that creates continual conflict. 79 00:10:45,855 --> 00:10:49,275 In dragon society, size is everything. 80 00:11:05,124 --> 00:11:10,088 But if rivals are closely matched, the outcome can be uncertain. 81 00:11:17,637 --> 00:11:21,266 Muscular tails strike with the power of sledgehammers. 82 00:11:31,776 --> 00:11:35,613 And their serrated teeth are as sharp as steak knives. 83 00:11:48,001 --> 00:11:50,670 Each tries to topple his opponent. 84 00:12:13,192 --> 00:12:14,277 Defeated. 85 00:12:15,361 --> 00:12:19,616 Only the most powerful dragons win the right to mate. 86 00:12:29,167 --> 00:12:32,670 The limited food and space on the small islands 87 00:12:32,795 --> 00:12:35,506 can often lead to intense competition. 88 00:12:37,133 --> 00:12:40,011 But some islands are immense. 89 00:12:41,137 --> 00:12:43,181 More like miniature continents. 90 00:12:44,641 --> 00:12:49,729 And these provide opportunities for life to experiment and evolve. 91 00:12:54,984 --> 00:12:58,196 Madagascar is one of the biggest islands 92 00:12:58,321 --> 00:13:00,573 and also one of the oldest, 93 00:13:00,698 --> 00:13:05,411 having split away from Africa over 120 million years ago. 94 00:13:17,173 --> 00:13:20,510 With time and isolation, its animals have adapted 95 00:13:20,593 --> 00:13:23,763 to take advantage of every available niche. 96 00:13:30,603 --> 00:13:36,109 The island now has some 250,000 different species, 97 00:13:36,234 --> 00:13:38,903 most found nowhere else on Earth. 98 00:13:51,624 --> 00:13:54,627 These are not monkeys, but lemurs. 99 00:14:01,092 --> 00:14:05,430 From a single ancestor, about a hundred different types have evolved. 100 00:14:10,727 --> 00:14:15,106 The largest, the Indri, seldom comes down from the branches. 101 00:14:22,447 --> 00:14:27,076 The much smaller ring-tails wander in troops across the forest floor 102 00:14:27,160 --> 00:14:28,453 searching for fruit. 103 00:14:30,121 --> 00:14:34,667 And tiny bamboo lemurs eat nothing except bamboo. 104 00:14:42,675 --> 00:14:44,302 With few competitors, 105 00:14:44,427 --> 00:14:49,432 lemurs have been free to colonise almost every environment on the island, 106 00:14:52,143 --> 00:14:54,854 even the most extreme. 107 00:15:02,528 --> 00:15:06,991 This baby sifaka has a hard life ahead of it. 108 00:15:11,954 --> 00:15:15,124 He's been born in the most arid and hostile corner 109 00:15:15,208 --> 00:15:17,335 of Madagascar's vast landscape. 110 00:15:20,671 --> 00:15:24,175 If he is to survive here, he has much to learn. 111 00:15:31,849 --> 00:15:34,352 The spiny forest is like a desert. 112 00:15:35,853 --> 00:15:40,900 It rarely rains, so water and food is very hard to find. 113 00:15:49,367 --> 00:15:52,703 Moving from tree to tree is a perilous business. 114 00:15:54,831 --> 00:15:58,918 Here, nearly all the plants are covered with ferocious spines. 115 00:16:01,254 --> 00:16:04,715 His mother searches the treetops for the youngest leaves. 116 00:16:07,218 --> 00:16:11,055 They provide the only food and water to sustain the family. 117 00:16:17,770 --> 00:16:21,941 At three months old, the youngster is starting to explore. 118 00:16:27,780 --> 00:16:31,534 All too soon, he will have to fend for himself up here. 119 00:16:37,415 --> 00:16:41,919 But it's altogether easier to stay on Mother's back. 120 00:16:49,969 --> 00:16:54,182 If he can master the strange ways of this forest, 121 00:16:54,265 --> 00:16:57,602 he will have a little corner of Madagascar to himself 122 00:17:04,400 --> 00:17:08,487 Island life encourages animals to do things differently, 123 00:17:09,614 --> 00:17:12,909 and on some islands, that is essential. 124 00:17:28,257 --> 00:17:30,676 There are islands still forming today 125 00:17:31,636 --> 00:17:33,679 built by volcanoes. 126 00:17:37,516 --> 00:17:39,852 Some erupt explosively, 127 00:17:46,651 --> 00:17:49,820 others pour out rivers of molten rock, 128 00:17:50,988 --> 00:17:51,989 lava. 129 00:17:58,496 --> 00:18:00,081 In the last 50 years, 130 00:18:00,164 --> 00:18:03,459 ten new volcanic islands have been formed. 