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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:36,454 --> 00:00:39,289 One quarter of all the land on Earth 2 00:00:39,373 --> 00:00:43,126 is covered by a single, remarkable type of plant. 3 00:00:49,800 --> 00:00:54,304 Almost indestructible, it can grow half a metre a day... 4 00:01:01,020 --> 00:01:04,481 ...and be tall enough to hide a giant. 5 00:01:08,986 --> 00:01:11,404 That plant is grass, 6 00:01:11,489 --> 00:01:14,908 and the world it creates is truly unique. 7 00:01:29,048 --> 00:01:32,926 The grass in northern India is the tallest on the planet, 8 00:01:33,094 --> 00:01:37,347 home to some of the most impressive creatures to tread the Earth. 9 00:01:52,947 --> 00:01:55,156 These are the good times, 10 00:01:55,241 --> 00:01:59,035 but in just a few months, all this fresh growth will be gone, 11 00:01:59,620 --> 00:02:02,872 and the animals will be forced to move on. 12 00:02:05,710 --> 00:02:10,463 That is the way things are on grasslands across the planet. 13 00:02:14,302 --> 00:02:18,722 A cycle of abundance, destruction and rebirth 14 00:02:19,056 --> 00:02:21,474 that affects every creature that lives here. 15 00:02:37,074 --> 00:02:41,828 The largest grassland on Earth, the vast Eurasian Steppe, 16 00:02:42,288 --> 00:02:46,374 stretches one third of the way around our planet. 17 00:02:50,338 --> 00:02:55,759 Spring rain has brought fresh grass, and with it, new life. 18 00:03:00,097 --> 00:03:04,934 A relic from the Ice Age, a baby Saiga antelope, 19 00:03:05,269 --> 00:03:07,103 just three hours old. 20 00:03:10,441 --> 00:03:12,776 His only company, his twin. 21 00:03:14,153 --> 00:03:18,948 Until they can stand, their mother has left them hidden in the grass. 22 00:03:26,999 --> 00:03:31,127 They should be safe, as long as they remain quiet. 23 00:03:36,300 --> 00:03:39,302 For these calves, the clock is already ticking. 24 00:03:40,971 --> 00:03:45,809 Their herd will soon be moving on, seeking the freshest new grass. 25 00:04:03,828 --> 00:04:08,540 Their lanky legs are a sure sign that they're built for a life on the move. 26 00:04:33,941 --> 00:04:36,985 Saiga always give birth to twins, 27 00:04:37,069 --> 00:04:40,738 so their numbers grow rapidly just when grass is plentiful. 28 00:04:44,285 --> 00:04:47,787 Their bizarrely shaped nose can detect fresh growth 29 00:04:48,122 --> 00:04:50,206 from hundreds of kilometres away. 30 00:05:02,428 --> 00:05:05,805 The young twins will now begin the nomadic life 31 00:05:06,056 --> 00:05:10,268 they share with most animals on the world's open plains. 32 00:05:32,333 --> 00:05:38,171 Grasslands occur where rain is too sporadic for forests to exist. 33 00:05:48,766 --> 00:05:52,268 The rain that a grassland needs to survive for a year 34 00:05:52,603 --> 00:05:54,771 might arrive all at once. 35 00:06:16,210 --> 00:06:21,422 Storms like these can release 30 centimetres of rain in 24 hours. 36 00:06:32,643 --> 00:06:35,395 Not much fun if you're out in it. 37 00:06:47,658 --> 00:06:51,035 Eventually the earth can't soak up any more, 38 00:06:54,039 --> 00:06:57,667 and the grassland undergoes a radical change. 39 00:07:04,758 --> 00:07:09,429 Many plants would drown here, but grasses thrive. 40 00:07:12,683 --> 00:07:13,850 They grow so fast, 41 00:07:13,934 --> 00:07:17,437 their leaves quickly rise above the water and into the sunlight. 42 00:07:22,276 --> 00:07:24,110 Here in southern Africa, 43 00:07:24,194 --> 00:07:28,948 water transforms one of the most remarkable grasslands on Earth, 44 00:07:31,619 --> 00:07:32,702 the Okavango. 45 00:07:36,582 --> 00:07:41,085 Every year, 8,000 square kilometres of grassland are flooded. 46 00:07:49,386 --> 00:07:53,556 For one pride of lions, this poses a major problem. 