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Africa.

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No continent on Earth today has
such spectacular wildlife.

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At its head lies
a vast tropical rainforest.

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Over a million square miles
of wilderness,

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much of it still unexplored...

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even now.

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There are more species of animals
and plants in these jungles

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than anywhere else on the continent.

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But even in this land of plenty...

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wildlife now faces major challenges.

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The forests of the Ivory Coast

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contain over 1,500 species of plant,

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but some are very difficult to get at...

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even for one of
the most intelligent of animals.

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Chimpanzees.

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The elders in this group know
where to find the most nutritious food

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and how to extract it.

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But if they are to survive to adulthood,

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the youngsters must learn these skills
from their parents.

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This young female is five years old...

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old enough to be given
an important lesson.

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And this is her teacher.

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Her mother.

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The lesson is how to crack a nut.

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Using tools like this is so complex

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that it has only been mastered by
a handful of chimpanzee communities.

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This is a skill that has been practised
by chimps for several thousand years.

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Time to try for herself.

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She needs to find a better tool.

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Small rocks just don't have the clout.

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And larger ones are too cumbersome.

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Wood is both light and strong...

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but not strong enough.

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Back to teacher.

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It may take a young chimp
up to a decade to perfect

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the skills it needs for nut-cracking.

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But she's already mastered one thing.

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When her fingers can't reach
the nut inside...

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she strips down a branch to size...

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and makes herself a spoon.

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She'll learn to use many tools
in her life...

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and eventually she'll share
this knowledge

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with youngsters of her own,

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enabling <i>them</i> to harvest the riches
of their rainforest home.

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The sheer abundance of life
in the rainforests

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is rivalled by that
on the eastern side of the continent.

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The Great Rift Valley runs for 4,000 miles
down the length of Africa.

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It developed some 30 million years ago,

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when a giant plume of molten rock
pushing up from the depths

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cracked the Earth's crust apart.

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Fresh water began to accumulate
on the floor of this rift...

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and a chain of lakes developed.

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These lakes are now
one of the richest freshwater habitats

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to be found anywhere.

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One single family of fish here -
the cichlids -

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has evolved into more
than 1,500 different species.

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This might look like paradise,

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but competition between
these cichlid species is intense.

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This crowded world is a dangerous one.

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Baby fish, after all, make a tasty meal.

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So, many cichlid mothers have developed
a very effective way

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of keeping their offspring safe.

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They use their mouths as a mobile nursery.

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It's a safe haven where the fry can stay
until danger has passed.

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When the coast is clear,
she releases them.

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This kind of behaviour starts
when the cichlid female

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picks up her newly laid eggs and holds
them in her mouth to keep them safe.

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During spawning,
her mate flashes his yellow tail spots

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to encourage her to keep laying.

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As each batch of eggs emerges,

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she scoops them up.

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But this couple are being watched...

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by cuckoo catfish.

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They work as a gang

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and devour as many cichlid eggs
as they can find.

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Then, in the middle of all this activity,

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one of the catfish also spawns.

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The cichlid mother
collects every egg she can see.

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Now, by herself, she must wait

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while the eggs in her mouth develop.

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It will take three weeks.

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She doesn't eat
throughout that entire time.

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But 18 days later,

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something is not right.

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The female blows out her young
before they're fully ready to emerge.

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And they are followed
by young cuckoo catfish...

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three times the size of her own babies.

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She may have as many as six of them
in her mouth.

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And now

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they begin to eat the cichlid babies.

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The female cichlid treats the baby catfish
as if they were hers.

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They are truly cuckoos among fish!

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The forces that created
the Great Rift Valley

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continue to shape Africa's landscape

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even today.

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At weak spots in the Earth's crust,
molten rock continues to erupt.

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There are some 200 volcanoes
on the continent...

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many of them active.

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They may bring destruction

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but also, eventually, fertility.

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This is Ol Doinyo Lengai.

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For the past 400,000 years,
ash from this great volcano

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has fallen on the surrounding savannas
of the Serengeti

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and greatly enriched them.

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This is the best grazing on the continent.

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On it live the world's largest herds
of migrating animals...

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and they, in turn, support predators.

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Here, in Kenya, cheetahs have formed
an unusual alliance.

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These swiftest of cats usually hunt
in groups of two or three.

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Bu': this team of five
is one of the largest ever recorded.

