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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,127 --> 00:00:05,214 (MUSIC PLAYING) 2 00:00:28,362 --> 00:00:31,448 NARRATOR: Our oceans are the lifeblood of our planet. 3 00:00:37,829 --> 00:00:41,208 My grandfather, Jacques Cousteau, inspired the world 4 00:00:41,610 --> 00:00:44,753 through his exploration, sharing the mysteries 5 00:00:44,962 --> 00:00:47,589 of one of Earth's most important habitats. 6 00:01:07,818 --> 00:01:11,154 It was in that spirit that a team of Disneynature filmmakers 7 00:01:11,655 --> 00:01:15,409 embarked on a quest to shed new light on this hidden world... 8 00:01:15,784 --> 00:01:17,244 (INDISTINCT) 9 00:01:20,664 --> 00:01:23,417 ...and on one of its most enchanting inhabitants. 10 00:01:23,584 --> 00:01:25,586 (WHISTLING) 11 00:01:27,379 --> 00:01:32,092 NARRATOR: For wildlife filmmakers, the ocean presents the greatest challenge. 12 00:01:32,369 --> 00:01:34,194 It is unforgiving. 13 00:01:37,973 --> 00:01:40,684 And visits beneath the waves are fleeting. 14 00:01:47,482 --> 00:01:51,903 Here, they will enter a realm where they are not the masters. 15 00:01:57,284 --> 00:01:59,494 And they must be respectful of the locals. 16 00:02:00,537 --> 00:02:02,164 MAN: No, no, no, no, no! 17 00:02:03,749 --> 00:02:05,083 (DOLPHINS CLICKS) 18 00:02:05,334 --> 00:02:06,885 NARRATOR: The team's mission? 19 00:02:07,711 --> 00:02:09,504 To reveal what it's like to live... 20 00:02:09,921 --> 00:02:11,715 -(DOLPHIN SQUEALS) -...in a dolphin's world. 21 00:02:20,057 --> 00:02:24,061 In the Red Sea, wildlife cinematographer, Roger Horrocks, 22 00:02:24,227 --> 00:02:27,230 is preparing to film the main character of our story... 23 00:02:28,315 --> 00:02:29,650 bottlenose dolphins. 24 00:02:30,651 --> 00:02:32,819 He has filmed dolphins all over the world, 25 00:02:33,320 --> 00:02:35,822 but it's his first time in this location. 26 00:02:36,948 --> 00:02:40,827 The key to his success lies with scientist, Angela Ziltener. 27 00:02:41,620 --> 00:02:43,997 Having studied them here for over a decade, 28 00:02:44,247 --> 00:02:47,376 she is a virtual gatekeeper to the Red Sea dolphins. 29 00:02:47,793 --> 00:02:50,379 Certainly, the dolphins are probably one of the most 30 00:02:50,545 --> 00:02:52,422 charismatic animals that you do get in the ocean. 31 00:02:52,589 --> 00:02:54,508 They're mammals, people can relate to them. 32 00:02:54,841 --> 00:02:58,387 Um, they're very, you know, they have a mammalian consciousness. 33 00:02:58,553 --> 00:03:01,348 So, we have a kinship with them. 34 00:03:03,809 --> 00:03:05,852 NARRATOR: As a highly experienced free-diver, 35 00:03:06,144 --> 00:03:10,315 Roger certainly has the athleticism to keep up with dolphins underwater. 36 00:03:11,024 --> 00:03:13,110 ROGER: Filming dolphins is probably the most physical 37 00:03:13,276 --> 00:03:15,779 -because they are incessantly on the move. -(SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY) 38 00:03:16,697 --> 00:03:19,741 So, the biggest challenge is really just keeping up with them 39 00:03:20,033 --> 00:03:24,246 and coming across those moments of pure, beautiful interaction. 40 00:03:27,999 --> 00:03:29,876 It was massively helpful to have Angela, 41 00:03:30,168 --> 00:03:33,714 who has spent an incredible amount of time in that location. 42 00:03:34,341 --> 00:03:36,842 Her knowing the dolphins helped us tremendously. 43 00:03:38,427 --> 00:03:41,179 NARRATOR: Angela is one of the few scientists in the world 44 00:03:41,471 --> 00:03:43,390 who studies them by scuba diving. 45 00:03:45,517 --> 00:03:49,813 It has allowed her to get to know over 200 individual dolphins, 46 00:03:50,063 --> 00:03:52,232 -and allowed them to get to know her. -(DOLPHINS WHISTLE) 47 00:03:52,983 --> 00:03:57,279 ANGELA: To understand the animals, you actually have to be one of them. 48 00:03:57,639 --> 00:04:00,449 That means not that you are the animal itself, 49 00:04:00,809 --> 00:04:03,285 but that you are accepted in the group. 50 00:04:04,244 --> 00:04:09,291 You will actually see all the individuals and that every dolphin is different. 51 00:04:10,292 --> 00:04:13,628 Every dolphin has their own personality, like humans. 52 00:04:14,629 --> 00:04:16,339 -(DOLPHINS WHISTLE) -NARRATOR: The pod knows Angela, 53 00:04:17,048 --> 00:04:20,260 but will the dolphins accept our strange new cinematographer? 54 00:04:20,844 --> 00:04:23,847 ROGER: I, kind of, knew literally from the moment that I got in 55 00:04:24,189 --> 00:04:26,107 that this was a great opportunity. 56 00:04:26,725 --> 00:04:30,604 When those dolphins were absolutely keen to interact, 57 00:04:30,812 --> 00:04:33,115 not only with each other, but also with me as a cameraman... 58 00:04:33,315 --> 00:04:35,776 -(DOLPHIN WHISTLE) -...so that was just such a joy. 59 00:04:37,152 --> 00:04:40,739 Wild animals actually wanting to be filmed. It was amazing. 60 00:04:44,701 --> 00:04:46,036 (DOLPHIN SQUEALS) 61 00:04:51,833 --> 00:04:53,502 ROGER: The more we film, the more we got a sense 62 00:04:53,668 --> 00:04:55,420 of how they operate as groups. 63 00:04:56,296 --> 00:04:59,049 You know, one thing that was very, very marked for me 64 00:04:59,549 --> 00:05:02,761 was the degree of interaction between the dolphins. 65 00:05:03,595 --> 00:05:06,890 It was astounding to see how tactile they were. 66 00:05:07,140 --> 00:05:08,308 (SQUEALING CONTINUES) 67 00:05:08,850 --> 00:05:11,269 ROGER: Dolphins spent time fin rubbing, 68 00:05:11,436 --> 00:05:13,563 and touching each other, grooming each other. 69 00:05:14,439 --> 00:05:17,108 I thought initially it was maybe a romantic thing, 70 00:05:17,275 --> 00:05:19,528 but actually, it's a bonding thing. 71 00:05:20,237 --> 00:05:23,323 They are emotional, highly intelligent creatures, 72 00:05:23,532 --> 00:05:25,659 -very, very similar to us. -(WHISTLING AND SQUEAKING) 73 00:05:27,494 --> 00:05:30,872 NARRATOR: And it wasn’t long before Roger spotted another example 74 00:05:31,081 --> 00:05:32,749 of their playful intelligence. 75 00:05:36,002 --> 00:05:40,298 ROGER: A group of juveniles just came in and they were almost showing off. 76 00:05:40,924 --> 00:05:44,761 I remember that feeling of knowing this is a unique piece of behavior 77 00:05:44,970 --> 00:05:47,097 and probably never going to get this chance again. 78 00:05:48,473 --> 00:05:51,101 NARRATOR: They flick their fluke to clear the sand, 79 00:05:51,726 --> 00:05:54,104 exposing a piece of coral. 80 00:05:55,480 --> 00:05:58,859 And voilà, a toy is born. 81 00:06:09,411 --> 00:06:12,873 Few animals spend so much time playing, 82 00:06:13,606 --> 00:06:15,150 yet this perceived playfulness 83 00:06:15,333 --> 00:06:18,003 might also be one of the ways that young dolphins 84 00:06:18,169 --> 00:06:20,255 -practice their hunting skills. -(DOLPHIN CLICKS) 85 00:06:25,802 --> 00:06:27,888 ROGER: You can just, kind of, see that intelligence 86 00:06:28,054 --> 00:06:30,140 and that mischievousness about them, 87 00:06:30,307 --> 00:06:35,729 and again, just such an incredible insight into how intelligent these animals are. 88 00:06:39,900 --> 00:06:42,611 I think dolphins just do it because they absolutely love it, 89 00:06:42,777 --> 00:06:44,829 and they enjoy the skill and the challenge. 90 00:06:49,868 --> 00:06:52,054 I think they do it for the sheer fun of it. 91 00:07:04,674 --> 00:07:08,511 NARRATOR: Angela's research has revealed another aspect of dolphin life 92 00:07:08,845 --> 00:07:10,555 rarely witnessed in the wild... 93 00:07:12,015 --> 00:07:13,099 sleeping. 94 00:07:16,061 --> 00:07:19,230 This group of dolphins is so relaxed in her presence, 95 00:07:19,981 --> 00:07:21,816 they take a nap as she watches... 96 00:07:24,653 --> 00:07:25,904 and Roger films. 97 00:07:31,117 --> 00:07:34,037 Dolphins sleep with just half the brain at a time. 98 00:07:35,622 --> 00:07:39,209 Half the brain needs to be awake to remember to surf as to breathe 99 00:07:40,043 --> 00:07:42,629 and to keep an eye out for any danger. 100 00:07:44,631 --> 00:07:47,676 As a consequence of having such active brains, 101 00:07:47,968 --> 00:07:52,347 wild dolphins, just like us, need lots of sleep. 102 00:07:54,641 --> 00:07:57,268 ROGER: They do these beautiful movements, synchronized movements where they 103 00:07:57,485 --> 00:07:59,237 come up and they go back down again. 104 00:08:00,563 --> 00:08:04,109 It's very, you know, very soporific, very slow. 105 00:08:05,151 --> 00:08:07,278 Really, really beautiful to watch. 106 00:08:09,698 --> 00:08:11,241 It just felt very poetic. 107 00:08:20,625 --> 00:08:23,211 NARRATOR: Thanks to Angela, Roger and the team 108 00:08:23,530 --> 00:08:27,924 are starting to get a taste of what it's like to be a wild dolphin. 109 00:08:29,092 --> 00:08:33,430 Knowledge they will need to build on, in the next leg of their adventure. 110 00:08:35,890 --> 00:08:40,437 It was just an absolute privilege to be... to have that kind of access 111 00:08:40,603 --> 00:08:45,316 to, you know, these animals on their terms because they choose to be with you. 112 00:08:45,483 --> 00:08:47,694 You know, you can't force them to be with you, and I think, 113 00:08:48,153 --> 00:08:50,280 you know, of all the locations I've dived, 114 00:08:50,822 --> 00:08:52,407 they were the most welcoming, 115 00:08:52,615 --> 00:08:56,369 um, and that was, you know, something that I'll never forget. 116 00:08:58,705 --> 00:09:01,124 NARRATOR: Roger has made filming dolphins look easy, 117 00:09:01,958 --> 00:09:06,129 but will cinematographer, Didier Noirot, have the same luck in Hawaii 118 00:09:06,504 --> 00:09:09,257 filming the next main characters of our story? 119 00:09:12,677 --> 00:09:13,970 Humpback whales. 120 00:09:18,349 --> 00:09:22,020 Hawaii is a very good location to film humpback whales... 121 00:09:23,063 --> 00:09:25,398 because of the whale population. 122 00:09:25,857 --> 00:09:28,318 -DIDIER: You're sure to see whales there. -(SPRAYS WATER) 123 00:09:28,568 --> 00:09:32,739 DIDIER: Crystal clear water, so, that's perfect place to film whales. 124 00:09:33,948 --> 00:09:38,661 NARRATOR: It is also here that every year, the females give birth to their calves. 125 00:09:41,122 --> 00:09:44,292 And filming a mother and calf is the team's first task. 126 00:09:46,753 --> 00:09:48,797 They set out aboard the Luckey Strike 127 00:09:49,756 --> 00:09:51,216 where skipper Tad Luckey 128 00:09:51,716 --> 00:09:55,011 and a group of scientists led by Professor Joe Mobley 129 00:09:55,386 --> 00:09:58,515 are their best chance for locating these family pairs. 