131 00:18:31,570 --> 00:18:37,034 Newly created and often remote, they're hard for colonists to reach. 132 00:18:40,746 --> 00:18:45,167 Even those that do, find these are tough places to survive. 133 00:18:51,090 --> 00:18:53,301 This is Fernandina, 134 00:18:53,384 --> 00:18:55,928 one of the Galapagos Islands in the Pacific. 135 00:18:58,431 --> 00:19:03,561 Young and still volcanically active, it's a desolate place. 136 00:19:18,075 --> 00:19:22,538 The surrounding sea, however, is particularly rich with life, 137 00:19:26,876 --> 00:19:30,546 and the frontier between these two very different worlds 138 00:19:30,629 --> 00:19:34,091 is the home of one of the strangest of reptiles, 139 00:19:39,055 --> 00:19:40,890 sea-going iguanas. 140 00:19:43,934 --> 00:19:45,770 They are vegetarians, 141 00:19:45,895 --> 00:19:48,439 but since there's little food for them on the land, 142 00:19:48,564 --> 00:19:51,776 marine iguanas graze on the sea floor. 143 00:19:56,113 --> 00:19:59,492 A big male like this one can dive to 30 metres 144 00:19:59,617 --> 00:20:01,911 and hold his breath for half an hour. 145 00:20:28,979 --> 00:20:33,984 There are more than 7,000 individuals on Fernandina alone. 146 00:20:42,326 --> 00:20:45,287 And by bringing nutrients from the sea to the land, 147 00:20:45,371 --> 00:20:48,833 the iguanas help other animals to survive here, too. 148 00:20:52,962 --> 00:20:56,340 Crabs feed on dead skin on the iguanas' back 149 00:20:56,465 --> 00:21:00,678 and, in turn, provide a welcome exfoliation service. 150 00:21:08,978 --> 00:21:12,857 While smaller lizards prey on the flies that pester the colony. 151 00:21:36,213 --> 00:21:40,926 But not all the relationships on this island are so harmonious. 152 00:21:47,766 --> 00:21:50,769 Marine iguanas lay their eggs in sand. 153 00:21:53,230 --> 00:21:57,359 In June, when the hatchlings emerge, they're vulnerable. 154 00:22:01,572 --> 00:22:05,034 They must join the adults at the edge of the sea. 155 00:22:05,117 --> 00:22:07,620 But the journey will be a dangerous one. 156 00:22:33,938 --> 00:22:35,481 Racer snakes. 157 00:23:06,345 --> 00:23:08,639 The snakes missed their chance. 158 00:23:17,189 --> 00:23:19,483 But more babies are hatching. 159 00:23:25,197 --> 00:23:29,159 And now the snakes are on the alert. 160 00:23:29,285 --> 00:23:33,831 This is the best feeding opportunity they will get all year. 161 00:23:50,014 --> 00:23:54,852 On flat ground a baby iguana can outrun a racer snake. 162 00:23:56,478 --> 00:23:58,731 But others are waiting in ambush. 163 00:24:27,718 --> 00:24:32,765 Another hatchling has its first glimpse of a dangerous world. 164 00:25:32,658 --> 00:25:37,913 A snake's eyes aren't very good, but they can detect movement. 165 00:25:39,998 --> 00:25:44,420 So if the hatchling keeps its nerve, it may just avoid detection. 166 00:27:20,390 --> 00:27:22,768 A near miraculous escape. 167 00:27:29,900 --> 00:27:31,151 The lucky survivors 168 00:27:31,235 --> 00:27:34,196 can begin learning the unique way of life 169 00:27:34,279 --> 00:27:36,949 demanded by this hostile island. 170 00:27:45,749 --> 00:27:49,378 Although marine iguanas are expert swimmers, 171 00:27:49,461 --> 00:27:51,755 they can't cross open oceans. 172 00:28:00,764 --> 00:28:02,808 But even the stormiest waters 173 00:28:02,933 --> 00:28:05,602 are no barrier for birds. 174 00:28:15,445 --> 00:28:18,532 Gale force winds and cold temperatures 175 00:28:18,615 --> 00:28:21,910 make the subantarctic islands off New Zealand 176 00:28:21,994 --> 00:28:24,997 particularly unwelcoming in winter. 177 00:28:38,135 --> 00:28:44,182 But when the brief summer comes, temperatures rise and winds slacken. 178 00:28:59,990 --> 00:29:03,368 It's now that visitors arrive. 179 00:29:06,204 --> 00:29:10,125 All here to breed before winter returns. 