47 00:07:55,976 --> 00:07:58,478 There may be plenty of prey around, 48 00:07:58,562 --> 00:08:01,397 but lions struggle to run it down in water. 49 00:08:08,739 --> 00:08:13,785 The pride has three-month-old cubs. They've never seen water before. 50 00:08:17,915 --> 00:08:20,083 If their mothers don't make a kill soon, 51 00:08:20,751 --> 00:08:23,336 the cubs might not survive the week. 52 00:08:33,138 --> 00:08:38,976 But fuelled by the flood, the eruption of grass attracts new possible prey. 53 00:08:42,314 --> 00:08:45,483 Buffalo arrive in herds 2,000 strong. 54 00:08:53,283 --> 00:08:56,327 Powerful, aggressive and united, 55 00:08:56,787 --> 00:08:59,789 they're the most dangerous animal a lion can face. 56 00:09:38,704 --> 00:09:40,997 The biggest bulls don't run. 57 00:09:43,417 --> 00:09:46,836 They're simply too huge to be scared of lions. 58 00:09:49,423 --> 00:09:54,510 At 900 kilos, he weighs more than all five lionesses combined. 59 00:09:59,183 --> 00:10:01,684 The pride do have numbers on their side, 60 00:10:03,395 --> 00:10:06,355 but one sweep of his horns could be deadly. 61 00:10:20,746 --> 00:10:25,208 One distracts the bull up front, while her sisters attack from behind. 62 00:10:36,553 --> 00:10:38,930 The cats must somehow topple the buffalo, 63 00:10:39,139 --> 00:10:42,433 but with swamp under foot, they can't get any traction. 64 00:11:27,354 --> 00:11:29,021 The bull is weakening, 65 00:11:29,940 --> 00:11:32,191 but the lions are tiring, too. 66 00:11:37,447 --> 00:11:41,200 It's now a battle of will as much as strength. 67 00:11:44,496 --> 00:11:48,124 To live, the bull must somehow shake off the lioness. 68 00:12:27,581 --> 00:12:29,206 The bull is wounded, 69 00:12:29,333 --> 00:12:33,169 but thanks to his thick hide, he will recover. 70 00:12:39,259 --> 00:12:42,720 For the pride, these are hungry times. 71 00:12:51,188 --> 00:12:56,192 But, ultimately, once the water recedes, there will be new life, 72 00:12:57,194 --> 00:12:59,445 and new food to benefit all. 73 00:13:09,039 --> 00:13:13,084 In the right conditions, grasses have the extraordinary ability 74 00:13:13,210 --> 00:13:18,130 to grow from first shoots to flower in a matter of only days. 75 00:13:25,055 --> 00:13:29,392 Grasses become the miniature equivalents of fruiting trees. 76 00:13:37,067 --> 00:13:39,694 And for creatures living within the grass, 77 00:13:39,778 --> 00:13:44,240 this is a landscape as vast and towering as any rainforest. 78 00:13:49,579 --> 00:13:52,581 An excellent place to build a tiny tree house 79 00:13:55,168 --> 00:13:56,711 for a harvest mouse. 80 00:14:09,016 --> 00:14:12,893 During summer, European meadowlands are full of food, 81 00:14:16,815 --> 00:14:19,108 but only for those that can reach it. 82 00:14:38,336 --> 00:14:41,464 Climbing grass is harder than climbing trees, 83 00:14:41,631 --> 00:14:44,967 not least because their stems just won't stay still. 84 00:14:53,060 --> 00:14:56,562 Her prehensile tail acts like a fifth limb, 85 00:14:56,646 --> 00:15:00,816 so she's as agile as a monkey clambering around in a tree. 86 00:15:08,867 --> 00:15:10,201 And just as well, 87 00:15:10,577 --> 00:15:15,164 for the best food in this tiny forest is at the very top of its canopy. 88 00:15:26,343 --> 00:15:29,386 Feeding up here, she's exposed. 89 00:15:37,062 --> 00:15:38,270 A barn owl. 90 00:16:10,554 --> 00:16:12,429 Not her finest move... 91 00:16:16,393 --> 00:16:17,643 But it did the trick. 92 00:16:19,896 --> 00:16:23,440 Harvest mice seldom go all the way down to the ground. 93 00:16:26,903 --> 00:16:30,281 It's a tangled and dangerous world down here. 94 00:16:44,087 --> 00:16:48,465 But she can read the pattern of the stems overhead like a map, 95 00:16:49,634 --> 00:16:51,594 and so find her way home. 96 00:16:59,978 --> 00:17:02,521 And not a minute too soon. 97 00:17:07,277 --> 00:17:09,445 There are mouths to feed. 98 00:17:23,793 --> 00:17:25,961 Her babies must fatten up quickly. 