130 00:09:59,599 --> 00:10:01,226 This is always a big challenge. 131 00:10:01,559 --> 00:10:04,354 You don't know what you get, never in advance. 132 00:10:04,562 --> 00:10:06,147 These whales are so difficult. 133 00:10:06,898 --> 00:10:10,652 It's very tricky for the producer, I mean. (CHUCKLES) 134 00:10:11,945 --> 00:10:14,572 NARRATOR: Finding a whale in Hawaii is not that hard, 135 00:10:15,115 --> 00:10:17,826 but skipper Tad has to find the right whale, 136 00:10:18,451 --> 00:10:19,911 and that's the challenge. 137 00:10:20,662 --> 00:10:23,790 DIDIER: To find the right whale to film, 138 00:10:24,374 --> 00:10:27,877 especially mom and calf, I have no expectation. 139 00:10:28,336 --> 00:10:32,507 That means I never know what I'm going to get on camera. 140 00:10:34,717 --> 00:10:38,221 NARRATOR: As part of Jacques Cousteau's original expedition team, 141 00:10:38,888 --> 00:10:42,809 Didier has over 30 years' experience filming whales. 142 00:10:43,768 --> 00:10:44,894 I have 200. 143 00:10:45,687 --> 00:10:48,606 NARRATOR: But each opportunity is always unpredictable. 144 00:10:51,484 --> 00:10:53,486 Come on. Come on. 145 00:10:55,479 --> 00:10:57,406 NARRATOR: It is a mother and calf 146 00:10:58,324 --> 00:11:02,662 but will Mom accept Didier as easily as the dolphins warmed to Roger? 147 00:11:03,663 --> 00:11:04,706 You can try. 148 00:11:05,665 --> 00:11:07,170 Go ahead. 149 00:11:08,001 --> 00:11:10,670 DIDIER: The difficult thing to film when you film mother and calf 150 00:11:10,837 --> 00:11:14,716 is to get close, silently, as close as you get. 151 00:11:15,633 --> 00:11:19,053 NARRATOR: He uses a bubble-free rebreather apparatus 152 00:11:19,429 --> 00:11:21,097 to silently approach. 153 00:11:25,643 --> 00:11:29,480 And any whale that doesn't accept Didier's presence is left alone. 154 00:11:33,886 --> 00:11:36,196 The team needs to find a friendly whale 155 00:11:36,779 --> 00:11:38,489 that is comfortable around a diver. 156 00:11:42,202 --> 00:11:43,286 (GROANS) 157 00:11:44,078 --> 00:11:45,205 Well, they just left. 158 00:11:45,914 --> 00:11:48,875 We were ready to go, but now they are far. 159 00:11:50,627 --> 00:11:53,129 NARRATOR: But attempts to film another mom and calf... 160 00:11:54,005 --> 00:11:55,340 produced the same result. 161 00:11:55,882 --> 00:11:59,594 DIDIER: When you see mother and calf, the mother is always very aware. 162 00:11:59,928 --> 00:12:03,473 She's protecting the calf, so any unknown thing 163 00:12:03,640 --> 00:12:06,351 like me would make her alert. 164 00:12:07,310 --> 00:12:08,728 Take two for nothing. 165 00:12:12,649 --> 00:12:14,234 NARRATOR: Another one gets away. 166 00:12:15,777 --> 00:12:19,113 -The mom and calf left. -WOMAN: You have nothing, huh? 167 00:12:23,618 --> 00:12:24,619 Go. 168 00:12:30,550 --> 00:12:33,302 NARRATOR: Didier is becoming all too familiar 169 00:12:33,503 --> 00:12:35,755 with the backsides of mother whales. 170 00:12:41,678 --> 00:12:43,805 DIDIER: So, you have to keep trying, 171 00:12:44,264 --> 00:12:49,185 finding a whale, new whale, and one that lets you come close. 172 00:12:56,609 --> 00:12:59,529 NARRATOR: After a long, unsuccessful day, 173 00:12:59,946 --> 00:13:02,240 he makes one last attempt. 174 00:13:02,600 --> 00:13:04,784 DIDIER: By the way, this is the ninth time. 175 00:13:07,912 --> 00:13:09,998 NARRATOR: Then, a stroke of luck. 176 00:13:10,373 --> 00:13:14,210 Didier has found a playful, approachable calf. 177 00:13:14,544 --> 00:13:18,506 DIDIER: You don't dive and go straight for the mom with the calf underneath. 178 00:13:18,715 --> 00:13:21,384 You first have to make friends with the calf. 179 00:13:22,010 --> 00:13:25,555 If the calf stays around you, that he is not scared, then turns around, 180 00:13:25,972 --> 00:13:28,891 the whale will know down there, even if she sleeps, 181 00:13:29,267 --> 00:13:31,227 you know, she knows that there is someone, 182 00:13:31,686 --> 00:13:34,564 but she knows the calf is happy with this someone, 183 00:13:35,106 --> 00:13:37,025 so she may tolerate that. 184 00:13:41,529 --> 00:13:44,615 NARRATOR: And as it dives back under its mother to rest, 185 00:13:45,033 --> 00:13:48,411 -Didier follows quietly. -(WHALE SINGS) 186 00:13:48,661 --> 00:13:51,956 DIDIER: Now is the time, because maybe after the whale will leave, 187 00:13:52,290 --> 00:13:55,001 and I will lose her for good. 188 00:13:55,293 --> 00:13:58,629 So, I decided to swim very, very slowly, 189 00:13:59,088 --> 00:14:02,091 and without making any noise at all. 190 00:14:07,263 --> 00:14:09,015 NARRATOR: Mom watches him carefully, 191 00:14:09,682 --> 00:14:12,185 but she seems content with him alongside her. 192 00:14:15,063 --> 00:14:17,148 Finally, success. 193 00:14:19,233 --> 00:14:20,526 Divers like Didier... 194 00:14:20,943 --> 00:14:24,947 are just humble visitors in this vast undersea world... 195 00:14:26,616 --> 00:14:28,910 but even the most powerful of creatures 196 00:14:29,118 --> 00:14:31,537 will sometimes allow you to get close to them. 197 00:14:35,124 --> 00:14:36,959 After weeks of persistence, 198 00:14:37,251 --> 00:14:41,047 the team finally succeeded in filming a mother and calf. 199 00:14:42,590 --> 00:14:46,928 This mother's duty is to protect her calf while it grows quickly, 200 00:14:47,261 --> 00:14:51,101 before the long migration back to Arctic waters. 201 00:14:51,349 --> 00:14:53,643 As they travel between resting spots, 202 00:14:53,976 --> 00:14:57,772 the mother encourages her calf to breach repeatedly. 203 00:15:05,113 --> 00:15:07,907 It may look like just some fun splashing about, 204 00:15:08,314 --> 00:15:12,620 but it's key to helping the young calf build strength and muscles, 205 00:15:13,214 --> 00:15:15,540 that also develops their breath-holding abilities. 206 00:15:31,264 --> 00:15:34,308 The close bond between a mother whale and her calf 207 00:15:34,559 --> 00:15:37,478 provide our filmmakers with their first inroad 208 00:15:37,687 --> 00:15:39,647 into humpback whale society. 209 00:15:41,983 --> 00:15:44,861 Shallow coastal waters are the perfect sanctuary 210 00:15:45,403 --> 00:15:48,239 for a young calf to grow healthy and strong. 211 00:15:49,157 --> 00:15:52,452 Away from the dangers found in deeper, open waters. 212 00:15:56,539 --> 00:15:59,292 But it is also where it will soon be introduced 213 00:15:59,584 --> 00:16:01,461 to a greater whale community, 214 00:16:02,170 --> 00:16:03,713 a complex society... 215 00:16:04,797 --> 00:16:08,426 one our team is just beginning to understand. 216 00:16:13,681 --> 00:16:16,100 To truly understand a dolphin's world... 217 00:16:17,059 --> 00:16:21,063 the filmmakers need to journey to the very heart of their ocean home. 218 00:16:23,232 --> 00:16:25,526 To the foundations of the whole story. 219 00:16:26,694 --> 00:16:29,030 A delicately balanced ecosystem... 220 00:16:29,780 --> 00:16:33,618 that is sanctuary to millions of incredible supporting characters. 221 00:16:35,703 --> 00:16:37,163 A coral reef. 222 00:16:38,915 --> 00:16:41,792 Capturing the intricacies of this underwater world 223 00:16:42,335 --> 00:16:45,254 requires a great deal of technical camera skill 224 00:16:45,630 --> 00:16:48,966 and an exceptional eye for precision and detail. 225 00:16:51,177 --> 00:16:55,181 Cinematographer, Doug Anderson, is the perfect choice for such a job. 226 00:16:56,807 --> 00:16:59,352 DOUG: We wanted to make that experience of viewing the reef 227 00:16:59,519 --> 00:17:00,937 as immersive as possible. 228 00:17:01,103 --> 00:17:02,522 So, we tried different techniques... 229 00:17:02,813 --> 00:17:05,191 (CHUCKLES) ...as many things as we could think of 230 00:17:05,358 --> 00:17:08,486 to try and get more engaging photography. 231 00:17:10,905 --> 00:17:12,448 Uh, we used this underwater scooter, 232 00:17:12,615 --> 00:17:15,493 which is like a torpedo with a propeller on it, 233 00:17:15,868 --> 00:17:19,664 to get that feeling of the dolphin like gliding over the reef. 234 00:17:26,337 --> 00:17:29,131 We used a jib, which is like a camera on the end of an arm, 235 00:17:29,298 --> 00:17:31,717 which allowed us to make for very stable tracking moves 236 00:17:31,884 --> 00:17:34,220 over the coral reef, and really try and bring 237 00:17:34,387 --> 00:17:38,808 the character of the individual species that we wanted to include 238 00:17:39,175 --> 00:17:40,176 to the screen. 239 00:17:47,984 --> 00:17:50,898 Of all the underwater habitats on the planet, 240 00:17:51,153 --> 00:17:54,198 it's coral reefs that are the most overtly diverse. 241 00:17:55,491 --> 00:18:00,871 Just amazed by the color, and the life, and beauty in front of me. 242 00:18:02,121 --> 00:18:04,333 Absolutely breathtaking when you're there. 243 00:18:07,128 --> 00:18:09,505 Intense experiences of life. 244 00:18:18,848 --> 00:18:21,225 I like to think of a coral reef a bit like a city. 245 00:18:22,751 --> 00:18:24,826 The buildings are the corals. 246 00:18:27,398 --> 00:18:32,403 Those buildings provide homes and habitat for countless animals. 247 00:18:34,639 --> 00:18:37,617 Every animal that lives there is as important to each other 248 00:18:37,783 --> 00:18:39,035 as the next one. 249 00:18:40,494 --> 00:18:42,814 But there are very obvious animals in the coral reef 250 00:18:43,247 --> 00:18:44,957 that do very important jobs. 251 00:18:48,878 --> 00:18:51,464 NARRATOR: Doug wants to find key characters like these... 252 00:18:52,256 --> 00:18:54,675 to highlight critical links in the community. 253 00:18:56,132 --> 00:18:59,180 These handsome devils are the perfect example. 254 00:19:00,556 --> 00:19:01,974 Bumphead parrotfish. 255 00:19:04,610 --> 00:19:06,571 They are the local groundskeepers, 256 00:19:06,896 --> 00:19:10,207 clearing the reef of dead algae-covered coral. 257 00:19:15,404 --> 00:19:21,077 Recently, as our oceans have warmed, coral reefs have bleached and died. 258 00:19:22,078 --> 00:19:24,538 Reefs with parrotfish are quickly cleaned, 259 00:19:24,872 --> 00:19:28,501 and new coral can recolonize so the reef lives on. 260 00:19:30,044 --> 00:19:33,756 Reefs that have lost to their parrotfish rarely recover. 261 00:19:38,469 --> 00:19:41,430 Parrotfish are important to maintain the health of the reef... 262 00:19:42,598 --> 00:19:45,309 but Doug also discovers another important fish. 263 00:19:46,185 --> 00:19:49,522 The incredible, workaholic cleaner wrasse. 