180 00:29:12,628 --> 00:29:14,504 There's the Snares penguins. 181 00:29:23,305 --> 00:29:25,223 Shear waters come, too. 182 00:29:28,310 --> 00:29:32,230 This is an excellent place for them to dig their nesting burrows, 183 00:29:32,356 --> 00:29:35,025 for no predators have managed to get here. 184 00:29:41,365 --> 00:29:44,910 Soon the island is crowded with birds. 185 00:29:46,536 --> 00:29:50,666 Every one of them eager to make the most of the short breeding season. 186 00:29:54,878 --> 00:29:57,756 But not everyone has a partner. 187 00:30:04,346 --> 00:30:08,016 A male Buller's albatross waits for his mate. 188 00:30:11,186 --> 00:30:16,066 Each year they spend six months apart, travelling the ocean. 189 00:30:21,238 --> 00:30:23,949 They reunite here to breed. 190 00:30:27,035 --> 00:30:29,454 But this year, she's late. 191 00:30:33,250 --> 00:30:35,293 No, that's not her. 192 00:30:39,881 --> 00:30:42,259 The other birds come and go. 193 00:30:52,602 --> 00:30:54,438 The clock is ticking. 194 00:30:55,772 --> 00:31:00,777 If she doesn't appear soon, it will be too late for them to breed successfully. 195 00:31:03,613 --> 00:31:08,076 Every morning the shearwaters fly off to collect food for their young. 196 00:31:26,678 --> 00:31:29,973 Everybody else seems to be getting on with it. 197 00:31:42,944 --> 00:31:47,657 The shearwaters' return marks another lost day. 198 00:31:49,785 --> 00:31:52,746 There are three million birds on the island, 199 00:31:52,829 --> 00:31:55,332 but only one matters to him. 200 00:32:03,673 --> 00:32:04,841 Could this be her? 201 00:32:11,348 --> 00:32:12,516 At last. 202 00:32:27,697 --> 00:32:30,158 At first, he's a little coy. 203 00:32:44,923 --> 00:32:46,675 But not for long. 204 00:32:54,015 --> 00:32:56,643 They greet each other with the special dance 205 00:32:56,726 --> 00:32:59,563 they've perfected over many years. 206 00:33:11,199 --> 00:33:16,955 There is much to do, if they're to raise a chick before winter returns. 207 00:33:21,793 --> 00:33:24,629 But when you've been apart for six months, 208 00:33:24,754 --> 00:33:27,132 some things can't be rushed. 209 00:33:46,610 --> 00:33:53,116 Islands in warm tropical waters don't experience seasonal extremes. 210 00:33:56,161 --> 00:33:59,414 The Seychelles, lying off the coast of East Africa, 211 00:33:59,497 --> 00:34:02,751 provide a sanctuary for seabirds all the year round. 212 00:34:20,018 --> 00:34:22,687 Fairy terns are permanent residents. 213 00:34:24,314 --> 00:34:29,653 They take a fairly relaxed view about what constitutes a nest. 214 00:34:31,029 --> 00:34:33,490 A bare branch is quite enough. 215 00:34:42,540 --> 00:34:47,671 Climbing onto it to incubate has to be done with care. 216 00:34:56,346 --> 00:34:59,182 Once a year, the noddies arrive. 217 00:35:00,809 --> 00:35:03,937 They do make nests, and Pisonia trees 218 00:35:04,020 --> 00:35:08,233 provide their young with a rather less precarious start in life. 219 00:35:15,490 --> 00:35:18,201 Nesting on this island looks idyllic, 220 00:35:19,577 --> 00:35:23,915 but behind the beauty there's a sinister side. 221 00:35:28,420 --> 00:35:33,717 The Seychelles fody makes quick work of an unattended egg. 222 00:35:49,441 --> 00:35:51,401 She knows something's not quite right, 223 00:35:51,526 --> 00:35:55,071 but her drive to incubate is strong. 224 00:36:10,253 --> 00:36:12,589 The noddies, too, have a problem. 225 00:36:16,634 --> 00:36:18,511 As their chicks grow, 226 00:36:18,595 --> 00:36:22,766 so the Pisonia tree develops seeds that are sticky 227 00:36:22,891 --> 00:36:24,601 and equipped with hooks. 228 00:36:30,231 --> 00:36:32,442 By the time the young noddies leave 229 00:36:32,567 --> 00:36:36,780 they carry these hitchhiking seeds away to other islands. 230 00:36:43,620 --> 00:36:48,083 But sometimes the Pisonia trees are too successful. 231 00:36:53,838 --> 00:36:57,801 If a fledgling testing out its wings drops to the ground, 232 00:36:57,926 --> 00:37:00,678 it can get covered with the seeds. 