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A strangely shaped mountain catching the clouds
high above the jungles of Venezuela.
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00:01:04,350 --> 00:01:08,900
Its summit rocks have been carved
into a multitude of grotesque shapes.
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00:01:09,190 --> 00:01:16,740
The sculptor, an agent that is continuously at work
on much of the landscape of our planet: Rainwater.
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00:01:19,280 --> 00:01:22,620
It washes over the rock, eroding it chemically.
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00:01:23,000 --> 00:01:29,210
It permeates the cracks, freezes,
and chips it off in flakes and splinters.
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00:01:33,010 --> 00:01:36,510
As the water flows downwards,
it starts on a long journey
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00:01:36,680 --> 00:01:39,850
that will take it from the mountains to the sea,
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00:01:40,010 --> 00:01:45,270
and here, with a leap of over 3,000 feet,
the highest made by any river,
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it forms the Angel Falls.
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00:02:02,410 --> 00:02:06,210
Our journey begins not far
from that towering waterfall
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00:02:06,410 --> 00:02:12,460
on the high moorlands of Peru,
15,000 feet above the sea.
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00:02:24,720 --> 00:02:29,770
Water is a very extraordinary
and very precious substance,
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the only one on earth, apart from mercury,
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which remains liquid
at normal temperatures and pressures,
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00:02:36,820 --> 00:02:42,870
so it's an essential part of the bodies
of all living organisms, animals and plant.
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Without it, life would come to an end.
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00:02:46,830 --> 00:02:50,420
But this particular water is a very rare kind.
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00:02:50,670 --> 00:02:54,500
97% of the water on earth is salty, the sea,
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but this was distilled from the surface of the sea
by the heat of the sun,
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00:02:59,550 --> 00:03:05,970
rose into the sky as vapour, condensed to form
clouds and then fell again as rain and snow
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00:03:06,180 --> 00:03:11,400
to form streams of pure, fresh, sweet water.
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00:03:11,770 --> 00:03:18,320
But this particular stream
is on its way to the sea a very long way away,
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00:03:18,490 --> 00:03:23,280
because these are the Andes,
and this is one of the many streams
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00:03:23,450 --> 00:03:29,200
that can claim to be a source
of the biggest river on earth, the Amazon.
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00:03:32,620 --> 00:03:37,250
The difficulties of living
in this young and violent river are formidable.
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Its waters are thick with powdered rock and mud,
but they have gathered few nutrients,
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and they rush down the valley
at tremendous speed.
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Anything that lives here
has to be a prodigious swimmer.
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00:03:51,560 --> 00:03:54,480
And these are. They're torrent ducks.
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00:04:09,660 --> 00:04:13,120
They exploit the swirls and eddies
with consummate skill,
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paddling with strokes of their large webbed feet.
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They head upstream, bracing themselves
against rocks with their stiff quilled tail,
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and using small horny spurs on the wrists
of their wings to give them purchase.
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00:04:33,480 --> 00:04:39,110
A pair owns a stretch of the river, working
their way up it to the frontier of their territory
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00:04:39,270 --> 00:04:44,860
when they abandon themselves to the flood
and are swept downstream to begin again.
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00:05:01,000 --> 00:05:04,470
Anchored firmly to the rocks is a kind of moss.
37
00:05:06,760 --> 00:05:13,270
Mosses are primitive, ancient plants that
appeared on earth long before flowering plants.
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00:05:13,430 --> 00:05:17,980
This torrent moss is found in young rivers
and streams all over the world,
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00:05:18,270 --> 00:05:22,820
and wherever it grows,
whether in the Andes or here in Europe,
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00:05:23,030 --> 00:05:27,030
it provides shelter for a multitude of insect larvae.
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00:05:28,950 --> 00:05:33,950
In summer, these creatures are transformed
and fly briefly above the river to mate,
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00:05:34,200 --> 00:05:37,170
but most of their lives are spent underwater.
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00:05:37,540 --> 00:05:39,960
Some are streamlined against the current.
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00:05:41,210 --> 00:05:45,590
The caddis fly larvae live in protective tubes,
the hollow stem of a reed,
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00:05:45,800 --> 00:05:49,510
or a construction of bits of wood
stuck together with silk.