264 00:19:52,358 --> 00:19:55,361 DOUG: There are moments in the reef where it becomes very obvious 265 00:19:55,528 --> 00:19:57,738 how controlled and complex 266 00:19:57,947 --> 00:20:00,574 the relationships between the individual animals are. 267 00:20:01,027 --> 00:20:04,328 And one of them, for sure, is watching cleaner wrasse do their work. 268 00:20:06,330 --> 00:20:08,457 They do an enormously important job, 269 00:20:08,624 --> 00:20:11,043 and that's pick the parasites and dead skin 270 00:20:11,335 --> 00:20:12,628 and scales and everything else off. 271 00:20:13,003 --> 00:20:14,755 You know, they're getting right inside their mouths 272 00:20:14,922 --> 00:20:18,467 and inside their gills. They're constantly busy. 273 00:20:19,009 --> 00:20:21,804 They are just so fun to watch. 274 00:20:23,222 --> 00:20:24,849 And they, kind of, do this funny little dance 275 00:20:25,015 --> 00:20:26,434 to try and bring in business. 276 00:20:29,270 --> 00:20:31,397 Everyone comes to their cleaning stations. 277 00:20:32,264 --> 00:20:33,724 Cute little reef fish. 278 00:20:34,859 --> 00:20:36,736 And then you've got big predators. 279 00:20:37,903 --> 00:20:39,613 I tell you, it really takes your breath away 280 00:20:39,947 --> 00:20:41,031 when you watch a cleaner wrasse 281 00:20:41,240 --> 00:20:43,409 going into the mouth of a two-feet predator. 282 00:20:44,410 --> 00:20:46,120 There's just this convention on the reef, 283 00:20:46,203 --> 00:20:50,708 they do not touch the cleaner wrasse. It's one of those really lovely examples 284 00:20:50,958 --> 00:20:54,712 of how intricate the relationships on a reef are. 285 00:20:58,841 --> 00:21:01,719 NARRATOR: While Doug continues to explore the interconnections 286 00:21:01,886 --> 00:21:03,637 between the fish and the reef... 287 00:21:05,097 --> 00:21:08,267 back in the Red Sea, Roger is about to find out 288 00:21:08,684 --> 00:21:11,312 that dolphins have similar dependencies. 289 00:21:13,981 --> 00:21:16,817 Angela has discovered an incredible connection 290 00:21:17,109 --> 00:21:19,320 that dolphins have with the coral here. 291 00:21:19,663 --> 00:21:22,907 ROGER: I was really excited about this one particular unique behavior 292 00:21:23,449 --> 00:21:24,617 that Angela had told me about, 293 00:21:24,859 --> 00:21:27,736 which I was really determined to capture on film. 294 00:21:35,628 --> 00:21:38,547 NARRATOR: Angela has brought Roger to a very special location 295 00:21:38,756 --> 00:21:40,883 that the dolphins like to visit every day... 296 00:21:43,010 --> 00:21:45,429 and from which they reap great benefits. 297 00:21:46,388 --> 00:21:49,186 ROGER: The key focus for me was that feeling, as a cameraman, 298 00:21:49,336 --> 00:21:53,395 knowing this is a unique piece of behavior and is that wonderful pressure... 299 00:21:53,562 --> 00:21:55,356 -(DOLPHIN SQUEALS) -...to get it into the film. 300 00:21:57,650 --> 00:21:59,193 (ROGER IMITATES DOLPHIN SQUEALING) 301 00:22:00,236 --> 00:22:01,779 (DOLPHINS SQUEAL) 302 00:22:02,029 --> 00:22:04,865 NARRATOR: Angela's hard-earned acceptance by the dolphins 303 00:22:05,241 --> 00:22:09,703 is what allowed her to follow them and make this incredible discovery. 304 00:22:11,497 --> 00:22:13,415 ANGELA: There is one certain kind of coral. 305 00:22:13,666 --> 00:22:15,417 It's called the gorgonian coral. 306 00:22:16,126 --> 00:22:22,466 And they really like to rub each body part in this coral because it's quite soft. 307 00:22:29,682 --> 00:22:31,559 This rubbing behavior seems to be 308 00:22:31,767 --> 00:22:35,104 such an important aspect in their daily life. 309 00:22:40,442 --> 00:22:43,445 ROGER: So, it's so wonderful to see them, kind of, lining up. 310 00:22:44,488 --> 00:22:46,991 And they're very gentle. They don't like fight to get through. 311 00:22:47,157 --> 00:22:50,578 And they're very courteous and allow the one to go after the other. 312 00:22:51,537 --> 00:22:53,622 And then they circle back and go through again. 313 00:23:00,713 --> 00:23:03,257 So, it's a wonderful social ritual as well. 314 00:23:07,720 --> 00:23:10,014 ANGELA: What we also know about different corals, 315 00:23:10,180 --> 00:23:12,266 they have antibacterial substances. 316 00:23:13,851 --> 00:23:17,646 So, it could also be that the dolphins actually use also 317 00:23:17,813 --> 00:23:23,903 these corals for medicine, for example, for even prevention for skin diseases. 318 00:23:26,322 --> 00:23:28,032 It's difficult to really prove it 319 00:23:28,282 --> 00:23:31,619 because it can be also a very nice feeling, 320 00:23:32,411 --> 00:23:37,666 but we have to find out if it's a really awareness of self-medication. 321 00:23:37,833 --> 00:23:38,834 (DOLPHINS WHISTLING) 322 00:23:39,001 --> 00:23:41,337 NARRATOR: Angela's groundbreaking observations 323 00:23:41,712 --> 00:23:43,464 have broaden our understanding, 324 00:23:43,881 --> 00:23:47,843 and also pose important new questions about dolphin behavior. 325 00:23:49,762 --> 00:23:52,723 ROGER: The hypothesis that Angela's exploring, 326 00:23:53,182 --> 00:23:55,351 and you know, if this can be proven to be true, 327 00:23:55,726 --> 00:23:58,520 it just highlights the amazing interdependence 328 00:23:58,687 --> 00:24:01,023 between these mammals and the coral reefs. 329 00:24:02,566 --> 00:24:06,487 Not only do they come here to rest and to play and to feel safe, 330 00:24:07,404 --> 00:24:10,366 but they're also actually coming to heal themselves. 331 00:24:13,827 --> 00:24:17,206 NARRATOR: Angela hopes to reveal more about these dolphins' lives 332 00:24:17,790 --> 00:24:20,501 so that we can protect them and their reef home 333 00:24:20,751 --> 00:24:22,294 long into the future. 334 00:24:25,881 --> 00:24:30,344 But a coral reef doesn't always provide a healthy sanctuary to its residents, 335 00:24:31,011 --> 00:24:33,180 as Doug is about to find out. 336 00:24:34,431 --> 00:24:38,102 DOUG: Obviously we have this vibrancy, this color, this beauty. 337 00:24:38,268 --> 00:24:40,229 It's that, you know, the light side of the reef, 338 00:24:40,496 --> 00:24:43,749 but the reef has its back alleys, too. 339 00:24:45,150 --> 00:24:46,694 It's got its dark places. 340 00:24:47,444 --> 00:24:48,862 Places where... 341 00:24:49,029 --> 00:24:54,493 you know, visually, things aren't just all joy and beauty and vibrancy, 342 00:24:54,827 --> 00:24:57,955 but feel a little bit more on the sinister side. 343 00:25:00,332 --> 00:25:04,461 NARRATOR: They are the places that most divers dare not venture. 344 00:25:06,797 --> 00:25:08,549 Doug and his team are in Malaysia, 345 00:25:09,341 --> 00:25:10,676 on their way to Sipadan, 346 00:25:11,051 --> 00:25:15,097 an oceanic island with a unique and hidden secret 347 00:25:15,514 --> 00:25:18,600 that reveals the dangers some of our characters face 348 00:25:18,892 --> 00:25:20,561 right in their backyard. 349 00:25:21,478 --> 00:25:24,481 Sipadan is an extraordinary, little island. 350 00:25:25,274 --> 00:25:28,986 It's a rock in the middle of hundreds of meters of water. 351 00:25:29,653 --> 00:25:31,447 And it's a marine reserve, 352 00:25:31,613 --> 00:25:35,451 and there is just an absolute heap of turtles here. 353 00:25:39,955 --> 00:25:42,541 NARRATOR: This reef would seem like the perfect sanctuary. 354 00:25:44,293 --> 00:25:48,255 But beneath its tranquil shell hides potential catastrophe 355 00:25:48,589 --> 00:25:50,257 for any wayward turtle. 356 00:25:52,468 --> 00:25:55,888 Inside the reef structure, there's a catacomb. 357 00:25:56,263 --> 00:25:58,265 And that's what they are here to film. 358 00:25:59,043 --> 00:26:02,102 DOUG: I had heard of Turtle Cave 20 years previously, 359 00:26:02,478 --> 00:26:04,188 and how tricky it was to get in. 360 00:26:05,606 --> 00:26:06,648 By no means... (CHUCKLES) 361 00:26:06,815 --> 00:26:09,443 ...a small operation. Just even getting the kit in there, 362 00:26:09,610 --> 00:26:12,529 before we even start thinking of lighting it or doing the photography. 363 00:26:13,906 --> 00:26:15,574 We've got a jib, which is like a big boom 364 00:26:15,741 --> 00:26:18,077 with a camera on one end and weights on the other. 365 00:26:19,661 --> 00:26:21,330 We've got communications underwater, 366 00:26:21,622 --> 00:26:23,499 which mean that we can talk to each other. 367 00:26:25,375 --> 00:26:26,960 We do have comms with the boat, 368 00:26:27,252 --> 00:26:30,172 um, but we lose that as soon as we're through the cave entrance. 369 00:26:30,631 --> 00:26:32,633 DOUG: (OVER RADIO) Topside, topside, this is divers. 370 00:26:32,841 --> 00:26:34,760 We are just about to enter the cave. 371 00:26:34,968 --> 00:26:36,095 See you on the other side. 372 00:26:36,512 --> 00:26:38,597 HELEN: They could be down there for a good three hours. 373 00:26:39,848 --> 00:26:41,183 If anything does go wrong, 374 00:26:41,391 --> 00:26:44,019 there's really nothing that we can do from up here. 375 00:26:44,394 --> 00:26:46,105 All we can really do is wait. 376 00:26:47,848 --> 00:26:50,892 So, fingers crossed, it all goes according to plan. 377 00:26:51,401 --> 00:26:52,986 Oh, divers 378 00:26:54,196 --> 00:26:57,032 Divers, divers, are you okay? 379 00:26:58,909 --> 00:27:00,619 We're at the cave 380 00:27:01,354 --> 00:27:04,679 Such a spooky place 381 00:27:04,957 --> 00:27:06,750 Very eerie 382 00:27:07,334 --> 00:27:08,961 Oh, divers... 383 00:27:10,921 --> 00:27:13,757 DOUG: We realize that this is going to be a really tough place for us to work. 384 00:27:14,133 --> 00:27:15,425 We have to lay lines 385 00:27:15,717 --> 00:27:18,262 so that we could feel our way in and out of the cave. 386 00:27:19,263 --> 00:27:21,807 There's no light in there. It's a small passage. 387 00:27:22,099 --> 00:27:24,017 We only illuminate it with a flashlight. 388 00:27:25,511 --> 00:27:28,722 Okay now, so, you're getting glimpses of just how remote 389 00:27:29,164 --> 00:27:31,166 and how difficult to get into, and therefore, 390 00:27:31,433 --> 00:27:33,348 difficult to get out of this space was. 391 00:27:35,445 --> 00:27:37,781 I never felt completely at ease. 392 00:27:38,866 --> 00:27:40,033 (WATER SLOSHING) 393 00:27:46,123 --> 00:27:48,709 DOUG: Usually, you know, when you're diving open ocean, 394 00:27:49,001 --> 00:27:52,087 you get a problem, you run out of gas, you got an equipment problem, 395 00:27:52,462 --> 00:27:55,340 you just go up. And in a cave, you can't do that. 396 00:27:55,507 --> 00:27:58,844 There's no up. (CHUCKLES) You know, there's only out. 397 00:28:01,305 --> 00:28:03,765 And then, obviously, the other big thing is it's dark in there, you know, 398 00:28:03,891 --> 00:28:06,643 from an equipment point of view, so we're going to have to light it. 399 00:28:07,144 --> 00:28:10,689 Most of the thought went into how we were going to logistically do it 400 00:28:10,856 --> 00:28:13,650 rather than the actual visuals of what it was going to look like. 401 00:28:13,984 --> 00:28:17,154 Then it really wasn't until I turned the lights on in the cave 402 00:28:17,321 --> 00:28:19,364 that I really got a sense of what sort of place it was. 403 00:28:20,949 --> 00:28:23,243 What I saw was a tomb. 404 00:28:24,036 --> 00:28:25,954 And on the ledges of these caverns 405 00:28:26,371 --> 00:28:28,957 lay the almost perfect skeletons of green turtles 406 00:28:29,249 --> 00:28:31,251 that had, over the years, died there. 