99 00:17:28,340 --> 00:17:33,010 They need to harvest the summer grasses while they're still rich with food. 100 00:17:41,811 --> 00:17:46,815 On the African savannah, too, seasonal grasses are filled with life, 101 00:17:47,317 --> 00:17:48,734 but it won't last long. 102 00:17:52,489 --> 00:17:55,866 Carmine bee-eaters are superb aerial hunters, 103 00:17:57,661 --> 00:18:01,247 experts at catching insects in midair. 104 00:18:08,922 --> 00:18:12,508 But they have no way of flushing their prey out of the grass. 105 00:18:23,061 --> 00:18:26,397 Once alarmed, most insects stay put. 106 00:18:29,901 --> 00:18:33,696 The bee-eaters need someone to stir things up a bit. 107 00:18:39,869 --> 00:18:41,036 A kori bustard. 108 00:18:46,293 --> 00:18:48,711 It's the world's heaviest flying bird, 109 00:18:48,795 --> 00:18:51,547 so it should be bulky enough to kick up some insects. 110 00:18:59,889 --> 00:19:00,931 Bingo! 111 00:19:04,060 --> 00:19:09,273 Until someone else comes along and cramps your style. 112 00:19:15,447 --> 00:19:19,658 Never mind, perhaps there are bigger opportunities ahead. 113 00:19:22,954 --> 00:19:24,663 What about an ostrich? 114 00:19:27,459 --> 00:19:28,834 The heaviest bird of all. 115 00:19:35,008 --> 00:19:38,802 This time there's more than enough transport to go around. 116 00:19:49,272 --> 00:19:53,317 Soon, almost every ostrich has its own passenger. 117 00:20:01,451 --> 00:20:05,287 But free riders are only tolerated for so long. 118 00:20:12,128 --> 00:20:14,296 What the bee-eaters really need 119 00:20:14,381 --> 00:20:17,800 is a creature so big it won't even notice them. 120 00:20:28,395 --> 00:20:33,690 Nothing cuts a swathe through grass like an African bull elephant. 121 00:20:50,708 --> 00:20:54,878 The trick is to fly as close to the front of the giant as possible. 122 00:20:55,547 --> 00:20:58,841 They only have a split second to grab the prize. 123 00:21:08,935 --> 00:21:13,272 As more insects are stirred up, the competition intensifies. 124 00:21:36,212 --> 00:21:40,799 With summer drawing to a close, the race to stock up is on. 125 00:21:46,264 --> 00:21:51,560 Soon, the grass will wither, and this opportunity will have gone. 126 00:22:01,446 --> 00:22:04,114 As the dry season takes hold, 127 00:22:04,240 --> 00:22:06,950 food becomes increasingly thin on the ground. 128 00:22:09,746 --> 00:22:14,833 Now, only the most specialised predators on the plains can make a living. 129 00:22:20,590 --> 00:22:25,427 She may be spotted like a cheetah, but this cat is no sprinter. 130 00:22:38,691 --> 00:22:44,279 Instead, she has extra-long legs which give her a high vantage point. 131 00:22:55,792 --> 00:23:01,129 But a serval cat's main weapon are enormous radar ears. 132 00:23:05,510 --> 00:23:08,804 They help her pinpoint prey hiding in the grass. 133 00:23:17,981 --> 00:23:21,066 But the prey she seeks are canny. 134 00:23:25,029 --> 00:23:26,488 Southern vlei rats. 135 00:23:29,909 --> 00:23:33,412 They know that any sustained movement can give them away. 136 00:23:39,335 --> 00:23:41,878 So they move in short bursts. 137 00:23:50,179 --> 00:23:53,515 But even the slightest rustle will give her a clue. 138 00:24:16,748 --> 00:24:17,789 Warm. 139 00:24:30,720 --> 00:24:31,887 Warmer. 140 00:24:46,736 --> 00:24:47,903 Missed. 141 00:26:10,737 --> 00:26:13,989 In better times, she could catch 10 a day, 142 00:26:15,366 --> 00:26:20,036 but now, with so few rodents around, she will have to go hungry. 143 00:26:22,498 --> 00:26:27,169 As drought intensifies, life gets tougher for all. 144 00:26:34,177 --> 00:26:38,013 Predators with permanent territories must tough it out, 145 00:26:38,765 --> 00:26:42,893 while most of their prey disappear over the horizon. 