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Two sets of brothers

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and a lead male.

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They have now lived and hunted together
for almost three years.

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By teaming up, they can hold

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the best territory in the area.

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But, even so, with five mouths to feed,
every hunt is very important.

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They haven't eaten for three days.

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To make a kill, they must get
within 30 metres of their quarry

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without being detected.

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Thick cover.

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That will help them.

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Topi - nearly three times their size...

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and quite strong enough
to fight off a lion,

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let alone a single cheetah.

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Now out in the open...

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every step the cheetahs take
increases their chance of success.

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The herd scatter,
and the team splits up.

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But they didn't get close enough.

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They switch targets to zebra.

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Everyone now knows that they're here.

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They must devise a different approach.

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All eyes are on the brothers.

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Out in the open,
they seem to be no threat.

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But the lead male is missing.

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The brothers are decoys.

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The trap is set.

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The other four nowjoin the lead male.

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Under the combined weight of five cheetah,

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death comes quickly.

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Today, Africa's savannas support
larger herds of big game

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than anywhere else in the world.

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And they, one way or another,

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provide food for all kinds
of smaller creatures.

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An oxpecker.

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A resourceful little bird
with an unusual diet.

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Fleas, ticks and even dandruff are food,

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as far as they are concerned.

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Both parties benefit.

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The oxpecker gets a good meal...

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and the host is cleaned in those places
it could never reach for itself.

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Each bird, every day,
collects hundreds of ticks

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and thousands of insect larvae.

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But some oxpeckers
go for rather riskier meals.

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Hippopotamus are highly territorial
and very aggressive...

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so oxpeckers tackling them
must always be on their guard.

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But there's much to be gained.

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Blood is the most nutritious meal of all.

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Pecking ensures that cuts remain open
and blood keeps flowing.

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And an oxpecker,
once it's found an open wound,

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will stay alongside it, no matter
how much that irritates its host.

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The reward? An endless supply of food,

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whatever the conditions.

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Not all of Africa is rich and fertile.

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A third of the continent is desert.

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This is the Namib in the southwest.

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At its head, a disused diamond mine

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<i>mt was abandoned nearby 70 years ago.</i>

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But it still has one inhabitant.

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A desert specialist...

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and one of Africa's rarest predators.

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The brown hyena.

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This ghost town is her home.

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Its ruins give her valuable protection
from the elements.

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She has been here for 15 years.

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She's already reared
nine generations of cubs.

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These two youngsters have reached
a critical stage in their lives.

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They're four months old,
and now they need regular solid food.

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But there is nothing edible
in these ruins,

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so their mother has to look elsewhere

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and may leave them
for several days on end.

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Brown hyenas may walk over 20 miles a day
in search of food.

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This is some of the most hostile country
on the planet.

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Temperatures reach
a blistering 50 degrees Celsius.

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Strong winds blow incessantly.

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Hyenas from all over the Namib head for
where the sand dunes meet the sea.

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Somewhere along

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this seemingly barren stretch of sand,

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there is food in great quantity.

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Cape fur seals.

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There are around 10,000 of them here.

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Adult seals are large and strong.

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But their pups are neither.

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The youngsters are closely guarded
by their mothers.

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A hyena, however, knows to be patient.

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Sooner or later, seal mothers
must return to the ocean to cool off.

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A single seal pup could feed a hyena
and her family for days.

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But finding food is only half the battle.

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It now has to be carried back.

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00:32:44,160 --> 00:32:46,322
A jackal is here too...

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and it's not alone.

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If a hyena loses her kill, she'll have
nothing with which to feed her cubs.

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The jackals won't follow her
very far from the coast.

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It's too hot for them
in the desert interior.

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Only by making these long journeys

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00:33:35,079 --> 00:33:40,040
can brown hyenas manage to survive
in the middle of the Namib.

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00:33:43,759 --> 00:33:47,002
But some desert animals
seldom move far.

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The Kalahari Desert.

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Here, food is more plentiful...

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but it's hidden.

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A pangolin.

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She can collect food
that others can't reach.

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A keen sense of smell
enables her to detect

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00:34:31,119 --> 00:34:35,603
the presence of ants and termites
in their nests beneath the sand.

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00:34:55,440 --> 00:34:58,762
Her sticky tongue, some 30cm long,

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enables her to collect them
from deep underground.

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00:35:10,239 --> 00:35:12,481
And she's being carefully watched.