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00:05:54,020 --> 00:06:00,770
Some weight themselves down by building
their shelters from heavy grains of sand.
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00:06:06,820 --> 00:06:10,820
The larva of the blackfly
holds on to a pebble with its back end,
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00:06:11,030 --> 00:06:15,790
while it grabs at food particles that are swept
past it with the antennae on its head.
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00:06:17,620 --> 00:06:24,380
It grips the rock with a ring of hooks,
but even if it loses its hold, all is not lost.
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00:06:27,170 --> 00:06:31,850
It has a lifeline of silk
which it has attached to its chosen pebble.
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00:06:47,400 --> 00:06:50,910
Having hauled itself back,
it now has to get a new grip.
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It spins a tiny pad of silk
from a spinneret just beneath its mouth,
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00:06:55,910 --> 00:06:58,370
then it fixes its hooks into that.
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00:07:01,170 --> 00:07:05,550
The nets with which it collects its food
are modified antennae,
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00:07:05,750 --> 00:07:10,800
and the larva brushes off what they catch
with alternate flicks of its mouthparts.
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00:07:14,930 --> 00:07:17,520
Not all caddis larvae live in solid tubes.
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00:07:17,770 --> 00:07:23,190
This one builds a construction that serves
both as a home and a food-gathering device.
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00:07:30,280 --> 00:07:35,580
It uses its silk to produce a funnel-shaped
scaffold of criss-crossing threads.
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00:07:46,670 --> 00:07:49,630
Undulating its body
is a way of aiding its breathing,
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00:07:49,880 --> 00:07:53,930
for the movement speeds the flow
of oxygen-bearing water through the funnel.
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00:07:56,930 --> 00:07:59,100
It holds on with the hooks at the back...
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00:08:03,310 --> 00:08:07,770
...leaving its jaws and front legs
free to do the construction work.
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00:08:35,840 --> 00:08:39,720
This blackfly larva wasn't saved by its lifeline.
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00:09:05,960 --> 00:09:12,050
But the caddis fly larva itself, ferocious and art
trapper though it is, is also at risk.
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00:09:16,260 --> 00:09:17,930
The dipper relishes it.
66
00:09:21,560 --> 00:09:25,190
Dippers live both in the rivers
of North America and Europe.
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00:09:27,400 --> 00:09:32,360
Underwater, their swimming technique
is quite different from the torrent ducks'.
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00:09:33,070 --> 00:09:39,200
Its feet are not webbed like a duck's, so
it propels itself with its wings, flying underwater.
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00:09:58,140 --> 00:10:01,470
In similar cold, fast-flowing streams
in North America
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lives a kind of giant newt, the hellbender.
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00:10:05,640 --> 00:10:09,310
When it's young,
it also, like a dipper, takes insect larvae,
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00:10:09,610 --> 00:10:15,280
but it can grow to over two feet long,
and then it seeks much bigger prey.
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A crayfish would suit it admirably.
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00:10:24,160 --> 00:10:30,130
A narrow escape. The crayfish saved itself at
the last moment by a convulsive snap of its tail,
75
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but the hellbender doesn't give up easily.
76
00:10:38,970 --> 00:10:43,560
Both animals try to keep out of the current
and habitually creep into crevices.
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00:10:56,690 --> 00:10:59,660
But that sometimes is a mistake.
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00:11:22,970 --> 00:11:27,140
Streams that tumble down
the sides of the valleys and feed young rivers
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have their own population.
80
00:11:31,400 --> 00:11:37,820
In Malaysia, the big-headed turtle clambers
around the waterfalls, using its tail as a prop.
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00:11:49,620 --> 00:11:55,460
In West African waterfalls, and nowhere else,
lives the extraordinary hairy frog.
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00:11:59,050 --> 00:12:03,970
Its so-called hairs are filaments of skin
on its flanks which act as gills,
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helping it to absorb oxygen from the water.
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00:12:09,640 --> 00:12:15,480
And, almost as unusual,
it has claws that help it grip the slippery stones
85
00:12:32,500 --> 00:12:38,500
The many sources of the Amazon began
as rivulets on the eastern flanks of the Andes.