233 00:37:09,479 --> 00:37:11,815 Entangled and weighed down, 234 00:37:12,482 --> 00:37:16,319 if it can't free itself, the youngster will starve. 235 00:37:30,333 --> 00:37:35,380 The Pisonia may have failed to disperse these seeds, 236 00:37:35,839 --> 00:37:40,468 but it will soon have fertiliser for its roots. 237 00:37:46,516 --> 00:37:52,564 This is why some people call the Pisonia the "bird catcher tree". 238 00:38:27,056 --> 00:38:30,101 The Fairy tern laid another egg, 239 00:38:30,226 --> 00:38:33,229 and now she has a tiny chick to feed. 240 00:38:40,195 --> 00:38:41,738 This chick is lucky. 241 00:38:44,616 --> 00:38:48,745 By the time it fledges, the Pisonia seeds will have dispersed 242 00:38:48,870 --> 00:38:51,372 and the danger they brought will be gone. 243 00:39:03,051 --> 00:39:06,262 Even the most idyllic looking of islands 244 00:39:06,387 --> 00:39:10,183 presents challenges for the animals living there. 245 00:39:10,266 --> 00:39:14,562 But the greatest threat they face is change. 246 00:39:31,496 --> 00:39:34,332 Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean. 247 00:39:35,833 --> 00:39:41,923 For millions of years this remote speck of land has been ruled by crabs. 248 00:39:48,263 --> 00:39:51,307 Their ancestors came from the sea, 249 00:39:51,432 --> 00:39:55,645 but most have now adopted a land-based existence. 250 00:40:05,154 --> 00:40:09,659 Given there are so many of them, they get along relatively harmoniously. 251 00:40:12,328 --> 00:40:18,334 They're the gardeners and caretakers of a tiny crab utopia. 252 00:40:22,171 --> 00:40:25,967 Once a year, they must all return to the sea to breed, 253 00:40:26,050 --> 00:40:28,344 and the march of the red crabs 254 00:40:28,469 --> 00:40:32,515 is one of the greatest natural spectacles on Earth. 255 00:40:44,527 --> 00:40:46,988 There are 50 million of them. 256 00:40:54,078 --> 00:40:58,750 It's an event that has brought the island worldwide fame. 257 00:41:09,844 --> 00:41:11,554 But in recent years, 258 00:41:11,679 --> 00:41:15,892 millions of red crabs haven't managed to reach the sea. 259 00:41:22,065 --> 00:41:25,193 An invader has occupied this island. 260 00:41:28,279 --> 00:41:30,531 Yellow crazy ants. 261 00:41:31,616 --> 00:41:34,952 They escape from visiting ships, and with no predators 262 00:41:35,078 --> 00:41:37,789 to control them, they have now created vast 263 00:41:37,914 --> 00:41:40,416 super colonies in the forest. 264 00:41:46,589 --> 00:41:49,717 When migrating red crabs march into their territory, 265 00:41:49,801 --> 00:41:51,427 the ants attack, 266 00:41:53,096 --> 00:41:57,058 squirting acid into the crabs' eyes and mouths. 267 00:42:07,318 --> 00:42:09,612 The crabs have no defence. 268 00:42:13,616 --> 00:42:17,912 Blinded and confused, they're doomed. 269 00:42:29,674 --> 00:42:33,219 Humans brought these ant invaders here 270 00:42:33,302 --> 00:42:36,305 and now humans are having to control them. 271 00:42:39,976 --> 00:42:45,815 Isolated communities may evolve for millions of years in relative peace, 272 00:42:47,316 --> 00:42:51,863 but when new challenges arrive, they can struggle to cope. 273 00:42:54,365 --> 00:42:59,078 Of all the species that have become extinct in recent years, 274 00:42:59,162 --> 00:43:02,707 around 80% have been islanders. 275 00:43:06,502 --> 00:43:11,507 Our impact on the Earth is greater today than ever before. 276 00:43:12,550 --> 00:43:14,969 Yet some islands are so remote, 277 00:43:15,052 --> 00:43:18,222 that few humans have even set foot on them. 278 00:43:21,684 --> 00:43:24,520 Zavodovski island is one. 279 00:43:28,316 --> 00:43:31,152 It lies in the great Southern Ocean. 280 00:43:31,235 --> 00:43:34,655 It's not only surrounded by the stormiest of seas, 281 00:43:34,739 --> 00:43:37,742 it is itself an active volcano. 