146 00:26:47,356 --> 00:26:53,111 To avoid starvation, many grassland animals follow a nomadic way of life. 147 00:26:55,573 --> 00:26:59,785 Over 2,000,000 wildebeests wander the East African savannahs 148 00:26:59,869 --> 00:27:01,620 chasing the rains. 149 00:27:15,885 --> 00:27:18,053 And they are not alone. 150 00:27:20,473 --> 00:27:22,015 Arriving on the wing, 151 00:27:22,099 --> 00:27:25,936 Jackson's Widowbirds also seek fresh grass. 152 00:27:28,064 --> 00:27:31,316 Although, it's not just food that they're after. 153 00:27:36,322 --> 00:27:38,490 This male wants a mate. 154 00:27:41,786 --> 00:27:44,913 He's grown elaborate breeding plumage for this moment, 155 00:27:47,083 --> 00:27:50,085 but he needs a stage on which to show it off. 156 00:27:54,590 --> 00:27:59,094 By carefully selecting grass blades, each trimmed to the correct length, 157 00:27:59,846 --> 00:28:02,097 he's creating something very special. 158 00:28:17,697 --> 00:28:20,365 He needs an even surface, 159 00:28:22,493 --> 00:28:23,869 and a centre-piece. 160 00:28:26,789 --> 00:28:28,206 The stage is set. 161 00:28:29,625 --> 00:28:34,296 His bachelor pad is sufficiently neat and tidy to attract a female. 162 00:28:36,215 --> 00:28:37,299 The problem is, 163 00:28:37,800 --> 00:28:39,009 can she see it? 164 00:28:43,222 --> 00:28:44,389 He has competition. 165 00:28:55,192 --> 00:28:59,529 It might take more than a little gardening to impress the ladies. 166 00:29:02,074 --> 00:29:03,992 Jumping is the right idea, 167 00:29:05,411 --> 00:29:07,871 but he's misjudged the height of the grass. 168 00:29:18,215 --> 00:29:20,216 His rival makes it look easy. 169 00:29:44,450 --> 00:29:46,618 Time to raise his game. 170 00:30:23,739 --> 00:30:28,660 It's not only who jumps the highest, but who can keep doing so the longest. 171 00:30:38,129 --> 00:30:43,091 Unable to go the distance, his rivals drop out one by one. 172 00:30:47,930 --> 00:30:51,182 Stamina has won him admirers, 173 00:30:52,685 --> 00:30:55,979 now he can show off his courtship arena... 174 00:31:05,823 --> 00:31:09,617 And engage in a little romantic hide-and-seek. 175 00:31:22,048 --> 00:31:24,799 Finally, he's done enough. 176 00:31:36,979 --> 00:31:41,316 The East African savannahs support millions of grazers. 177 00:31:42,693 --> 00:31:46,321 Each year they devour millions of tonnes of grass, 178 00:31:48,574 --> 00:31:50,784 and yet there's one creature here 179 00:31:50,868 --> 00:31:55,997 whose impact is far greater than all these animals combined. 180 00:32:00,169 --> 00:32:03,254 They're found wherever grass grows on the planet, 181 00:32:04,048 --> 00:32:07,342 yet their labours go almost entirely unnoticed. 182 00:32:12,431 --> 00:32:18,186 One of the most remarkable is found here on the grasslands of South America. 183 00:32:21,232 --> 00:32:27,195 These blades are so tough that virtually no large grass eaters can stomach them. 184 00:32:28,531 --> 00:32:32,283 Yet they're harvested on an industrial scale... 185 00:32:36,455 --> 00:32:39,207 ...by tiny grass cutter ants. 186 00:32:46,423 --> 00:32:49,300 But they themselves can't digest one bit of it. 187 00:32:52,721 --> 00:32:54,055 So, why bother? 188 00:32:58,602 --> 00:33:01,229 The answer is underground, 189 00:33:03,315 --> 00:33:05,441 and it's very ingenious. 190 00:33:10,322 --> 00:33:15,827 Each blade is cut to length and placed into a garden of fungus. 191 00:33:21,083 --> 00:33:27,755 The rotting grass feeds the fungus, and in turn the fungus feeds the ants. 192 00:33:31,468 --> 00:33:35,972 But feeding 5,000,000 workers requires intensive agriculture. 193 00:33:38,684 --> 00:33:42,103 Luckily, they are an industrious lot. 194 00:33:46,775 --> 00:33:51,863 This colony alone will collect over half a tonne of grass every year. 195 00:33:56,285 --> 00:33:59,787 With billions of ant colonies across the world's grasslands 196 00:33:59,955 --> 00:34:05,543 all doing exactly the same thing, that's a mind-boggling amount of grass. 