407 00:28:40,469 --> 00:28:42,804 FEMALE DIVER: (SINGING) This turtle behind you 408 00:28:44,681 --> 00:28:47,976 Wondering what you are doing 409 00:28:48,810 --> 00:28:50,562 Filming in the cave 410 00:28:51,772 --> 00:28:54,233 He wants to come with you 411 00:28:54,983 --> 00:28:58,195 With you, come with you... 412 00:28:58,654 --> 00:29:01,615 NARRATOR: Doug must move very slowly and carefully. 413 00:29:02,366 --> 00:29:05,077 The cave floor is covered in fine sediment. 414 00:29:09,748 --> 00:29:12,334 Some believe this to be the powdered remains 415 00:29:12,834 --> 00:29:18,423 of thousands of turtle skeletons that have crumbled over countless ages. 416 00:29:18,966 --> 00:29:22,386 And one false move could cloud the entire cave, 417 00:29:22,636 --> 00:29:25,973 making it difficult for the crew to find their way out. 418 00:29:31,979 --> 00:29:34,314 After hours of meticulous setup, 419 00:29:35,274 --> 00:29:38,193 Doug starts to reveal the cave's haunting secrets 420 00:29:38,443 --> 00:29:42,990 from the perspective of a turtle who has tragically lost its way. 421 00:29:50,789 --> 00:29:52,541 DOUG: It felt like being in a church. 422 00:29:53,583 --> 00:29:55,419 I felt enormous respect for the place. 423 00:29:56,295 --> 00:29:58,880 There was a sense of peace and reverence. 424 00:30:00,215 --> 00:30:03,802 An eerie connection to something. 425 00:30:05,470 --> 00:30:06,680 We all felt it. 426 00:30:07,806 --> 00:30:10,809 A coral reef, in many ways, is a giver of life... 427 00:30:11,893 --> 00:30:13,186 but it also takes. 428 00:30:15,814 --> 00:30:19,192 NARRATOR: Hours later, they make their way back to the surface 429 00:30:19,693 --> 00:30:23,030 -and to the safety of the boat. -(FEMALE DIVER HUMMING) 430 00:30:25,824 --> 00:30:27,826 For you... 431 00:30:40,147 --> 00:30:43,108 That was so much more special than I thought it would be. 432 00:30:43,467 --> 00:30:47,054 It was really quite touching to see all these turtle skeletons 433 00:30:47,262 --> 00:30:49,514 in the bottom of the cave, and then, you know, 434 00:30:49,681 --> 00:30:52,768 just imagining the turtles when they got lost in there 435 00:30:52,851 --> 00:30:55,062 and how scared and afraid they must've been. 436 00:30:59,232 --> 00:31:02,027 NARRATOR: To convey the broader story of this undersea world, 437 00:31:02,402 --> 00:31:05,489 the filmmakers wanted to balance these harsh realities 438 00:31:06,198 --> 00:31:08,533 with scenes of beauty and enchantment. 439 00:31:09,618 --> 00:31:10,911 And back in Hawaii, 440 00:31:11,328 --> 00:31:14,915 Didier has found the greatest enchantment of all. 441 00:31:17,167 --> 00:31:19,544 A singing male humpback whale 442 00:31:20,170 --> 00:31:24,174 with hundreds of others from miles around joining the chorus. 443 00:31:25,300 --> 00:31:26,885 (HUMPBACK WHALE SINGING) 444 00:31:27,886 --> 00:31:30,931 NARRATOR: Just 50 years ago, these waters were quiet. 445 00:31:33,225 --> 00:31:37,104 Scientist, Joe Mobley, has been monitoring their population recovery. 446 00:31:39,523 --> 00:31:42,776 JOE: Humpback whales in North Pacific were hunted to near extinction 447 00:31:42,968 --> 00:31:45,220 until they were protected in 1966. 448 00:31:45,695 --> 00:31:47,739 At that time, there were probably under a thousand whales 449 00:31:47,948 --> 00:31:48,949 that came to Hawaii. 450 00:31:49,574 --> 00:31:51,576 But now, 50 years later, 451 00:31:51,993 --> 00:31:56,123 there are maybe as many as 10,000 animals that visit the Hawaiian Islands. 452 00:31:57,749 --> 00:32:01,294 So, this day on the Luckey Strike, we were looking for a singer. 453 00:32:01,810 --> 00:32:04,423 To show that the whales communicate together, 454 00:32:04,589 --> 00:32:06,174 it's part of a community. 455 00:32:06,425 --> 00:32:10,720 NARRATOR: But nothing prepared Didier for what he was about to encounter. 456 00:32:10,846 --> 00:32:12,514 ...hundred feet down and we can see the back fins. 457 00:32:12,764 --> 00:32:14,599 There are a lot of mackerel showing here, which is... 458 00:32:15,100 --> 00:32:17,811 That's a whale right here, this red mark right here. 459 00:32:18,562 --> 00:32:21,022 -It's down a hundred feet. -He's right there. 460 00:32:21,231 --> 00:32:24,067 -He was singing away... -DIDIER: I heard it, too. 461 00:32:24,234 --> 00:32:25,652 Well, the girls said they could hear him 462 00:32:25,777 --> 00:32:27,863 -clear as could be on the bow. -DIDIER: Yeah. 463 00:32:28,029 --> 00:32:29,573 (WHALE SINGING) 464 00:32:29,781 --> 00:32:33,118 DIDIER: Being on the boat, we can hear the male singing so strong 465 00:32:33,285 --> 00:32:35,162 when you are right above the singer. 466 00:32:37,581 --> 00:32:39,416 -We can still hear him. -DIDIER: Yeah, yeah, yeah. 467 00:32:39,708 --> 00:32:40,876 So, we're very close. 468 00:32:42,377 --> 00:32:44,921 DIDIER: So, gently, we went down into the water. 469 00:32:46,798 --> 00:32:48,216 (WHALE SINGING) 470 00:32:54,806 --> 00:32:58,268 DIDIER: Today I looked down, then two whales came, 471 00:32:58,602 --> 00:33:02,314 and they start to move and to stop in front of me. 472 00:33:02,898 --> 00:33:04,232 Right in front of me. 473 00:33:16,161 --> 00:33:20,332 NARRATOR: Then, an unimaginable event began to unfold 474 00:33:20,540 --> 00:33:21,917 before Didier's eyes. 475 00:33:26,922 --> 00:33:31,635 DIDIER: Then, a third whale came, and they start to dance together. 476 00:34:20,392 --> 00:34:27,357 It's really a gift from nature to be first row in the theater. 477 00:34:33,613 --> 00:34:35,198 Diving with those giants, 478 00:34:35,865 --> 00:34:38,994 you finally realize how small you are. 479 00:34:51,172 --> 00:34:54,797 That was one of the best moments of my life. 480 00:34:55,051 --> 00:34:56,761 That was just magnificent. 481 00:35:08,441 --> 00:35:10,191 You can't forget any of those moments 482 00:35:10,400 --> 00:35:13,987 when you are alone, very small next to those giants, you know. 483 00:35:14,195 --> 00:35:16,740 So, it is really something like it is... 484 00:35:17,073 --> 00:35:19,284 I will keep in my memory forever. 485 00:35:21,202 --> 00:35:25,040 NARRATOR: What Didier has managed to capture is just a tiny glimpse 486 00:35:25,457 --> 00:35:28,627 into the humpback's complex, social behavior. 487 00:35:29,878 --> 00:35:32,797 But we are yet to understand the true meaning 488 00:35:32,964 --> 00:35:35,216 of this magnificent whale ballet. 489 00:35:40,597 --> 00:35:45,018 Dolphins take their social activities to a whole new level. 490 00:35:47,187 --> 00:35:50,982 And the team wanted to show exactly how they get their thrills. 491 00:35:51,149 --> 00:35:52,150 (DOLPHINS SQUEAKING) 492 00:35:52,317 --> 00:35:53,985 ROGER: They're a symbol of freedom, you know. 493 00:35:54,194 --> 00:35:56,446 They roam the oceans. They're not constrained. 494 00:35:56,704 --> 00:36:02,243 And you really see that perhaps, most beautifully expressed when they surf. 495 00:36:04,079 --> 00:36:06,247 NARRATOR: Surfing dolphins are a regular sight 496 00:36:06,456 --> 00:36:09,751 on the Wild Coast of South Africa, where Roger grew up. 497 00:36:11,211 --> 00:36:16,091 Now, he's returning to his roots with a team of big wave specialists 498 00:36:16,591 --> 00:36:19,552 to try and film this amazing dolphin behavior. 499 00:36:22,430 --> 00:36:25,684 ROGER: The reason we chose the Wild Coast is that we know it's got dolphins. 500 00:36:25,892 --> 00:36:28,353 We know that in the winter, when the winter swells come through, 501 00:36:28,520 --> 00:36:29,979 it's got these incredible swells. 502 00:36:31,481 --> 00:36:34,192 NARRATOR: And Roger's goal is to film them by getting 503 00:36:34,526 --> 00:36:36,945 right inside the surf zone. 504 00:36:39,114 --> 00:36:41,324 Fellow cinematographer, Jamie McPherson, 505 00:36:41,574 --> 00:36:45,995 has attached a gyro-stabilized camera on the back of a high-speed boat, 506 00:36:46,430 --> 00:36:51,251 while skipper, Carl, negotiates the boat behind the breaking waves. 507 00:36:53,002 --> 00:36:55,797 Pro surf veteran, Paris, will use a jet ski 508 00:36:55,964 --> 00:36:59,134 to place Roger right in front of the break. 509 00:37:01,010 --> 00:37:02,220 The stage is set, 510 00:37:02,804 --> 00:37:05,473 and the dolphins have turned up as if on cue, 511 00:37:05,849 --> 00:37:08,101 traveling up the coastline in large groups. 512 00:37:09,644 --> 00:37:12,981 But the crew have just met their first hurdle. 513 00:37:13,565 --> 00:37:19,529 Ironically, the infamous Wild Coast has turned completely calm. 514 00:37:21,573 --> 00:37:25,034 We've passed literally, I would say, two to three hundred dolphins, 515 00:37:25,301 --> 00:37:28,304 maybe, you know, in about six or seven different pods. 516 00:37:28,538 --> 00:37:32,584 So, the dolphins are here, but absolutely no swell. 517 00:37:33,042 --> 00:37:35,253 It's good that we got dolphins, we just need a decent wave. 518 00:37:35,470 --> 00:37:37,430 At the moment we got no decent wave, so... 519 00:37:38,631 --> 00:37:41,176 Hopefully in the next two days, we're supposed to get some better swells. 520 00:37:41,342 --> 00:37:44,679 So, it's just a case of waiting and hoping that the swell picks up 521 00:37:44,846 --> 00:37:48,057 and that dolphins actually fancy having a surf. 522 00:37:52,687 --> 00:37:56,733 But what we did get was this incredibly clean patch of water, 523 00:37:56,941 --> 00:37:59,277 which in the Transkei is very, very unusual. 524 00:38:00,195 --> 00:38:01,529 So, we took this opportunity 525 00:38:01,696 --> 00:38:04,866 to try and get some underwater shots of these dolphins coming through. 526 00:38:05,563 --> 00:38:09,120 Holding fingers, fins, crossing rostrums and blowholes 527 00:38:09,329 --> 00:38:10,830 and flukes and flippers and hands and feet. 528 00:38:11,122 --> 00:38:12,916 Everything we can cross, we're crossing. 529 00:38:14,626 --> 00:38:16,753 NARRATOR: Roger dives into the clear shallows 530 00:38:16,961 --> 00:38:18,046 of the beach break. 531 00:38:21,382 --> 00:38:25,094 And soon, an enthusiastic dolphin pod approaches. 