282 00:43:40,495 --> 00:43:44,040 It's the last place on Earth you'd choose to live. 283 00:43:53,508 --> 00:43:56,552 Unless you're a chinstrap penguin. 284 00:43:59,222 --> 00:44:02,642 There's plenty of food in these waters, but to exploit it, 285 00:44:02,725 --> 00:44:05,436 the penguins have to risk their lives. 286 00:44:56,279 --> 00:45:00,157 Life here is dangerous in the extreme. 287 00:45:17,967 --> 00:45:21,637 But there are some benefits from living on a volcano. 288 00:45:24,265 --> 00:45:27,768 Its warmth melts the snow early in the year 289 00:45:28,644 --> 00:45:32,148 and by January, the Antarctic's mid-summer, 290 00:45:32,273 --> 00:45:34,775 the island is covered in chicks. 291 00:45:39,322 --> 00:45:42,491 Parents take turns at guarding them 292 00:45:42,617 --> 00:45:44,994 until they're large enough to be left alone. 293 00:45:50,041 --> 00:45:55,212 This mother's chicks are hungry, but she has no food left to give them. 294 00:45:57,173 --> 00:46:01,510 Their survival depends on their father returning with their next meal. 295 00:46:06,015 --> 00:46:07,850 But some don't make it. 296 00:46:22,531 --> 00:46:26,619 Skuas harass the colony hoping to snatch a chick. 297 00:46:34,877 --> 00:46:36,837 She can't risk leaving them. 298 00:46:41,884 --> 00:46:45,930 Everything will be fine as long as their father comes back soon. 299 00:47:16,585 --> 00:47:19,839 He's been fishing 80 kilometres offshore, 300 00:47:19,922 --> 00:47:22,049 but now, he's not faraway. 301 00:47:24,885 --> 00:47:28,389 For him, however, and for all the other parents here, 302 00:47:28,472 --> 00:47:31,267 the worst of the journey is still to come. 303 00:48:04,467 --> 00:48:09,138 Tiny claws help him to get whatever grip he can on the rough lava. 304 00:48:38,125 --> 00:48:41,170 For these commuters, it's rush hour. 305 00:48:42,838 --> 00:48:45,674 Some have had a really bad day. 306 00:48:50,137 --> 00:48:54,391 The father now has a three-kilometre walk to the nest, 307 00:48:54,517 --> 00:48:57,144 and a stomach loaded with food doesn't help. 308 00:49:04,527 --> 00:49:08,531 This is the largest penguin colony in the world. 309 00:49:15,663 --> 00:49:19,125 But as he makes the same journey every other day, 310 00:49:19,208 --> 00:49:22,378 he should be able to do it with his eyes closed. 311 00:49:31,262 --> 00:49:34,515 It's true that there can be safety in numbers, 312 00:49:34,598 --> 00:49:37,309 but numbers can also be something of a problem 313 00:49:37,393 --> 00:49:39,687 when you're trying to find your own nest. 314 00:49:46,527 --> 00:49:48,445 The mother is still waiting. 315 00:49:50,698 --> 00:49:52,825 Her chicks are now desperate. 316 00:49:58,914 --> 00:50:01,625 In the midst of all this deafening chorus, 317 00:50:01,750 --> 00:50:04,295 he can recognise her particular cry. 318 00:50:24,773 --> 00:50:25,941 At last. 319 00:50:42,082 --> 00:50:44,251 Both chicks will get a meal. 320 00:50:51,800 --> 00:50:56,597 With a head bob of acknowledgement, their mother now leaves. 321 00:50:56,680 --> 00:51:00,017 It's her turn to do the feeding run. 322 00:51:06,690 --> 00:51:13,155 This formidable commute is the price these penguins pay for sanctuary. 323 00:51:19,787 --> 00:51:23,332 A strange vision of paradise to us, perhaps, 324 00:51:23,457 --> 00:51:26,961 but for one and a half million penguins, 325 00:51:27,044 --> 00:51:29,296 this island has it all. 326 00:51:40,516 --> 00:51:44,561 Islands may seem remote and insignificant, 327 00:51:44,687 --> 00:51:49,024 but they are home to some of the most precious wildlife on Earth. 328 00:52:04,331 --> 00:52:05,541 Next time, 329 00:52:05,666 --> 00:52:08,752 we ascend into the planet's high mountains 330 00:52:09,837 --> 00:52:14,300 to discover a spectacular but hostile world 331 00:52:14,383 --> 00:52:17,344 where life must be at its most resourceful, 332 00:52:18,846 --> 00:52:21,557 and only the toughest animals can endure. 27266

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