197 00:34:34,990 --> 00:34:39,077 It's estimated that over one third of the grass that grows on Earth 198 00:34:39,578 --> 00:34:42,330 will be harvested by an insect. 199 00:34:48,671 --> 00:34:54,759 In northern Australia, termites memorialise their industry in sculpture. 200 00:35:03,060 --> 00:35:06,229 These astonishing mounds are three metres tall. 201 00:35:07,022 --> 00:35:10,066 They're always built on a north-south axis, 202 00:35:10,192 --> 00:35:13,569 which is why their builders are called compass termites. 203 00:35:27,710 --> 00:35:29,502 These castles of clay 204 00:35:29,586 --> 00:35:32,422 protect their builders from extremes of heat 205 00:35:32,548 --> 00:35:36,551 and seasonal floods experienced on many grasslands. 206 00:35:48,564 --> 00:35:52,984 Termites manage to do what most grass eaters can't, 207 00:35:54,111 --> 00:35:57,572 break down dead grass and extract the nutrients. 208 00:35:58,991 --> 00:36:03,077 But they themselves can be food for those that can reach them. 209 00:36:08,959 --> 00:36:10,793 A half-metre-long tongue 210 00:36:12,171 --> 00:36:14,422 covered in microscopic hooks, 211 00:36:17,926 --> 00:36:22,472 followed by claws longer than those of a velociraptor. 212 00:36:28,937 --> 00:36:32,523 A giant anteater on the plains of South America. 213 00:36:37,696 --> 00:36:40,948 It can devour 20,000 insects a day. 214 00:36:46,455 --> 00:36:51,876 Powerful forelegs enable it to rip apart a termite hill with ease. 215 00:37:02,304 --> 00:37:07,642 And as the sun bakes the grass, the termites face new danger. 216 00:37:30,666 --> 00:37:34,919 In minutes, fire turns grassland to ash. 217 00:37:49,393 --> 00:37:55,189 But the grasses are not dead. Their underground stems are unharmed. 218 00:37:58,569 --> 00:38:01,028 Weeks, months may pass, 219 00:38:01,530 --> 00:38:06,409 but eventually the rains will return and the grass will sprout again. 220 00:38:13,876 --> 00:38:19,255 Some grasslands must endure not only fire, but ice. 221 00:38:24,803 --> 00:38:29,724 As winter approaches, the prairies of North America begin to freeze. 222 00:38:46,408 --> 00:38:48,993 In summer, bison roamed freely, 223 00:38:49,077 --> 00:38:52,747 almost continuously cropping the abundant green grass. 224 00:38:54,750 --> 00:39:00,129 Now, that grass is not only withered and frozen, it's about to be buried. 225 00:39:22,611 --> 00:39:27,490 Sixty million tonnes of snow now blanket this herd's territory. 226 00:39:31,703 --> 00:39:35,081 Pushing through deep snow is exhausting work, 227 00:39:35,165 --> 00:39:37,875 and the bison are now slowly starving. 228 00:39:45,175 --> 00:39:48,636 Just keeping warm saps huge amounts of energy. 229 00:39:55,394 --> 00:39:59,689 Their thick coats can insulate them down to minus 30 Celsius. 230 00:40:00,649 --> 00:40:02,650 It's now minus 40. 231 00:40:05,821 --> 00:40:11,659 The only thing that will keep them alive is buried beneath a metre of snow. 232 00:40:16,498 --> 00:40:20,167 And that's a problem shared with a surprising neighbour. 233 00:40:38,770 --> 00:40:42,565 The food the fox seeks is also deep beneath the snow. 234 00:40:55,454 --> 00:41:00,291 The survival of both creatures depends on getting through to the ground. 235 00:41:06,048 --> 00:41:09,759 For the bison, it will be a matter of brute strength. 236 00:41:14,723 --> 00:41:19,602 Massive neck muscles enable them to shovel five tonnes of snow a day. 237 00:41:26,401 --> 00:41:29,403 Their light-weight neighbour needs more precision. 238 00:41:58,183 --> 00:42:00,267 The bison have reached their goal, 239 00:42:01,103 --> 00:42:03,521 a mouthful of withered grass. 240 00:42:07,442 --> 00:42:12,279 And where the bison have dug, the fox now spots an opportunity. 241 00:42:21,623 --> 00:42:23,791 Every footstep counts, 242 00:42:26,837 --> 00:42:28,546 but he mustn't break through... 