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The drier it gets,
the deeper the termites live.

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Many are way beyond the reach
of even a pangolin.

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But not of an aardvark.

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It's the world's largest burrowing animal.

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Its sense of smell is extremely acute.

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Shovel-like claws and powerful legs
enable it to dig down

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to depths of five or six metres.

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00:36:17,679 --> 00:36:23,686
A full-grown aardvark needs to eat
about 50,000 termites every day.

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Termites are highly nutritious
and full of moisture,

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and they can be collected here year round.

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Aardvark are usually nocturnal.

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00:36:53,760 --> 00:36:56,842
But the fact that this one
is foraging in daylight

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is a sign that food is scarce.

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Recent droughts in the Kalahari
have led to low termite numbers

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and, as a consequence,
aardvarks here are close to starvation.

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00:37:19,199 --> 00:37:24,239
Changes in the world's climate
are affecting many of Africa's animals.

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It's predicted that in the next century,

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Southern Africa will warm twice as much
as the global average.

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The future will be bleak for those
that cannot adapt fast enough.

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In Zimbabwe,
it hasn't rained in six months.

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During a drought, food becomes
harder and harder to find.

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00:38:37,079 --> 00:38:41,927
Apple-ring acacias produce pods
that are full of protein...

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00:38:43,360 --> 00:38:45,806
but mostly on their higher branches.

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Six metres up, they're out of reach

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00:38:53,360 --> 00:38:56,603
even for the continent's largest animals.

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This bull elephant needs to eat
about 90kg of vegetation every day.

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00:39:57,840 --> 00:40:01,639
He's worked out a remarkable way
of surviving

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in these lean times.

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00:40:06,280 --> 00:40:10,126
But it requires great physical strength.

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Only a handful of bulls
have mastered the skill.

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He weighs over five tonnes.

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This is a truly monumental effort.

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Those around him benefit too.

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Elephants have used their great
intelligence to help them survive

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Africa's driest times for millennia.

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00:42:08,639 --> 00:42:12,166
But today,
they face an even greater threat.

253
00:42:18,480 --> 00:42:24,442
It's thought that as many as 20 million
elephants once roamed the continent,

254
00:42:24,559 --> 00:42:28,769
but many have been killed
for their tusks...

255
00:42:31,960 --> 00:42:36,010
their ivory used for entirely
ornamental purposes.

256
00:42:41,280 --> 00:42:45,842
Now just 350,000 elephants remain.

257
00:42:53,320 --> 00:42:56,369
These stockpiles of confiscated tusks

258
00:42:56,480 --> 00:43:00,530
represent half of the elephants killed
on the continent

259
00:43:00,639 --> 00:43:03,041
in just one year.

260
00:43:14,800 --> 00:43:17,530
But of all of Africa's remaining wildlife,

261
00:43:17,639 --> 00:43:22,202
it is the rhinoceros that has been
most affected by poaching.

262
00:43:27,679 --> 00:43:32,766
In the Far East, its horn is used
as traditional medicine.

263
00:43:37,880 --> 00:43:41,407
All of Africa's rhinos
are now under threat...

264
00:43:44,159 --> 00:43:49,121
but for one subspecies,
it's likely to be already too late.

265
00:43:52,239 --> 00:43:56,130
The northern white rhinoceros
is facing extinction.

266
00:43:58,599 --> 00:44:00,887
Scientists are working on a solution,

267
00:44:01,000 --> 00:44:05,050
but no male now survives,
so natural breeding is impossible.

268
00:44:10,840 --> 00:44:14,525
These two females
are the last of their kind.

269
00:44:15,760 --> 00:44:17,568
When they die,

270
00:44:17,679 --> 00:44:23,402
an entire subspecies that inhabited
the Earth for millions of years

271
00:44:23,519 --> 00:44:27,001
will have disappeared for ever.

272
00:44:31,320 --> 00:44:33,367
Right across Africa,

273
00:44:33,480 --> 00:44:39,327
human beings are having
a devastating impact on all wildlife.

274
00:44:42,400 --> 00:44:44,447
Cheetah numbers are decreasing

275
00:44:44,559 --> 00:44:46,050
year on year.

276
00:44:48,039 --> 00:44:53,206
Today, there are fewer than 8,000
left on the continent.