532 00:38:25,345 --> 00:38:26,429 (DOLPHINS SQUEALING) 533 00:38:26,721 --> 00:38:29,224 ROGER: When I got in the water with the dolphins for the first time, 534 00:38:29,682 --> 00:38:32,685 there's this kind of strange jostling back flexing behavior. 535 00:38:32,852 --> 00:38:36,773 Now, whether that was some social, you know, interaction, I'm not sure. 536 00:38:37,106 --> 00:38:39,526 And I've never seen this before anywhere else in the world. 537 00:38:40,068 --> 00:38:42,237 (DOLPHINS WHISTLING) 538 00:38:43,655 --> 00:38:46,908 NARRATOR: As luck would have it, with Roger now in amongst the pod, 539 00:38:47,909 --> 00:38:50,036 a set of waves finally comes in. 540 00:38:51,454 --> 00:38:54,040 And our lead actors are in business. 541 00:38:56,292 --> 00:38:58,545 ROGER: The speed that came through was amazing. 542 00:38:59,546 --> 00:39:03,341 You actually see the way they are using the energy of the wave 543 00:39:03,508 --> 00:39:05,927 to gain the momentum. They're riding the pressure wave. 544 00:39:06,302 --> 00:39:08,596 And then you see them turn, sort of build up speed, 545 00:39:08,763 --> 00:39:10,306 and then they bank left. 546 00:39:10,640 --> 00:39:13,059 And it's that pressure that shoots them out the back of the wave. 547 00:39:13,351 --> 00:39:16,229 And it was just marvelous to be in amongst all of that. 548 00:39:16,521 --> 00:39:18,606 It was just such a bonus. 549 00:39:20,774 --> 00:39:21,942 NARRATOR: But soon, 550 00:39:22,076 --> 00:39:24,454 the swell begins to get dangerous for Roger. 551 00:39:24,737 --> 00:39:25,905 Time to get out. 552 00:39:28,575 --> 00:39:30,368 At last, surf is up. 553 00:39:30,869 --> 00:39:33,246 And with it, more dolphins. 554 00:39:33,663 --> 00:39:35,248 ROGER: (OVER RADIO) Hello, do you read me? 555 00:39:35,373 --> 00:39:38,293 There's quite a lot of dolphins that are moving for the surf zone. 556 00:39:38,668 --> 00:39:41,838 So, yeah, looking very strong. I think we're going to get something. 557 00:39:42,338 --> 00:39:43,423 Come on down. 558 00:39:45,466 --> 00:39:49,137 NARRATOR: Finally, it's action stations for Jamie's team. 559 00:39:53,600 --> 00:39:54,642 JAMIE: Dolphins in the wave. 560 00:39:55,268 --> 00:39:58,646 NARRATOR: Carl must maneuver his boat skillfully inside the surf zone... 561 00:40:00,106 --> 00:40:02,567 and get Jamie into the best possible position. 562 00:40:04,652 --> 00:40:06,321 JAIMIE: You have to outrun the wave. 563 00:40:06,821 --> 00:40:08,948 But then, at certain point, you have to get out, which means 564 00:40:09,157 --> 00:40:10,742 going over the top of the 15-foot wave, 565 00:40:10,950 --> 00:40:12,535 so there's a 15-foot drop in the back of it. 566 00:40:12,660 --> 00:40:15,914 NARRATOR: As they battle the waves, Carl must also guide Jamie to where 567 00:40:16,214 --> 00:40:17,840 the dolphins might leap out. 568 00:40:18,700 --> 00:40:19,784 Watch out. There they go. 569 00:40:22,003 --> 00:40:23,922 CARL: Yeah. So, we got in the face of that wave. 570 00:40:26,466 --> 00:40:28,092 JAMIE: Technically, it's very tricky to be 571 00:40:28,217 --> 00:40:30,053 tight on a dolphin that's swimming through a wave whilst 572 00:40:30,403 --> 00:40:32,867 you're driving the other way at high speed. 573 00:40:35,725 --> 00:40:37,727 NARRATOR: But it finally starts to pay off 574 00:40:38,292 --> 00:40:42,106 as Jamie captures wave after wave of dolphin magic. 575 00:40:51,574 --> 00:40:53,576 JAMIE: It's the most exciting, dynamic thing that I've done. 576 00:41:03,836 --> 00:41:07,048 NARRATOR: But Carl mustn't get caught too far in front of the waves. 577 00:41:07,966 --> 00:41:11,302 If they begin to crest, they can easily flip his boat. 578 00:41:12,637 --> 00:41:14,722 This is where Roger and Paris come in. 579 00:41:15,798 --> 00:41:18,092 -Time to deploy the jet ski. -Yeah. Let's go. 580 00:41:18,351 --> 00:41:20,228 ROGER: It was the first time that I've ever attempted 581 00:41:20,395 --> 00:41:22,063 to film dolphins from a jet ski. 582 00:41:22,438 --> 00:41:24,315 But what we hoped for was just to get 583 00:41:24,399 --> 00:41:26,901 one or two unique shots in front of the wave. 584 00:41:27,193 --> 00:41:30,738 Those waves were big, you know. It's a big wave. 585 00:41:31,698 --> 00:41:33,908 You've got a really skilled pilot trying to get you 586 00:41:34,075 --> 00:41:35,702 into these really difficult situations 587 00:41:35,868 --> 00:41:38,538 where that wave could just swamp you at any time. 588 00:41:39,288 --> 00:41:40,581 Paris was just astounding. 589 00:41:40,832 --> 00:41:44,419 He was able to just anticipate how the wave was going to break. 590 00:41:45,294 --> 00:41:46,671 I'll never forget that moment where 591 00:41:46,888 --> 00:41:49,098 there was a really nice break coming through, 592 00:41:49,465 --> 00:41:51,050 really good-sized pod of dolphins. 593 00:41:52,552 --> 00:41:54,303 We really had a go at one wave... 594 00:41:56,305 --> 00:41:59,600 and then I just remember seeing dolphins in the face of the wave. 595 00:42:01,476 --> 00:42:04,396 Paris has got to wait, wait, wait. He's got to judge it. 596 00:42:06,088 --> 00:42:09,694 Just this, you know, wonderful image of them all racing down the wave. 597 00:42:09,861 --> 00:42:12,989 And then, as that wave breaks, he's going to accelerate us out of there. 598 00:42:13,448 --> 00:42:14,824 And it happened so quickly. 599 00:42:15,241 --> 00:42:17,702 (PARIS AND ROGER CHEERING) 600 00:42:21,664 --> 00:42:24,000 ROGER: It was really the shot that I was so hoping to get. 601 00:42:28,796 --> 00:42:31,174 This is so exhilarating. You've been waiting for so long, you know, 602 00:42:31,340 --> 00:42:33,593 you're sitting, you're waiting for, like, days and days. 603 00:42:33,760 --> 00:42:36,137 And then suddenly, you know, the set's here and everything's right. 604 00:42:36,345 --> 00:42:38,264 And in the next minute, you know, Stevie just picks up, 605 00:42:38,431 --> 00:42:40,475 he goes, "Pick up the things," and, bang, you know, on it, 606 00:42:40,641 --> 00:42:42,894 exactly as we predicted, just jumping down the face, 607 00:42:43,352 --> 00:42:45,146 surfing the wave together, jumping out the back. 608 00:42:45,646 --> 00:42:47,523 ROGER: I mean, it's fantastic, yeah. 609 00:42:49,067 --> 00:42:52,779 NARRATOR: Our filmmakers have captured some incredible, dynamic scenes 610 00:42:53,045 --> 00:42:54,839 of dolphins letting loose. 611 00:42:56,866 --> 00:42:59,952 But a dolphin's daily life is not all fun and games. 612 00:43:02,914 --> 00:43:04,499 They also need to find food, 613 00:43:05,291 --> 00:43:07,251 not often found on the reef itself. 614 00:43:12,465 --> 00:43:15,343 And one of the most amazing dolphin feeding grounds 615 00:43:15,968 --> 00:43:17,178 is in the Bahamas. 616 00:43:18,805 --> 00:43:20,389 Onboard the Dolphin Dream, 617 00:43:20,657 --> 00:43:24,060 our Bahamian team are relying on skipper Scott Smith, 618 00:43:24,477 --> 00:43:27,980 a veteran dolphin finder, to take them to the action. 619 00:43:30,817 --> 00:43:32,944 Joining the crew for this portion of the story 620 00:43:33,469 --> 00:43:35,346 is cinematographer Paul Atkins 621 00:43:35,905 --> 00:43:40,576 a marine biologist and dolphin specialist who's filmed them all over the world. 622 00:43:51,170 --> 00:43:53,840 PAUL: I've been filming dolphins and whales for over 30 years. 623 00:43:54,924 --> 00:43:57,510 So, I've filmed bottlenose dolphins in the Bahamas before. 624 00:43:58,302 --> 00:44:01,139 I always look for an opportunity to go back. 625 00:44:02,306 --> 00:44:04,892 It's just always a thrill to get in the water 626 00:44:05,353 --> 00:44:07,353 and to see animals that I'm familiar with. 627 00:44:09,480 --> 00:44:12,024 And sometimes, I feel like they remember me, 628 00:44:12,275 --> 00:44:14,443 that they're coming up to me and saying hello. 629 00:44:15,695 --> 00:44:18,072 Eventually, when they stop paying attention to you, 630 00:44:18,239 --> 00:44:20,408 and then you become a part of their tribe. 631 00:44:20,575 --> 00:44:23,870 And it's an extraordinary experience when you can just travel with them 632 00:44:24,120 --> 00:44:26,080 and see what they do. 633 00:44:26,747 --> 00:44:28,207 (DOLPHINS WHISTLING) 634 00:44:28,457 --> 00:44:32,587 NARRATOR: Paul is here to capture dolphins hunting in a very special way. 635 00:44:35,673 --> 00:44:38,718 They use a type of sonar called echolocation, 636 00:44:39,635 --> 00:44:41,804 which works kind of like x-ray vision. 637 00:44:44,557 --> 00:44:46,726 (CLICKING) 638 00:44:47,685 --> 00:44:52,106 They emit a series of rapid-fire clicks that bounce off hidden objects, 639 00:44:53,107 --> 00:44:55,735 allowing them to locate food beneath the sand... 640 00:44:59,363 --> 00:45:01,490 food like razorfish. 641 00:45:06,787 --> 00:45:09,415 PAUL: When you're with a group of dolphins, 642 00:45:09,749 --> 00:45:13,169 you feel privileged to be witnessing their culture. 643 00:45:15,671 --> 00:45:20,509 Dolphins are one of the few animals besides humans and great apes 644 00:45:20,801 --> 00:45:23,095 that actually have been shown to have culture. 645 00:45:23,526 --> 00:45:26,641 And that culture is based on ways of finding food. 646 00:45:28,142 --> 00:45:29,518 (CLICKING) 647 00:45:37,485 --> 00:45:38,527 NARRATOR: Around the world, 648 00:45:38,945 --> 00:45:41,739 dolphins have developed different feeding strategies 649 00:45:42,156 --> 00:45:43,741 depending on their habitat. 650 00:45:45,201 --> 00:45:49,163 And some of them involve extraordinary levels of teamwork. 651 00:45:53,584 --> 00:45:56,212 These shallow tidal mudflats in Florida 652 00:45:56,472 --> 00:46:00,322 are a rich feeding ground for many marine and coastal animals. 653 00:46:02,009 --> 00:46:04,053 And with its great abundance of fish, 654 00:46:04,303 --> 00:46:09,100 it has given rise to a unique and spectacular dolphin hunting technique 655 00:46:09,809 --> 00:46:11,644 known as mud ringing. 656 00:46:17,525 --> 00:46:19,193 Scientist, Laura Engleby, 657 00:46:19,652 --> 00:46:23,781 has brought cinematographer Jamie McPherson onto these tidal flats 658 00:46:24,031 --> 00:46:26,617 in search of this remarkable phenomenon. 659 00:46:29,870 --> 00:46:32,290 For Jamie, it may not be as heart-stopping 660 00:46:32,456 --> 00:46:34,792 as filming dolphins surfing the big waves, 661 00:46:35,501 --> 00:46:37,086 but it is just as difficult. 662 00:46:41,716 --> 00:46:44,010 -JAMIE: Oh, damn it. -(LAURA LAUGHS) 663 00:46:44,337 --> 00:46:46,887 JAMIE: From the boat, it's tricky because you have to work out where they are. 664 00:46:47,346 --> 00:46:48,931 The camera's right on sea level. 