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00:12:38,670 --> 00:12:46,140
Now, 5,000 feet lower down, each has grown
beyond recognition and cut its own zigzag valley.
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00:12:46,720 --> 00:12:52,230
White water, tumbling down the valley wall,
joins the brown water of a larger tributary,
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heavy with mud and sediment.
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00:12:59,320 --> 00:13:05,780
And as it gets bigger and bigger,
so it becomes more and more powerful.
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00:13:06,200 --> 00:13:10,450
It's the dry season at the moment
and the river is comparatively low.
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00:13:10,700 --> 00:13:15,500
But during the rains, when it's in spate,
its waters rise up over here
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00:13:15,670 --> 00:13:22,880
and the sheer volume and weight and force
of them can shift boulders the size of these.
93
00:13:38,650 --> 00:13:45,200
The volume and speed of its waters
are not the river's only weapons.
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It also has teeth.
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00:13:49,490 --> 00:13:54,250
And in this empty rainy-season part of its bed,
you can see them.
96
00:13:58,250 --> 00:14:05,090
Sand and gravel, fragments of rock that
have been eroded from higher up in its course
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00:14:05,340 --> 00:14:11,220
and which the river hurls with enormous force
at the rocks of its river bed.
98
00:14:15,100 --> 00:14:19,900
With such tools,
it can carve away the sides of mountains.
99
00:14:34,910 --> 00:14:39,630
Young, vigorous rivers transform the land,
demolishing the mountains,
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00:14:39,830 --> 00:14:45,380
breaking down the debris into smaller particles
and carrying them away downstream.
101
00:14:46,220 --> 00:14:52,510
This river in China is perpetually so turbid
that it's called the Huang Ho, the Yellow River.
102
00:14:52,850 --> 00:14:56,730
It carries a bigger load of sediment
than any river in the world.
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00:14:57,560 --> 00:15:05,360
During floods, each cubic yard of water contains
over 2,000 pounds of soil and pulverised rock.
104
00:15:18,580 --> 00:15:22,630
Rivers in the full vigour of their youth
are terrifyingly strong.
105
00:15:23,000 --> 00:15:25,630
They roll great boulders along their beds,
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00:15:25,800 --> 00:15:31,720
they cut away at the banks, undermining trees
which crash into the waters and are swept away.
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00:15:41,190 --> 00:15:47,030
When a river encounters a band of unusually
hard rock, such as an ancient flow of basalt lava,
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its progress is temporarily slowed.
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00:15:50,200 --> 00:15:54,450
It spreads out across the barrier
and then tumbles over the front edge.
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00:15:55,120 --> 00:15:58,700
So are formed some of the loveliest cascades.
111
00:15:59,160 --> 00:16:03,960
These are the falls of Iguacu
on the border of Brazil and Paraguay.
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00:16:04,330 --> 00:16:06,800
They can't compare in height with the Angel Falls,
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but in terms of the volume of water that
passes over them, they are incomparably bigger.
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The falling waters
pound away at the base of the falls,
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00:16:28,900 --> 00:16:33,110
undercutting the basalt
until blocks split off the face.
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00:16:33,610 --> 00:16:39,160
So the falls steadily work their way upriver,
leaving downstream a deep gorge,
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and animals live even here,
within the falls themselves.
118
00:16:46,960 --> 00:16:51,090
Swifts perch on the rock face behind the cascade.
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00:16:52,260 --> 00:16:54,930
Every evening
they congregate high above Iguacu.
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00:16:55,090 --> 00:16:58,890
After a day of hawking for insects,
they're ready to roost.
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00:17:00,140 --> 00:17:03,810
And where safer
than behind a screen of falling water?
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Some dive down with such speed
that they shoot right through the fall.
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00:17:26,500 --> 00:17:30,090
And now the river
has left the mountains far behind
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00:17:30,300 --> 00:17:32,710
and has changed its character considerably.
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00:17:33,090 --> 00:17:37,850
It's bigger, it's broader,
and its waters carry not only sand and gravel
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but rich nutrients
washed in from its vegetation-covered banks.