243 00:42:29,631 --> 00:42:30,631 Yet. 244 00:42:34,052 --> 00:42:37,638 He listens carefully to pinpoint his target. 245 00:42:43,562 --> 00:42:44,645 It's moving. 246 00:43:07,210 --> 00:43:08,252 A vole. 247 00:43:10,922 --> 00:43:16,510 Small, but 100 times more nutritious than a mouthful of dried grass. 248 00:43:23,518 --> 00:43:29,732 To get through the winter on these prairies, sometimes brain beats brawn. 249 00:43:36,740 --> 00:43:42,453 Ultimately, life on all grasslands depends on the turn of the seasons. 250 00:44:07,813 --> 00:44:12,733 Eight hundred kilometres further north than any tree can survive, 251 00:44:12,818 --> 00:44:15,528 grass returns to life. 252 00:44:26,873 --> 00:44:30,209 Caribou females have journeyed to the far north 253 00:44:30,961 --> 00:44:32,127 to calve. 254 00:44:36,132 --> 00:44:41,136 Over 70,000 caribou babies will be born in the next few days. 255 00:44:46,226 --> 00:44:51,272 As the calves appear, so too do the leaves of the newly sprouting grass. 256 00:44:54,943 --> 00:44:56,986 And the calves must strengthen quickly. 257 00:44:57,445 --> 00:45:00,781 Within days they will have to keep up with their parents 258 00:45:00,949 --> 00:45:02,950 on a never-ending march. 259 00:45:08,164 --> 00:45:13,460 At one day old, they're already faster than an Olympic sprinter. 260 00:45:14,629 --> 00:45:18,799 They're testing the legs that will carry them thousands of kilometres, 261 00:45:20,343 --> 00:45:22,761 better to learn their limitations now. 262 00:45:43,491 --> 00:45:47,786 It may look playful, but there's no harder life on the grasslands 263 00:45:47,871 --> 00:45:50,664 than that facing these infants. 264 00:45:54,169 --> 00:45:56,503 The caribou mothers now join together, 265 00:45:56,630 --> 00:45:59,840 each with an infant exactly the same age. 266 00:46:08,725 --> 00:46:14,063 They're setting off on the greatest overland trek made by any animal. 267 00:46:38,213 --> 00:46:43,592 But wherever grass eaters travel, predators lie in wait. 268 00:46:50,725 --> 00:46:54,728 Here they are, Arctic wolves. 269 00:47:02,195 --> 00:47:03,821 They must seize their chance 270 00:47:03,905 --> 00:47:06,532 while the caribou pass through their territory. 271 00:47:44,154 --> 00:47:48,949 The wolf runs at the herd, trying to flush out the weak or the slow. 272 00:47:58,793 --> 00:48:00,502 A calf is separated. 273 00:48:09,262 --> 00:48:14,141 At full tilt, 60 kilometres an hour, the wolf is just faster. 274 00:48:22,817 --> 00:48:25,444 But the calf has stamina. 275 00:48:56,309 --> 00:49:01,897 Only a few weeks old, and this calf's will to survive is remarkable. 276 00:49:07,487 --> 00:49:09,363 And it needs to be, 277 00:49:09,864 --> 00:49:12,908 for these young caribou have now started a journey 278 00:49:13,201 --> 00:49:15,160 that will last a lifetime. 279 00:49:18,581 --> 00:49:23,585 Forever chasing the seasonal growth of the grass on which they depend. 280 00:49:33,054 --> 00:49:36,390 Like all grassland creatures, they are at the mercy 281 00:49:36,516 --> 00:49:41,103 of these unpredictable but ultimately bountiful lands. 282 00:49:47,527 --> 00:49:51,613 Grass can survive some of the harshest conditions on Earth, 283 00:49:51,739 --> 00:49:56,201 flood, fire and frost, and still flourish. 284 00:50:06,880 --> 00:50:10,424 So it is that grasslands provide a stage 285 00:50:10,717 --> 00:50:15,304 for the greatest gatherings of wildlife on planet Earth. 286 00:50:23,438 --> 00:50:25,105 Next time, 287 00:50:25,523 --> 00:50:28,358 we venture to the newest habitat on Earth, 288 00:50:29,068 --> 00:50:30,611 our cities. 289 00:50:31,446 --> 00:50:34,448 To reveal the extraordinary ways 290 00:50:35,241 --> 00:50:38,702 that animals survive in this man-made world. 24770

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