665 00:46:49,482 --> 00:46:51,067 You only see them when they surface. 666 00:46:51,267 --> 00:46:52,476 So, you see the fins occasionally. 667 00:46:52,727 --> 00:46:54,603 You're trying to work out where they're going to go. 668 00:46:54,870 --> 00:46:56,247 It's very hard to coordinate that. 669 00:46:56,856 --> 00:46:59,275 It's very tricky to be in the right place at the right time. 670 00:47:02,361 --> 00:47:05,239 NARRATOR: Suddenly, the dolphins look like they are teaming up 671 00:47:05,614 --> 00:47:07,033 and coordinating their efforts. 672 00:47:07,455 --> 00:47:08,605 WOMAN: No, Jamie, now they're to the right. 673 00:47:08,951 --> 00:47:10,619 -To the right. -JAMIE: Coming where? 674 00:47:10,703 --> 00:47:12,079 -WOMAN 1: To your right. -WOMAN 2: Right. 675 00:47:12,280 --> 00:47:14,105 WOMAN 1: See them? 676 00:47:15,458 --> 00:47:16,917 NARRATOR: They've started to hunt. 677 00:47:21,063 --> 00:47:24,108 Jamie zeroes in on the action with his zoom lens. 678 00:47:29,764 --> 00:47:31,223 JAMIE: Well, you see a lot of splashing. 679 00:47:33,601 --> 00:47:36,687 They don't put their heads up to catch the fish until the very last second. 680 00:47:37,396 --> 00:47:40,232 The dolphins still have to try and catch fish that's flying through the air. 681 00:47:40,566 --> 00:47:42,735 So, to see the look on their faces and see how quick they are 682 00:47:42,818 --> 00:47:45,863 at reacting to the fish that are flying really immerses you in it. 683 00:47:47,031 --> 00:47:49,158 But to understand the behavior and really see what was going on, 684 00:47:49,825 --> 00:47:51,202 we had to get in the air. 685 00:48:02,972 --> 00:48:06,183 NARRATOR: Spotting dolphin pods across these vast mudflats 686 00:48:06,475 --> 00:48:08,853 is much easier in a helicopter. 687 00:48:10,137 --> 00:48:11,639 I see some dolphins right down here. 688 00:48:11,847 --> 00:48:15,059 NARRATOR: Each day, dolphins travel up these tidal channels 689 00:48:15,309 --> 00:48:17,269 into dangerously shallow waters, 690 00:48:18,229 --> 00:48:21,399 lured here by the sheer bounty of fish to be had. 691 00:48:23,042 --> 00:48:24,919 It looks like they're in really shallow water there. 692 00:48:27,029 --> 00:48:29,031 NARRATOR: It's so shallow here at low tide, 693 00:48:29,323 --> 00:48:31,242 they often have to swim on their sides. 694 00:48:36,789 --> 00:48:40,626 This one certainly seems to be having fun hunting in the sea grass. 695 00:48:41,085 --> 00:48:43,587 LAURA: (OVER RADIO) Aww! (LAUGHS) What are you doing? 696 00:48:48,384 --> 00:48:50,219 NARRATOR: But this is not the hunting behavior 697 00:48:50,302 --> 00:48:51,512 the crew are looking for. 698 00:48:52,430 --> 00:48:54,014 So, they continue their search. 699 00:48:54,498 --> 00:48:56,225 -PILOT: Yeah, I'm bringing it around. -LAURA: All right. 700 00:48:56,308 --> 00:48:57,685 -PILOT: Yeah, preparing... -LAURA: Yeah... 701 00:48:57,768 --> 00:48:59,073 PILOT: ...turning the nose right now... 702 00:48:59,186 --> 00:49:00,479 JAMIE: Yeah, I will. So, we'll just 703 00:49:00,604 --> 00:49:02,523 come back to these guys if we can't find anything else. 704 00:49:03,149 --> 00:49:04,150 NARRATOR: Nearby, 705 00:49:04,316 --> 00:49:06,944 another group of dolphins reveal some of the risks 706 00:49:07,153 --> 00:49:09,196 of hunting in such shallow waters. 707 00:49:10,281 --> 00:49:13,242 -LAURA: Oh, they're definitely stranded. -JAMIE: Yeah, they're definitely stranded. 708 00:49:14,535 --> 00:49:16,787 LAURA: Quite amazing. They made a little mud hole for themselves. 709 00:49:17,872 --> 00:49:21,959 They have come around in tight circles and have created a mud hole 710 00:49:22,209 --> 00:49:23,752 to where they can at least swim 711 00:49:24,003 --> 00:49:26,755 and not get sun burns and not flip on their sides 712 00:49:26,881 --> 00:49:28,924 because the worse thing, when they're stuck like that, 713 00:49:29,091 --> 00:49:32,511 is they can crush their internal organs with their own body weight and overheat. 714 00:49:33,554 --> 00:49:35,890 JAMIE: It's horrible to see 'cause you can see they're stressed out, 715 00:49:36,015 --> 00:49:38,066 you can see they're worried, and there's nothing you can do. 716 00:49:38,241 --> 00:49:40,352 You're in a helicopter flying around and no one can help them. 717 00:49:43,564 --> 00:49:45,441 NARRATOR: Laura knows the tide is rising, 718 00:49:45,691 --> 00:49:47,693 so the dolphins will soon be freed. 719 00:49:49,778 --> 00:49:52,281 And before long, they spot something. 720 00:49:53,032 --> 00:49:54,158 Mud clouds. 721 00:49:57,077 --> 00:50:00,623 As they approach, they can see the dolphins are definitely hunting. 722 00:50:01,582 --> 00:50:04,335 LAURA: From the air, it offers a whole different perspective 723 00:50:04,502 --> 00:50:05,753 of what's going on. 724 00:50:06,170 --> 00:50:09,757 They're clearly chasing some prey, but this is a feeding strategy 725 00:50:09,924 --> 00:50:11,675 that hasn't been documented in the literature 726 00:50:11,842 --> 00:50:13,969 that we're just now, through this aerial footage, 727 00:50:14,136 --> 00:50:16,472 able to really see what they're doing. 728 00:50:17,848 --> 00:50:20,017 NARRATOR: But this still isn't the hunting behavior 729 00:50:20,184 --> 00:50:21,435 they've come here to film. 730 00:50:24,563 --> 00:50:26,106 Then, finally, 731 00:50:26,689 --> 00:50:28,775 Jamie spots what they've been looking for. 732 00:50:29,443 --> 00:50:34,406 This dolphin beats up the mud with its fluke, creating a perfect circle. 733 00:50:36,158 --> 00:50:37,326 A mud ring. 734 00:50:38,118 --> 00:50:40,037 LAURA: (OVER RADIO) Aww. Wow. Aww. 735 00:50:40,287 --> 00:50:41,956 NARRATOR: This technique in itself... 736 00:50:42,540 --> 00:50:45,000 showcases the dolphin's remarkable intelligence 737 00:50:45,751 --> 00:50:50,172 as they use the muddy substrate to form the perfect fishing net. 738 00:50:53,383 --> 00:50:55,760 JAMIE: (OVER RADIO) I see they've got a shoal of fish surrounded. 739 00:50:56,053 --> 00:50:57,555 MAN: (OVER RADIO) Yeah, it's really nice. 740 00:50:58,055 --> 00:51:01,183 NARRATOR: Other dolphins have corralled the shoal of fish into the ring. 741 00:51:02,309 --> 00:51:04,895 And the entrapped fish, in trying to escape, 742 00:51:05,145 --> 00:51:07,439 leap straight into their waiting mouths. 743 00:51:21,245 --> 00:51:23,664 JAMIE: (OVER RADIO) Absolutely perfect, there's a whole shoal of fish. 744 00:51:24,415 --> 00:51:26,417 You can see the dolphins trying to get around them. 745 00:51:29,461 --> 00:51:31,589 -Look at that, there. -(LAURA LAUGHS) 746 00:51:31,922 --> 00:51:34,091 -LAURA: That is amazing. -JAMIE: That's pretty amazing. 747 00:51:39,471 --> 00:51:41,890 JAMIE: I've never seen anything that coordinated. 748 00:51:42,516 --> 00:51:44,643 And they're definitely working together and communicating 749 00:51:45,019 --> 00:51:46,729 to better coordinate the ring 750 00:51:46,937 --> 00:51:48,939 and make the fish leap and land where dolphins are waiting. 751 00:51:49,106 --> 00:51:51,692 -It's, yeah, an amazing display. -(DOLPHINS CHATTER) 752 00:52:08,459 --> 00:52:10,336 (DOLPHINS CHATTERING) 753 00:52:17,635 --> 00:52:19,511 NARRATOR: The team's patience has paid off. 754 00:52:20,621 --> 00:52:22,623 They've finally captured on film 755 00:52:23,057 --> 00:52:27,186 this remarkable cooperative hunting strategy of bottlenose dolphins. 756 00:52:32,232 --> 00:52:34,818 In much deeper waters off the coast of Hawaii, 757 00:52:35,944 --> 00:52:37,946 our whale team have returned to film 758 00:52:38,113 --> 00:52:40,491 a great gathering of male humpbacks. 759 00:52:43,077 --> 00:52:44,078 But this gathering 760 00:52:44,244 --> 00:52:47,289 is not in the same cooperative spirit as the dolphins. 761 00:52:48,499 --> 00:52:49,667 Quite the opposite. 762 00:52:51,043 --> 00:52:53,462 An intense competition is brewing. 763 00:52:55,381 --> 00:52:57,758 Here, they gather in the greatest numbers 764 00:52:58,008 --> 00:53:01,804 to take part in the most spectacular battle in nature. 765 00:53:11,095 --> 00:53:13,440 Back on the Luckey Strike, Tad has now teamed up 766 00:53:13,731 --> 00:53:16,234 with Paul Atkins to film this great ritual. 767 00:53:17,194 --> 00:53:21,907 They are following a female humpback who has a number of males in hot pursuit. 768 00:53:23,492 --> 00:53:26,620 PAUL: There's definitely an air of excitement and tension when you're 769 00:53:26,787 --> 00:53:28,956 headed out to film one of these battles. 770 00:53:29,206 --> 00:53:31,125 You're never quite sure what's going to happen. 771 00:53:32,126 --> 00:53:34,795 They're going really fast at eleven o'clock. 772 00:53:39,800 --> 00:53:43,303 NARRATOR: Professor Joe Mobley is documenting the activity from the bow. 773 00:53:46,223 --> 00:53:50,436 And as the boat catches up with the pod, things really start to heat up. 774 00:53:53,021 --> 00:53:55,399 The battle is about to commence. 775 00:54:02,114 --> 00:54:04,074 The males begin to chase one another. 776 00:54:14,960 --> 00:54:16,545 It's a pretty fast-moving pod. 777 00:54:23,260 --> 00:54:26,805 As Paul begin to film some spectacular surface behavior, 778 00:54:27,389 --> 00:54:29,975 more and more whales join the competition. 779 00:54:33,395 --> 00:54:36,106 All these challengers are racing to catch up 780 00:54:36,315 --> 00:54:38,484 and displace the current front-runner, 781 00:54:39,276 --> 00:54:42,738 wanting to become the ultimate champion. 782 00:54:52,289 --> 00:54:55,417 Out in front, the female is setting the pace. 783 00:54:59,797 --> 00:55:02,966 But this surface view does not reveal the whole combat, 784 00:55:03,467 --> 00:55:05,844 as Joe has speculated for many years. 785 00:55:06,887 --> 00:55:10,307 JOE: The frustrating thing is I'm bound to the above-surface world, 786 00:55:10,682 --> 00:55:12,643 where we're limited to probably less than ten percent 787 00:55:12,810 --> 00:55:13,894 of their total behavior. 788 00:55:14,186 --> 00:55:16,396 You know, most of what's important is going down below. 789 00:55:19,691 --> 00:55:21,068 Looks good for pole cam, right? 790 00:55:21,310 --> 00:55:22,311 Go ahead. 791 00:55:22,611 --> 00:55:24,071 We're going to give it a try. 792 00:55:25,447 --> 00:55:27,783 JOE: So, increasingly, I've been relying on opportunities like this 793 00:55:27,991 --> 00:55:31,253 to work with film crews with their high-tech equipment. 794 00:55:31,370 --> 00:55:33,205 And those kinds of instruments basically give us 795 00:55:33,372 --> 00:55:35,582 a whale's eye view. It puts us in their world. 