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And after it's gone over its last rapids
and tumbled over its last fall,
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it becomes a very different river indeed.
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00:17:58,780 --> 00:18:05,540
It's middle-aged:
Ampler, less violent, more sluggish and richer.
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On the banks of the Amazon tributaries,
the jungle stands thick.
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Birds like the sun bittern
stalk quietly in search of a meal.
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Huge fish cruise through the slow waters.
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00:18:27,060 --> 00:18:32,730
The arapaima, one of the largest
of freshwater fish, grows over six feet long.
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00:18:33,360 --> 00:18:40,490
The Amazon contains over 3,000 different kinds
of fish. That's more than live in all the Atlantic
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00:18:45,040 --> 00:18:47,870
Rays almost certainly evolved in the sea,
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but this species has managed to make the change
to fresh water and lives high up the Amazon.
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00:18:54,880 --> 00:18:57,590
Many fish have evolved here in fresh water
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and become suited to all its variations
of depth, speed and chemical composition,
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00:19:03,890 --> 00:19:10,150
to muddy water and to clear, to stretches that are
thick with plants and places where there are none.
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00:19:10,690 --> 00:19:12,900
Their variety is enormous.
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00:19:15,480 --> 00:19:19,400
Take, for example, just one family: The catfish.
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They're bottom-dwelling fish, with feelers
on their snouts that have sense organs on them,
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so the fish can feel and taste their way
through the thick, muddy water or at night.
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00:19:32,880 --> 00:19:34,750
There are small ones and immense ones,
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00:19:34,960 --> 00:19:38,720
some that give electric shocks
and others that swim upside down.
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00:19:39,090 --> 00:19:41,760
Those in fast-flowing waters
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have suckers on their chins or undersides
with which they cling to rocks.
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00:19:48,520 --> 00:19:56,070
In South America alone,
there are 1,200 different species of catfish.
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00:20:23,800 --> 00:20:28,270
In these crowded waters,
many fish give special protection to their young
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for the first few weeks of their lives.
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00:20:30,980 --> 00:20:34,440
This fish, the discus, goes even further.
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It provides its fry with special food.
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00:20:38,150 --> 00:20:42,200
The parents exude
a nutritious slime from their skin
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00:20:42,360 --> 00:20:46,740
and the young graze over their flanks,
feeding on it.
155
00:21:21,820 --> 00:21:26,410
After a week, they're big enough
to feed on small particles floating in the water.
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00:21:39,800 --> 00:21:45,880
These are now a month old and have already
assumed the disc-like shape of their parents.
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00:21:46,220 --> 00:21:51,390
They're becoming independent,
but they've strayed past the lair of an electric e
158
00:21:54,810 --> 00:21:56,480
The eel has poor eyesight,
159
00:21:56,650 --> 00:22:01,980
but it detects the presence of objects around it
with short electric discharges, a kind of radar.
160
00:22:04,490 --> 00:22:10,490
It rises for a gulp of air. This time the young
discus seem to have escaped detection.
161
00:22:19,130 --> 00:22:24,090
But the eel can also produce
a major electric shock which stuns its prey.
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It releases its capture.
Perhaps so small a fish is not worth eating.
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The young discus, apart from the marks of
the eel's jaws on its flanks, seems no worse off.
164
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One Amazonian fish puts its eggs
beyond the reach of any water-living predator:
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On leaves overhanging a river.
166
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A pair of splashing tetras are courting.
167
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They curve their bodies
and, for an instant, leap clear of the water.
168
00:23:13,100 --> 00:23:15,810
Sometimes a third fish joins in.
169
00:23:21,770 --> 00:23:23,650
The bigger of the two is the male.
170
00:23:25,320 --> 00:23:30,160
For a moment the pair hang on the leaf,
supported by the suction of the male's floppy fins
171
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Again and again, they jump. In this one moment,
the female lays her eggs and drops off,
172
00:23:40,420 --> 00:23:43,130
and the male fertilises them and follows her.
173
00:23:43,960 --> 00:23:46,960
Each time, they leave behind a dozen or so eggs.