277
00:45:05,000 --> 00:45:09,483
The global demand for pangolin scales
for use in traditional medicine

278
00:45:09,599 --> 00:45:13,684
has now made them
the most trafficked animal on the planet.

279
00:45:18,840 --> 00:45:22,844
And western chimpanzees are so threatened
by the loss of their habitat

280
00:45:22,960 --> 00:45:26,009
that they are now critically endangered.

281
00:45:29,679 --> 00:45:31,284
In this female's lifetime,

282
00:45:31,400 --> 00:45:34,847
three-quarters of the forest
in the Ivory Coast

283
00:45:34,960 --> 00:45:37,327
has been felled for plantations.

284
00:45:42,639 --> 00:45:45,802
Deforestation -
and not only in Africa -

285
00:45:45,920 --> 00:45:49,288
continues on an enormous scale.

286
00:45:54,199 --> 00:45:58,682
64 million acres of forest
are destroyed every year

287
00:45:58,800 --> 00:46:02,246
to make way for agriculture
and industry.

288
00:46:03,679 --> 00:46:07,206
An area of forest
the size of a football field

289
00:46:07,320 --> 00:46:09,322
is disappearing every second.

290
00:46:15,079 --> 00:46:18,561
Climate change is affecting
global weather patterns.

291
00:46:20,400 --> 00:46:24,371
Rainfall is increasingly unpredictable.

292
00:46:24,480 --> 00:46:28,849
Average temperatures
are soaring all over the globe.

293
00:46:35,079 --> 00:46:38,242
Extreme weather
is now affecting wildlife

294
00:46:38,360 --> 00:46:41,603
on all seven of the planet's continents.

295
00:46:55,199 --> 00:47:00,490
Today, scientists tell us that
we are at the star': of a mass extinction,

296
00:47:00,599 --> 00:47:05,161
and one that is being caused
by human activity.

297
00:47:08,599 --> 00:47:12,001
Over a million species
could be wiped out,

298
00:47:12,119 --> 00:47:15,010
many within the next few decades.

299
00:47:21,920 --> 00:47:28,041
But with help, even the most vulnerable
wildlife populations can still recover.

300
00:47:33,920 --> 00:47:36,809
In Africa's Virunga National Park,

301
00:47:36,920 --> 00:47:41,289
an intensive conservation programme
for the mountain gorilla

302
00:47:41,400 --> 00:47:47,407
has raised their numbers above 1,000
for the first time since records began.

303
00:48:04,360 --> 00:48:06,806
And in Antarctica,

304
00:48:06,920 --> 00:48:10,766
the international ban on whaling
has meant that the great whales

305
00:48:10,880 --> 00:48:15,681
have returned to the Southern Ocean
in numbers not seen for a century.

306
00:48:19,840 --> 00:48:21,728
So we can improve things...

307
00:48:23,840 --> 00:48:26,286
if we determine to do so.

308
00:48:30,920 --> 00:48:34,447
This is a crucial moment in time.

309
00:48:34,559 --> 00:48:36,766
The decisions we take now

310
00:48:36,880 --> 00:48:41,806
will influence the future of animals,
humanity,

311
00:48:41,920 --> 00:48:45,719
and indeed all life on Earth.

312
00:49:17,360 --> 00:49:21,922
<i>For the Africa team,
each shoot presented its own challenge...</i>

313
00:49:23,239 --> 00:49:27,324
<i>but one tested them
in ways they never imagined.</i>

314
00:49:30,159 --> 00:49:35,086
<i>The team journeyed for six days
to the hear! of the Congo rainforesf.</i>

315
00:49:36,239 --> 00:49:40,722
<i>Their aim</i> - <i>to film the intimate lives
of lowland gorillas.</i>

316
00:49:43,119 --> 00:49:46,760
<i>They worked with local expert trackers,</i>

317
00:49:46,880 --> 00:49:50,487
<i>who can pick up the trail
of evidence left by the gorillas.</i>

318
00:49:55,000 --> 00:49:59,766
From the plant, they can tell
which way the group has gone.

319
00:50:03,559 --> 00:50:08,009
<i>As they close in, the team wear masks
to stop the spread of disease.</i>

320
00:50:14,440 --> 00:50:19,081
<i>Finally, a silverback and his family
in the trees.</i>

321
00:50:23,320 --> 00:50:25,083
Look at that big boy.

322
00:50:32,679 --> 00:50:34,762
He's huge!