796 00:55:35,874 --> 00:55:37,835 Much more likely to answer the kinds of questions 797 00:55:38,210 --> 00:55:40,254 that we've been asking for decades now. 798 00:55:41,813 --> 00:55:42,940 TAD: Okay, you've got it? 799 00:55:43,131 --> 00:55:45,884 PAUL: So, we designed the granddaddy of all pole cams, 800 00:55:46,218 --> 00:55:47,803 and this had never been tried before. 801 00:55:48,428 --> 00:55:49,471 MAN: Okay, I got it. 802 00:55:49,680 --> 00:55:53,308 PAUL: And the pole cam system has to be beefy and sturdy enough 803 00:55:53,559 --> 00:55:57,145 to withstand moving through water at four to five knots, 804 00:55:57,437 --> 00:55:58,939 sometimes six knots. 805 00:56:01,316 --> 00:56:04,319 NARRATOR: Paul hopes to capture a unique underwater perspective 806 00:56:04,486 --> 00:56:06,196 of this great contest. 807 00:56:08,448 --> 00:56:11,118 On top deck, he prepares the viewing monitor. 808 00:56:12,786 --> 00:56:15,622 As the boat races to catch up with the charging giants, 809 00:56:16,456 --> 00:56:19,626 skipper Tad must get his boat right alongside them. 810 00:56:28,343 --> 00:56:29,636 PAUL: Okay, there's two whales. 811 00:56:30,387 --> 00:56:32,180 Now there's three whales in the frame. 812 00:56:33,065 --> 00:56:35,567 Okay, there's one dead center in the frame. 813 00:56:36,101 --> 00:56:37,561 This is great position, Tad. 814 00:56:38,729 --> 00:56:42,190 Oh, he's coming up right here, right here, this is good. 815 00:56:43,983 --> 00:56:45,752 Stay in and let these guys catch up. 816 00:56:47,195 --> 00:56:49,823 NARRATOR: By combining Paul's underwater and surface filming 817 00:56:51,408 --> 00:56:53,493 with aerial footage by helicopter... 818 00:56:54,786 --> 00:56:57,205 PAUL: Oh, this is great, Tad. Hold this. 819 00:56:57,827 --> 00:57:02,044 ...he starts to reveal the intensity of this battle like never before. 820 00:57:05,047 --> 00:57:07,841 Okay, there's one below that's coming. This is great position, Tad. 821 00:57:08,508 --> 00:57:12,137 PAUL: And he's coming up right here, right here, this is good. 822 00:57:15,432 --> 00:57:16,433 Wow. 823 00:57:16,850 --> 00:57:17,851 Geez. 824 00:57:23,065 --> 00:57:25,108 NARRATOR: All the whales dive down into the deep. 825 00:57:30,238 --> 00:57:31,490 PAUL: Diving, diving. 826 00:57:33,033 --> 00:57:34,419 And there they go. 827 00:57:35,077 --> 00:57:37,287 Now, we can see them all diving towards the bottom, 828 00:57:37,454 --> 00:57:38,914 going down about 200 feet. 829 00:57:40,499 --> 00:57:42,167 Sometimes it goes... so we can follow them 830 00:57:42,334 --> 00:57:43,919 straight down the bottom and you see them. 831 00:57:44,169 --> 00:57:46,380 Looks like they're rubbing on the bottom at 200 feet. 832 00:57:46,755 --> 00:57:48,256 If we could get a camera down there, 833 00:57:48,423 --> 00:57:50,550 we might find out where's it's all really happening. 834 00:57:50,926 --> 00:57:53,971 Maybe that's where the actual mating is occurring. 835 00:57:54,846 --> 00:57:56,056 -Who knows? -Coming up. 836 00:57:56,223 --> 00:57:57,599 They're still stuck on us right here. 837 00:57:57,975 --> 00:58:00,352 NARRATOR: Suddenly, erupting back up from the deep, 838 00:58:00,727 --> 00:58:03,772 the conflict resumes at an even greater pace. 839 00:58:05,107 --> 00:58:06,817 Yeah, yeah, yeah, because this is... 840 00:58:07,442 --> 00:58:09,486 Yeah, this is really getting good. 841 00:58:10,988 --> 00:58:14,199 NARRATOR: Over 25 male whales charge past the camera, 842 00:58:14,658 --> 00:58:16,785 blowing streams off aggressive bubbles. 843 00:58:17,536 --> 00:58:19,037 -PAUL: Lot of bubbles. -MAN: Yeah. 844 00:58:19,496 --> 00:58:20,914 -PAUL: Tons of bubbles. -MAN: Coming up. 845 00:58:29,881 --> 00:58:32,968 NARRATOR: Those in the rear try to force the front-runners under, 846 00:58:34,011 --> 00:58:38,765 ruthlessly ramming them to slow them down and take the lead nearest to the female. 847 00:58:43,020 --> 00:58:47,441 This is the most immense ocean competition in nature. 848 00:58:52,195 --> 00:58:54,448 Finally, as the other males tire, 849 00:58:54,717 --> 00:58:57,826 the two fastest and strongest take primary positions 850 00:58:59,327 --> 00:59:01,121 hot on the heels of the female. 851 00:59:13,967 --> 00:59:16,887 In the last moments, a challenger lunges forward 852 00:59:17,154 --> 00:59:18,864 and forces his rival under... 853 00:59:21,641 --> 00:59:23,060 and out of the race... 854 00:59:24,853 --> 00:59:27,522 claiming his place as the victor. 855 00:59:34,821 --> 00:59:35,906 And they're gone. 856 00:59:37,908 --> 00:59:39,117 PAUL: And there they go. 857 00:59:43,622 --> 00:59:46,374 NARRATOR: This battle is finally over. 858 00:59:48,919 --> 00:59:52,297 One mighty humpback has fought and won the right 859 00:59:52,589 --> 00:59:55,300 to be the protector of our lone female. 860 01:00:01,973 --> 01:00:05,018 Filming this magnificent event was only possible 861 01:00:05,227 --> 01:00:08,855 because protection has allowed whale societies to rebuild. 862 01:00:12,317 --> 01:00:16,071 Unfortunately, such success stories are rare. 863 01:00:17,030 --> 01:00:18,406 And unlike the humpbacks, 864 01:00:19,074 --> 01:00:21,785 the populations of our ocean's greatest predators 865 01:00:22,202 --> 01:00:23,620 are in huge decline. 866 01:00:29,000 --> 01:00:32,671 Over a hundred million sharks are fished each year 867 01:00:33,421 --> 01:00:36,466 to satisfy the demands of the shark finning industry. 868 01:00:38,468 --> 01:00:42,472 Giants like the tiger shark are becoming increasingly rare. 869 01:00:44,474 --> 01:00:48,145 And their overblown reputation as frightening and deadly predators 870 01:00:48,770 --> 01:00:50,147 has not helped them. 871 01:00:58,446 --> 01:01:01,283 Paul, however, having filmed sharks for many years, 872 01:01:01,533 --> 01:01:04,619 knows they are nothing like this cartoonish stereotype. 873 01:01:07,038 --> 01:01:09,833 The first time I saw sharks underwater, what impressed me was 874 01:01:10,000 --> 01:01:13,461 how extraordinarily beautiful they are, how graceful they are, 875 01:01:13,837 --> 01:01:18,008 how perfectly adapted that they're swimming and how agile they are. 876 01:01:18,675 --> 01:01:21,094 And then, the next thing that impresses you about sharks, 877 01:01:21,386 --> 01:01:23,430 because you grow up with all of this fear, 878 01:01:23,638 --> 01:01:25,807 is they don't seem to be threatening you. 879 01:01:26,224 --> 01:01:27,893 PAUL: They don't seem to be that scary. 880 01:01:33,607 --> 01:01:35,192 When tiger sharks show up... 881 01:01:36,318 --> 01:01:38,403 their presence kind of dominates the scene. 882 01:01:38,620 --> 01:01:41,456 Pretty much, you have your attention on the tiger shark, 883 01:01:41,907 --> 01:01:43,116 and you never turn your back on it, 884 01:01:43,200 --> 01:01:46,411 because they tend to know which direction you're looking at, 885 01:01:47,078 --> 01:01:49,206 and they tend to want to come up behind you. 886 01:01:54,377 --> 01:01:57,172 But they like to test, they like to see what you are. 887 01:01:57,339 --> 01:02:01,384 And part of that testing can be pushing its nose into you. 888 01:02:05,222 --> 01:02:07,891 And what you can do is just put your hand on its nose 889 01:02:08,016 --> 01:02:09,726 and just gently push them away. 890 01:02:10,185 --> 01:02:13,188 PAUL: What other predator on land could you do that with? 891 01:02:13,438 --> 01:02:16,733 If you did it with bears that were feeding, or lions, or tigers, 892 01:02:17,275 --> 01:02:18,735 you'd probably get mauled. 893 01:02:19,361 --> 01:02:22,656 And yet, here with one of the biggest, baddest, predators on the planet, 894 01:02:23,114 --> 01:02:25,116 in terms of the way we feel about them, 895 01:02:25,450 --> 01:02:27,744 and it's perfectly safe to do that, so... 896 01:02:39,881 --> 01:02:42,676 NARRATOR: Sharks are not only misunderstood by humans, 897 01:02:43,426 --> 01:02:47,514 but their important role in maintaining a well-balanced ocean ecosystem 898 01:02:48,265 --> 01:02:49,683 is often overlooked. 899 01:02:55,647 --> 01:02:58,650 A healthy coral reef has many sharks, 900 01:02:59,025 --> 01:03:03,321 but in today's oceans, these reefs are increasingly hard to find. 901 01:03:06,992 --> 01:03:09,494 Underwater cinematographer, Denis Lagrange, 902 01:03:09,744 --> 01:03:13,540 has known for years about one of the last strongholds on Earth 903 01:03:14,045 --> 01:03:16,849 for large gatherings of grey reef sharks. 904 01:03:17,544 --> 01:03:22,048 He's in French Polynesia, preparing to dive these shark-infested waters. 905 01:03:30,265 --> 01:03:34,686 On an incoming tide, hundreds of reef sharks school in this channel. 906 01:03:44,446 --> 01:03:48,116 Like Paul, Denis has no fear of these apex predators, 907 01:03:48,533 --> 01:03:51,036 for he knows he is not on their menu. 908 01:03:52,746 --> 01:03:55,915 DENIS: For me, sharks are one of the most of incredible creature 909 01:03:56,082 --> 01:03:58,251 in the ocean, and you really feel it. 910 01:04:02,881 --> 01:04:05,884 And when we have all these sharks gather together 911 01:04:06,217 --> 01:04:08,011 and they're really concentrated, 912 01:04:08,428 --> 01:04:10,180 it's an amazing spectacle, 913 01:04:10,347 --> 01:04:14,021 and French Polynesia is the last place, I think, in the world, 914 01:04:14,196 --> 01:04:15,821 where you can see that. 915 01:04:18,521 --> 01:04:22,150 We try to justify why sharks should be saved and not killed, 916 01:04:22,484 --> 01:04:26,821 try to fight against shark finning, but I think it's important to repeat it 917 01:04:27,280 --> 01:04:29,366 because they are at the top of the food chain. 918 01:04:29,949 --> 01:04:32,577 They're cleaning the reef of all natural sickness. 919 01:04:52,514 --> 01:04:56,935 So, if you have no predators, the reef will just not be in good shape. 920 01:04:57,227 --> 01:04:58,395 It's a reality. 921 01:04:59,437 --> 01:05:01,314 We have to try our best to protect the shark. 922 01:05:01,940 --> 01:05:04,859 And French Polynesia, it's one of the only country in the world 923 01:05:05,235 --> 01:05:07,821 who really protect the shark. It's written in the law. 924 01:05:08,154 --> 01:05:11,241 You're not allowed to kill sharks, you're not allowed to fish sharks. 925 01:05:12,784 --> 01:05:15,120 NARRATOR: And the protection of sharks in these waters 926 01:05:15,286 --> 01:05:18,289 allows them to fulfil their role as vital hunters. 927 01:05:20,458 --> 01:05:22,961 But most sharks don't hunt during daylight hours. 