174
00:23:54,300 --> 00:23:58,020
A few infertile eggs drop off,
but they're not wasted.
175
00:23:58,230 --> 00:24:02,270
Eventually as many as 200 eggs
are safely placed out of harm's way,
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and the river can be
an exceedingly dangerous place.
177
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Piranha, the most savage of all the Amazon's fish.
178
00:24:11,780 --> 00:24:17,740
A swimming capybara suddenly realises their
presence and tries to retreat, but it's too late.
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00:24:23,880 --> 00:24:27,460
The splashing, the taste of blood
spreading through the water,
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00:24:27,630 --> 00:24:33,890
attracts more of the shoal until there are
hundreds, all possessed by a frenzy for flesh.
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00:24:34,140 --> 00:24:39,980
None are much more than a foot long, but their
teeth are sharp enough to cut clean through bone.
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Within minutes, there's little left.
183
00:24:55,740 --> 00:25:01,960
As the river gets older, it slows down. A minor
obstacle in its path is now enough to deflect it.
184
00:25:02,120 --> 00:25:08,750
The water flowing round the outside of a bend
speeds up and cuts away at the bank.
185
00:25:08,960 --> 00:25:11,340
On the inside, where the current is slow,
186
00:25:11,510 --> 00:25:16,090
the water drops its load of sediment
to form a shoal.
187
00:25:16,300 --> 00:25:22,060
So the bend becomes more exaggerated
as the elderly river swings from side to side
188
00:25:22,230 --> 00:25:24,690
in a series of loops and meanders.
189
00:25:25,400 --> 00:25:31,610
One bend may approach another until the neck
of land between them is so narrow it collapses.
190
00:25:31,860 --> 00:25:37,740
Then the river takes the shorter course
and the meander is left isolated as a curving lake
191
00:25:38,580 --> 00:25:41,370
There the water, at last, is still.
192
00:25:41,870 --> 00:25:47,210
Plants no longer have to fight against a current,
and the lakes become clogged with vegetation.
193
00:25:49,210 --> 00:25:56,180
These are the largest floating leaves of all,
the leaves of the famous giant Amazon lily.
194
00:25:57,340 --> 00:26:01,180
Covering the water with leaves of this size
is very aggressive,
195
00:26:01,350 --> 00:26:06,770
for it cuts out the light below,
making it difficult for other plants to grow there
196
00:26:07,020 --> 00:26:13,860
The upturned rims of the great pads, as they
grow, thrust to one side all other floating plants
197
00:26:14,650 --> 00:26:18,820
To prevent these leaves being destroyed
by being eaten by fish,
198
00:26:19,030 --> 00:26:24,080
they are protected with very effective
and ferocious spines underneath,
199
00:26:24,290 --> 00:26:27,620
as you can see most clearly
on this half-opened bud.
200
00:26:29,330 --> 00:26:35,470
It can develop from the size of a soup plate to
a huge emerald disc six feet across in a few days,
201
00:26:35,720 --> 00:26:38,720
growing at a rate of one square inch a minute.
202
00:26:39,260 --> 00:26:41,260
The flowers grow with similar speed.
203
00:26:41,560 --> 00:26:47,850
Each opens first in the evening and remains
with its petals spread and fragrant all night.
204
00:26:48,060 --> 00:26:54,400
By the morning, however, it's closed again.
But during the night it's taken prisoners.
205
00:26:55,190 --> 00:26:58,450
Inside the flower are beetles.
206
00:26:59,660 --> 00:27:03,540
Sometimes there are as many as 40 of them
in a single bloom.
207
00:27:03,740 --> 00:27:10,880
They're not there just by accident. They've been
attracted by sugary outgrowths in the centre.
208
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While they're trapped in there,
they will feed on those.
209
00:27:14,920 --> 00:27:19,800
This evening the flower will open again,
the beetles will be released
210
00:27:19,970 --> 00:27:25,890
and they'll fly off carrying pollen
to cross-pollinate another lily flower.
211
00:27:26,060 --> 00:27:34,610
And then, after just two nights, this bloom,
by now turned purple, will crumple and die.