323
00:50:39,840 --> 00:50:42,525
You don't want to look him in the eye
because that...

324
00:50:42,639 --> 00:50:43,925
Oh, OK!

325
00:50:48,119 --> 00:50:51,806
<i>The trackers have known this male
for 20 years</i>

326
00:50:51,920 --> 00:50:54,400
<i>and use clicking noises to reassure him.</i>

327
00:50:57,199 --> 00:51:00,409
It was a completely amazing experience.

328
00:51:00,519 --> 00:51:02,920
Just came closer and closer and closer,

329
00:51:03,039 --> 00:51:05,771
and my eyes got wider and wider and wider.

330
00:51:07,880 --> 00:51:10,086
Yeah, it was incredible.
I'm just sort of smiling.

331
00:51:10,199 --> 00:51:11,963
It's kind of hard to process.

332
00:51:16,239 --> 00:51:20,563
<i>But soon, the gorillas head
into the thickest jungle...</i>

333
00:51:21,719 --> 00:51:23,483
Heavy, heavy.

334
00:51:25,559 --> 00:51:28,291
<i>Which means that keeping up
is difficult.</i>

335
00:51:28,400 --> 00:51:34,009
There are a group of gorillas
somewhere in this mass of vegetation

336
00:51:34,119 --> 00:51:39,650
but it takes us about ten minutes
just to cut a few-metres path through it.

337
00:51:41,920 --> 00:51:44,320
<i>Filming them is virtually impossible.</i>

338
00:51:44,440 --> 00:51:49,240
Oh, there's always
a piece of vegetation in the way.

339
00:51:49,360 --> 00:51:51,567
Oh, God, I can barely see anything.

340
00:51:56,360 --> 00:52:01,844
<i>As the days pass,
the jungle begins to take its toll.</i>

341
00:52:01,960 --> 00:52:03,724
Oh, God, this is awful.

342
00:52:05,440 --> 00:52:10,161
Your ears, your nose, my eyes...
They're flying everywhere.

343
00:52:11,760 --> 00:52:17,289
<i>And with little filmed, the reality
of the situation is sinking in.</i>

344
00:52:17,400 --> 00:52:21,849
It's going to be a real challenge for me
to get a sequence here,

345
00:52:21,960 --> 00:52:24,485
and it's a long way to come
to get nothing.

346
00:52:26,960 --> 00:52:30,202
Yeah, I'd say I'm feeling
the pressure at the moment.

347
00:52:36,599 --> 00:52:38,648
<i>Half the shoot is now over,</i>

348
00:52:38,760 --> 00:52:42,481
<i>so the crew decide
to move to a more open area.</i>

349
00:52:46,440 --> 00:52:47,851
<i>Their destination -</i>

350
00:52:47,960 --> 00:52:51,168
<i>a clearing known as a bar'.</i>

351
00:52:53,320 --> 00:52:58,007
So, our luxurious home for the next
ten days or so is the top of this mirador.

352
00:53:01,519 --> 00:53:04,682
<i>It's a little cramped,
but from this platform</i>

353
00:53:04,800 --> 00:53:08,121
<i>they hope to spot the gorillas
emerging from the forest.</i>

354
00:53:12,920 --> 00:53:16,969
<i>On their first morning,
the crew awaken to a visitor.</i>

355
00:53:20,440 --> 00:53:22,726
It's our first elephant on this trip.

356
00:53:22,840 --> 00:53:25,206
There's a big bull
in the middle of the bai.

357
00:53:28,599 --> 00:53:29,840
<i>And finally,</i>

358
00:53:29,960 --> 00:53:32,724
<i>the risk of moving pays off.</i>

359
00:53:34,840 --> 00:53:37,844
It's been
a really, really quiet morning,

360
00:53:37,960 --> 00:53:40,327
but a big group of gorillas,
about 15,

361
00:53:40,440 --> 00:53:45,367
has suddenly appeared really, really close
to us and, apparently,

362
00:53:45,480 --> 00:53:48,961
this very rarely happens. Maybe about
once a month they'll come this close.

363
00:53:53,280 --> 00:53:56,568
<i>Over the next week,
the gorillas continue to visit the bai.</i>

364
00:54:12,400 --> 00:54:14,527
<i>Until one afternoon...</i>

365
00:54:21,239 --> 00:54:22,684
<i>gunshots.</i>

366
00:54:24,960 --> 00:54:27,360
<i>On the platform,
the team are vulnerable.</i>

367
00:54:27,480 --> 00:54:31,246
There's been poachers
probably within eyeshot of us.