928 01:05:23,420 --> 01:05:26,548 The serious hunting action occurs after dark. 929 01:05:28,341 --> 01:05:31,386 So, Denis's next dive would be a much greater challenge, 930 01:05:32,262 --> 01:05:36,307 filming sharks hunting at night for his very first time. 931 01:05:39,894 --> 01:05:42,397 They put on special chainmail shark suits 932 01:05:42,772 --> 01:05:46,109 designed to stop a reef shark's teeth from puncturing the skin. 933 01:05:48,278 --> 01:05:50,947 Sharks don't often intentionally bite humans. 934 01:05:51,739 --> 01:05:55,618 But in the heat of a feeding frenzy, it's wise to take precautions. 935 01:05:55,869 --> 01:05:56,870 (MAN LAUGHING) 936 01:05:57,120 --> 01:06:00,457 We expect a lot of shark action tonight. 937 01:06:02,333 --> 01:06:03,751 I hope we will survive. 938 01:06:04,335 --> 01:06:06,129 -MAN: Should we go now? -We should go. 939 01:06:06,504 --> 01:06:07,505 Yeah. 940 01:06:09,424 --> 01:06:11,092 -MAN: Are we good? -Are we good? 941 01:06:11,593 --> 01:06:12,677 Yeah. 942 01:06:15,763 --> 01:06:18,391 NARRATOR: It's more like a special forces operation. 943 01:06:19,517 --> 01:06:20,727 And it needs to be. 944 01:06:23,563 --> 01:06:30,445 (MEN SPEAKING FRENCH) 945 01:06:39,662 --> 01:06:41,831 NARRATOR: A few sharks appear straight away. 946 01:06:44,918 --> 01:06:46,503 Then the numbers build quickly. 947 01:06:54,260 --> 01:06:56,137 DENIS: When you first dive down to the reef 948 01:06:56,554 --> 01:06:59,682 and you see this amazing number of sharks altogether, 949 01:07:00,600 --> 01:07:01,935 you feel a little scared. 950 01:07:09,734 --> 01:07:11,361 NARRATOR: The surface team is anxious. 951 01:07:11,986 --> 01:07:14,572 They can see the sharks amassing from above. 952 01:07:16,241 --> 01:07:20,495 DENIS: We've never seen that before. Daytime, the shark kind of lazy, 953 01:07:20,703 --> 01:07:22,872 but as soon as you're diving at night with them, 954 01:07:23,498 --> 01:07:25,917 you really see how powerful they can be. 955 01:07:32,298 --> 01:07:34,926 NARRATOR: While the fish remain hidden, they are safe. 956 01:07:41,349 --> 01:07:43,268 But a nervous reef fish breaks cover... 957 01:07:44,519 --> 01:07:46,229 and the feeding frenzy is on. 958 01:07:47,355 --> 01:07:50,316 DENIS: To be eaten by a shark is a really big issue. 959 01:07:50,567 --> 01:07:54,153 When you have hundreds of them in front of you or coming right at you, 960 01:07:54,445 --> 01:07:56,990 they don't care about you, they just want the fish. 961 01:07:57,574 --> 01:07:58,950 (DENIS IMITATES DOLPHIN SQUEALING) 962 01:08:20,054 --> 01:08:21,764 DENIS: No, no, no, no, no! 963 01:08:30,914 --> 01:08:32,775 On l'a fait! On l'a fait! 964 01:08:33,292 --> 01:08:34,485 (ALL LAUGH) 965 01:08:34,736 --> 01:08:37,030 (ALL SPEAKING FRENCH) 966 01:08:37,280 --> 01:08:38,656 No, but then you have to pay attention 967 01:08:38,740 --> 01:08:40,450 -to the little fish going between us. -Oh là là, 968 01:08:40,575 --> 01:08:42,368 -yeah, yeah, yeah. -"Get away, get away." 969 01:08:42,619 --> 01:08:45,455 When they're frenzy, you know, there are a lot of them. 970 01:08:45,747 --> 01:08:48,958 DENIS: If they come to you, I mean, they kick you down. 971 01:08:49,208 --> 01:08:52,920 I really felt it, you know, a little fish went out of the coral, 972 01:08:53,129 --> 01:08:55,673 and they went on it, and they don't care about you, 973 01:08:55,840 --> 01:08:57,216 you know, just going for the fish. 974 01:08:57,550 --> 01:09:01,638 It was like a river, water flowing. And then afterwards, another image, 975 01:09:02,305 --> 01:09:05,308 he was the middle of the LA, Los Angeles traffic. 976 01:09:05,433 --> 01:09:07,185 -MAN: You know, like in the movie? -(MEN LAUGHING) 977 01:09:08,686 --> 01:09:11,439 You know, the big turnaround and, like, cars everywhere. 978 01:09:12,106 --> 01:09:15,735 Huh? Highway, but full of cars, like big traffic jam, 979 01:09:15,902 --> 01:09:17,612 and this was Denis in the middle of that. 980 01:09:17,904 --> 01:09:20,114 -I went to LA... -It was just like flowing, 981 01:09:20,865 --> 01:09:22,950 like water, sharks flowing around him. 982 01:09:26,037 --> 01:09:29,791 They've been around here, they've been here for 400 million years. 983 01:09:30,667 --> 01:09:33,711 I mean, those species are like... When you see them hunting, 984 01:09:34,253 --> 01:09:37,674 it's like, you know, okay, evolution made them so powerful. 985 01:09:37,924 --> 01:09:39,092 It's like the top. 986 01:09:39,926 --> 01:09:42,261 When they hunt, it's just like beautiful to watch. 987 01:09:42,720 --> 01:09:43,721 Beautiful. 988 01:09:53,439 --> 01:09:54,982 NARRATOR: On our cinematographers' quest 989 01:09:55,233 --> 01:09:58,778 to share with you a tiny glimpse into a dolphin's world, 990 01:09:59,779 --> 01:10:01,572 they visited some unique places, 991 01:10:02,281 --> 01:10:05,284 many of which are some of the last examples 992 01:10:05,451 --> 01:10:07,495 of thriving ocean communities. 993 01:10:09,706 --> 01:10:12,041 Healthy coral reefs, rich in life, 994 01:10:12,375 --> 01:10:16,295 once fringed every landmass across our tropical oceans... 995 01:10:17,588 --> 01:10:20,174 yet today, very few remain. 996 01:10:21,259 --> 01:10:23,636 We are killing them. 997 01:10:26,597 --> 01:10:28,850 Pollution and unsustainable fishing 998 01:10:29,225 --> 01:10:33,229 are just a few of the destructive practices causing their demise. 999 01:10:44,490 --> 01:10:48,494 Sadly, during the three years it took for the team to make this film, 1000 01:10:49,078 --> 01:10:52,498 a third of the Great Barrier Reef bleached and died. 1001 01:10:55,710 --> 01:10:59,464 Without immediate action, most scientists agree 1002 01:10:59,714 --> 01:11:04,677 that almost all coral reefs will be destroyed in just 50 years. 1003 01:11:06,637 --> 01:11:09,015 Countless creatures will cease to exist. 1004 01:11:11,184 --> 01:11:14,353 And our dolphins will have lost their vital home. 1005 01:11:18,983 --> 01:11:24,113 But there is hope, with one of the simplest of solutions... 1006 01:11:25,740 --> 01:11:26,824 protection. 1007 01:11:29,786 --> 01:11:34,957 The best example, the islands of Palau in Micronesia. 1008 01:11:36,876 --> 01:11:40,171 Didier has come here to film a very special event. 1009 01:11:41,380 --> 01:11:45,468 DIDIER: So, when I knew I was going to go to Palau, I was very excited 1010 01:11:45,635 --> 01:11:47,011 because I have never been. 1011 01:11:48,346 --> 01:11:52,600 When I first put my head in the water, I realized how beautiful it was. 1012 01:11:54,435 --> 01:11:57,271 It's that sort of place where you have strong upwellings 1013 01:11:57,563 --> 01:11:59,774 bringing rich water from the depths, 1014 01:12:00,900 --> 01:12:02,068 very rich in nutrients. 1015 01:12:02,443 --> 01:12:05,655 Makes a top-class reef, very rich in life, 1016 01:12:06,096 --> 01:12:07,614 with all those fish everywhere. 1017 01:12:08,825 --> 01:12:10,159 And not only the small ones. 1018 01:12:10,952 --> 01:12:12,745 Giants and other predators... 1019 01:12:15,248 --> 01:12:17,708 all kind of fish. We have all the food chain. 1020 01:12:19,669 --> 01:12:23,548 Mantas, hundreds of sharks, everyone is here. 1021 01:12:30,680 --> 01:12:32,056 NARRATOR: In 1998, 1022 01:12:32,348 --> 01:12:35,768 everyone thought that this reef might have been lost forever. 1023 01:12:37,478 --> 01:12:40,690 An El Niño event had bleached and killed the coral. 1024 01:12:42,733 --> 01:12:45,778 But you-know-who stepped in to clean up... 1025 01:12:47,321 --> 01:12:49,407 our trusty bumphead parrotfish. 1026 01:12:51,242 --> 01:12:54,203 And with the added help of government-enforced protection... 1027 01:12:55,288 --> 01:12:57,498 the reef is now as good as new. 1028 01:13:06,607 --> 01:13:11,696 Not surprisingly, Palau is now famous for its great fish gatherings. 1029 01:13:12,847 --> 01:13:17,435 Every full moon, all the bumpheads gather at dawn to spawn. 1030 01:13:19,186 --> 01:13:23,441 This is the legendary spectacle Didier has come here to film. 1031 01:13:32,533 --> 01:13:35,620 DIDIER: To film the bumpheads spawning is a special event 1032 01:13:35,912 --> 01:13:38,748 because this is something I do for the first time. 1033 01:13:40,458 --> 01:13:42,043 First, you see all those fish... 1034 01:13:44,013 --> 01:13:46,756 and it's not ten, 30, it's hundreds of them. 1035 01:13:48,549 --> 01:13:51,719 They are big massive fish, like 20, 30 kilos. 1036 01:13:53,971 --> 01:13:56,682 For a cameraman, this is something unique. 1037 01:14:03,356 --> 01:14:06,359 NARRATOR: Didier must remain poised and ready the whole time, 1038 01:14:07,109 --> 01:14:10,738 because the actual spawning event could occur at any moment. 1039 01:14:12,114 --> 01:14:14,158 DIDIER: When they aggregate, you are on the reef, 1040 01:14:14,700 --> 01:14:17,411 so you wait, you wait, and all of a sudden, 1041 01:14:17,620 --> 01:14:19,664 they stop to go out in the blue, 1042 01:14:20,081 --> 01:14:22,291 and this is where the action will start. 1043 01:14:23,167 --> 01:14:24,377 This is where... 1044 01:14:24,710 --> 01:14:28,089 things get complicated because you have to swim against the current, 1045 01:14:28,464 --> 01:14:31,300 and we can't compete with the fish. 1046 01:14:31,467 --> 01:14:33,052 You know, they are much faster than us. 1047 01:14:34,061 --> 01:14:38,182 When the first female comes to spawn, then they will all come together. 1048 01:14:38,557 --> 01:14:41,018 They go up, swim up, and all the males follow. 1049 01:14:41,185 --> 01:14:43,396 You have two, three, four, sometimes up to ten. 1050 01:14:43,763 --> 01:14:47,099 And you have to be very reactive because this is very fast. 1051 01:14:47,817 --> 01:14:49,694 Not missing any action. 1052 01:14:51,362 --> 01:14:55,741 NARRATOR: Millions of parrotfish eggs are released into the warm ocean currents, 1053 01:14:56,075 --> 01:14:59,829 creating the next generation of reef saviors. 1054 01:15:05,376 --> 01:15:08,087 In discovering these spectacles across the world, 1055 01:15:08,963 --> 01:15:13,050 our filmmakers have also given us a valuable insight 1056 01:15:13,384 --> 01:15:16,470 into how we can help our fragile oceans. 1057 01:15:21,058 --> 01:15:22,893 With international protection, 1058 01:15:23,561 --> 01:15:27,064 more places like Palau would be able to recover... 1059 01:15:31,527 --> 01:15:34,739 creating a healthier, more productive ocean. 1060 01:15:37,908 --> 01:15:40,578 One full of incredible characters... 1061 01:15:41,871 --> 01:15:44,415 -(DOLPHINS CLICKING) -...that can continue to thrive 1062 01:15:45,124 --> 01:15:47,418 long into the future. 1063 01:15:56,761 --> 01:15:59,889 (MUSIC PLAYING) 87021

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