212
00:27:38,610 --> 00:27:44,830
The leaves, strengthened by air-filled ribs
beneath, can support the weight of a small child,
213
00:27:45,040 --> 00:27:49,120
and water birds can walk over them
with complete confidence and safety.
214
00:27:53,750 --> 00:27:58,920
The jacana has greatly elongated toes
that can spread its weight so effectively
215
00:27:59,090 --> 00:28:04,260
that it can tread on very flimsy leaves
without submerging them.
216
00:28:04,640 --> 00:28:07,810
It seeks insects,
and there are plenty to choose from.
217
00:28:08,730 --> 00:28:13,150
The pond skater sits on a leaf,
but it could sit on the water,
218
00:28:13,360 --> 00:28:17,690
for the surface forms a platform
that supports many small creatures.
219
00:28:18,280 --> 00:28:21,950
Water molecules are bound
by a force akin to magnetism.
220
00:28:22,160 --> 00:28:28,830
They're not attracted to molecules of air above,
so their forces are concentrated sideways,
221
00:28:29,120 --> 00:28:34,790
giving the surface a specially strong tension,
and the pond skater hunts on it.
222
00:28:37,500 --> 00:28:39,380
It's lost its prey under the leaf.
223
00:28:43,550 --> 00:28:48,810
This time there is no escape.
The pond skater stabs its victim and sucks it dry.
224
00:28:50,020 --> 00:28:53,940
It's crucially important for the pond skater
to keep meticulously clean.
225
00:28:54,100 --> 00:28:58,690
The waxy surface of its body
and the hairs on its feet repel water,
226
00:28:58,900 --> 00:29:03,530
but any dirt on them that is wettable
would break the surface-tension film.
227
00:29:05,410 --> 00:29:10,120
They're aggressive insects,
each with its own territory among the lily pads.
228
00:29:13,580 --> 00:29:18,420
Intruders are immediately chased away,
and fights between rivals are common.
229
00:29:23,550 --> 00:29:29,100
The surface-tension film is not only the pond
skaters' platform, but their sounding board.
230
00:29:29,350 --> 00:29:36,310
Through sense organs on their feet, they detect
vibrations caused by the struggles of an insect,
231
00:29:36,520 --> 00:29:39,730
and by bouncing up and down they communicate,
232
00:29:39,900 --> 00:29:45,490
sending keep-out signals to rivals
and come-hither signals to potential mates.
233
00:30:00,960 --> 00:30:05,380
Whirligig beetles use vibrations of the
surface film in a different way.
234
00:30:05,840 --> 00:30:10,350
They create ripples,
and by monitoring the returning echoes,
235
00:30:10,510 --> 00:30:14,140
they detect the presence of other creatures
and obstacles around them.
236
00:30:19,360 --> 00:30:24,400
They have excellent eyes,
partitioned so that the lower half peers down
237
00:30:24,570 --> 00:30:26,700
to see what's happening in the water beneath.
238
00:30:28,410 --> 00:30:31,450
Hanging from below the surface is another hunter.
239
00:30:31,740 --> 00:30:37,960
Its tail has two tubes which penetrate the surface
film and collect air so that it can breathe.
240
00:30:38,170 --> 00:30:42,960
At its other end, its head has ferocious jaws
with which it seizes its prey.
241
00:30:43,170 --> 00:30:47,550
This is the larva of the giant diving beetle,
and it's caught a tadpole.
242
00:30:50,100 --> 00:30:54,180
It has to come to the surface,
even when it's adult, so it can collect air
243
00:30:54,350 --> 00:30:58,270
to sustain it on its hunting forays
down into deeper waters.
244
00:31:01,900 --> 00:31:08,700
The water boatman patrols the surface not
from above, like the pond skater, but from below.
245
00:31:09,360 --> 00:31:15,750
The two kinds of insects manage to collect
most of the creatures trapped in the surface film.
246
00:31:16,710 --> 00:31:19,830
The camphor beetle
lives on plants at the water's edge,
247
00:31:20,040 --> 00:31:23,460
but it is perhaps the most versatile
of all water-walkers.