368
00:54:31,360 --> 00:54:33,327
They know we're here.
We can't see them.

369
00:54:33,440 --> 00:54:35,123
And two big gunshots.

370
00:54:36,199 --> 00:54:38,123
<i>They decide to evacuate.</i>

371
00:54:39,679 --> 00:54:42,411
<i>But there's also a risk of walking
through the jungle at night.</i>

372
00:54:44,800 --> 00:54:48,440
The one rule of the forest is not to walk
in the forest when it gets dark,

373
00:54:48,559 --> 00:54:53,440
so we're going as fast as we can.

374
00:54:53,559 --> 00:54:57,485
<i>Elephants are in the area,
so this is extremely dangerous.</i>

375
00:55:05,679 --> 00:55:08,603
<i>An hour later,
the team reach a camp.</i>

376
00:55:08,719 --> 00:55:10,289
Oh, God.

377
00:55:16,320 --> 00:55:19,244
That is not an experience
I'd want to repeat again.

378
00:55:20,800 --> 00:55:23,166
We had to choose between the risk

379
00:55:23,280 --> 00:55:25,681
of getting charged
by an elephant in the dark

380
00:55:25,800 --> 00:55:28,280
or getting shot by poachers.

381
00:55:28,400 --> 00:55:29,844
Um...

382
00:55:29,960 --> 00:55:34,170
So, yeah, it's... pretty stressful.

383
00:55:34,280 --> 00:55:37,443
I'm going to have a sit-down.

384
00:55:37,559 --> 00:55:40,130
If they're ivory poachers,
this is quite serious,

385
00:55:40,239 --> 00:55:42,003
and they've got nothing to lose,

386
00:55:42,119 --> 00:55:45,681
and the gunshot was aimed in our
direction, that's where the sound was.

387
00:55:45,800 --> 00:55:47,961
It's a pretty scary situation to be in.

388
00:55:51,679 --> 00:55:56,811
<i>Overnight, an armed anti-poaching unit
is called in to scout the area.</i>

389
00:55:59,000 --> 00:56:01,240
Because of the remoteness
of this park,

390
00:56:01,360 --> 00:56:03,806
there's been no poaching
recorded in the last 20 years,

391
00:56:03,920 --> 00:56:08,244
so this is a really significant moment
and it's a really sad moment,

392
00:56:08,360 --> 00:56:12,251
because it means that,
as roads are being built here,

393
00:56:12,360 --> 00:56:17,081
it's becoming <i>less</i> and <i>less</i> remote, the
animals here are in more and more danger.

394
00:56:22,800 --> 00:56:26,360
<i>Within a few hours,
the anti-poaching unit return</i>

395
00:56:26,480 --> 00:56:31,610
<i>with a stash of tusks
and news of a slaughtered elephant.</i>

396
00:56:31,719 --> 00:56:36,327
It's about as tragic as it gets, really,
and we heard the two shots go off,

397
00:56:36,440 --> 00:56:39,842
so we were there when it happened
and the elephant went down.

398
00:56:41,079 --> 00:56:43,606
<i>With the armed poachers still on the run,</i>

399
00:56:43,719 --> 00:56:46,849
<i>the team decide to abandon the shoot.</i>

400
00:56:46,960 --> 00:56:49,884
It's really tough
leaving on such a sad note.

401
00:56:50,000 --> 00:56:54,085
We've been watching these elephants
in the bai for the last week,

402
00:56:54,199 --> 00:56:58,762
and knowing that one of them
was killed yesterday is, urn,

403
00:56:58,880 --> 00:57:04,125
is horrible and, yeah,
it's sad to be leaving like this.

404
00:57:06,760 --> 00:57:10,047
<i>The poachers were caught,
but this incident</i>

405
00:57:10,159 --> 00:57:13,925
<i>is a reminder of how vulnerable
wildlife has become on the continent.</i>

406
00:57:18,639 --> 00:57:22,326
<i>Even animals
in the remotest parts of Africa,</i>

407
00:57:22,440 --> 00:57:25,603
<i>and indeed all our seven worlds,</i>

408
00:57:25,719 --> 00:57:27,802
<i>are now at risk.</i>