248
00:31:24,630 --> 00:31:27,340
It can run over water, like a pond skater.
249
00:31:29,550 --> 00:31:35,310
It can also produce a substance which reduces
the tension between water molecules.
250
00:31:35,560 --> 00:31:41,730
In emergencies it squirts this from its tail,
and with the tension pulling hard at the front,
251
00:31:42,150 --> 00:31:47,490
it shoots across the surface so fast that
the only way to see it clearly is in slow motion.
252
00:31:51,780 --> 00:31:58,040
And, as a final demonstration of its versatility,
it can, like most good beetles, fly.
253
00:32:01,000 --> 00:32:06,170
One particularly ferocious hunter lives
on the edge of lakes and ponds in Europe,
254
00:32:06,510 --> 00:32:07,840
the fishing spider.
255
00:32:09,380 --> 00:32:14,470
It uses the surface-tension film in the same way
as other spiders use their webs.
256
00:32:14,850 --> 00:32:21,060
With its front legs resting delicately
on the surface, it feels for tell-tale vibrations.
257
00:32:25,150 --> 00:32:30,240
But it also has excellent sight
and can see potential prey below the surface.
258
00:32:33,660 --> 00:32:36,660
The stickleback sees only the spider's feet.
259
00:32:46,750 --> 00:32:49,670
That is a greatly slowed-down version of the kill.
260
00:32:49,880 --> 00:32:52,340
In reality, the pounce is rapier-swift
261
00:32:52,510 --> 00:32:56,930
and the stickleback had little chance
once it strayed within range.
262
00:33:21,790 --> 00:33:28,090
The lakes and ponds fed by streams or cut off
from the main river are comparatively small.
263
00:33:28,380 --> 00:33:32,420
But where rivers flow
into basins created by geological faults,
264
00:33:32,670 --> 00:33:35,430
their water accumulates in immense lakes.
265
00:33:36,350 --> 00:33:42,140
This is Lake Prespa in Yugoslavia. Not
the largest of lakes but, even so, 20 miles long.
266
00:33:42,560 --> 00:33:48,270
As the rivers enter its still waters,
they lose their impetus and drop their sediment,
267
00:33:48,650 --> 00:33:52,740
so such lakes are potentially fertile,
and their animal inhabitants,
268
00:33:52,900 --> 00:33:58,620
no longer harassed by a current
nor hemmed in by a shallow bottom or banks,
269
00:33:58,870 --> 00:34:00,790
can proliferate, and they do.
270
00:34:01,450 --> 00:34:03,710
Fish swarm in their waters.
271
00:34:11,090 --> 00:34:16,390
And fish-eating birds, like pelicans
and cormorants, swarm correspondingly.
272
00:34:33,690 --> 00:34:37,070
Land-based creatures haunt its margins.
273
00:34:37,320 --> 00:34:41,990
These may be its most fertile parts,
for the lack of strong currents in a deep lake
274
00:34:42,160 --> 00:34:44,960
can leave the bottom starved of oxygen,
275
00:34:45,410 --> 00:34:51,340
but in the shallows, especially when warmed
by the sun, algae and other plants flourish,
276
00:34:51,590 --> 00:34:57,050
small invertebrates proliferate and there's food
for even the least agile of hunters.
277
00:35:22,950 --> 00:35:26,210
But in one way these large lakes are very special.
278
00:35:26,540 --> 00:35:31,080
This trout, with distinctive red spots,
lives in Lake Ohrid,
279
00:35:31,250 --> 00:35:35,050
a few miles away from Lake Prespa,
but nowhere else in the world.
280
00:35:35,670 --> 00:35:39,680
Isolated in the lake,
communities of fish become very inbred.
281
00:35:39,890 --> 00:35:47,180
Small characteristics that could be lost become
fixed, and the fish evolve into new species.
282
00:35:49,230 --> 00:35:51,980
A similar thing has happened to the shrimps.
283
00:35:59,360 --> 00:36:06,040
And among the many different species of water
snails, several are now unique to Lake Ohrid.
284
00:36:11,460 --> 00:36:17,090
In the heart of Russia lies a stretch of fresh water
so huge and so ancient
285
00:36:17,260 --> 00:36:23,680
that these processes have produced new species
on a scale unequalled anywhere else in the world,
286
00:36:24,390 --> 00:36:26,010
Lake Baikal.
287
00:36:28,680 --> 00:36:33,650
The lake lies in a great depression
formed by faulting in the earth's crust.
288
00:36:33,810 --> 00:36:40,860
It's 400 miles long and 5,000 feet deep,
the deepest of all lakes.
289
00:36:43,870 --> 00:36:49,750
In the depths of the lake, 1,000 feet down,
lives a unique kind of salmon, the omul.
290
00:36:50,370 --> 00:36:55,960
In summer, they move up into the shallows
and feed on caddis fly larvae and sand hoppers,
291
00:36:56,210 --> 00:37:00,340
and here they're caught in great numbers
for their delicious eating.
292
00:37:11,440 --> 00:37:15,270
But this is only one of Baikal's special inhabitants.
293
00:37:15,520 --> 00:37:22,150
Of the 1,200 different kinds of fish
and other animals and 500 plants that it contains,
294
00:37:22,360 --> 00:37:24,490
over 80% are unique.
295
00:37:25,240 --> 00:37:31,040
There are unique molluscs, unique flatworms
and even one unique mammal, the Baikal seal.
296
00:37:35,540 --> 00:37:41,510
This tiny seal is almost certainly descended
from the ringed seal of the Arctic Sea.
297
00:37:41,880 --> 00:37:45,260
Today the lake is over 1,000 miles
away from that sea.
298
00:37:45,640 --> 00:37:50,220
It's likely that their ancestors
arrived during the Ice Age,
299
00:37:50,520 --> 00:37:53,480
when the journey
may have been shorter and easier.
300
00:37:53,940 --> 00:37:59,110
Since then, cut off from other ringed seals,
they've developed in their own way.
301
00:38:01,440 --> 00:38:04,530
The Amazon has no great lake on its course,
302
00:38:04,740 --> 00:38:09,540
so even in its middle stretches
it still carries mud from the Andes.
303
00:38:10,120 --> 00:38:12,910
The Rio Negro, which joins it, is clear,
304
00:38:13,160 --> 00:38:17,080
for it has come from the north-west
where the rocks are hard and bare.
305
00:38:17,630 --> 00:38:23,840
The two immense rivers flow for miles alongside
one another in the same bed, scarcely mixing.
306
00:38:24,800 --> 00:38:28,470
As well as sediment,
they also carry abundant nutrients,
307
00:38:28,720 --> 00:38:32,180
and life on their banks flourishes as never before
308
00:38:34,270 --> 00:38:39,520
Herds of capybara wade through the shallows,
cropping the luxuriant plants.
309
00:38:46,030 --> 00:38:49,450
They're excellent swimmers,
with webs between their toes,
310
00:38:49,660 --> 00:38:55,210
and they have that placing of eyes, ears
and nostrils so valuable to mammals that swim,
311
00:38:55,410 --> 00:38:58,580
on top of the head,
so as the animal lies submerged,
312
00:38:58,750 --> 00:39:03,300
they can see, hear and smell
what's going on above water around them.
313
00:39:18,650 --> 00:39:21,020
Giant otters have a similar head design
314
00:39:21,270 --> 00:39:26,650
and sometimes lift themselves above the surface
to get an even better view of their surroundings.
315
00:39:32,660 --> 00:39:39,370
This Amazonian species is the biggest of
all otters, six feet long and a powerful swimmer.
316
00:39:39,830 --> 00:39:44,460
It's well-equipped with large, webbed feet,
a flattened tail and sensitive whiskers.
317
00:39:45,050 --> 00:39:49,760
A pair lays claim to a stretch of river
by making patches on the bank,
318
00:39:49,930 --> 00:39:52,640
marking them with their own personal smell.
319
00:40:05,400 --> 00:40:11,160
There are otters in many of the great rivers of the
world and they are the most graceful of swimmers.
320
00:40:26,510 --> 00:40:30,760
In India they share
the harvest of fish with the gavial.
321
00:40:31,050 --> 00:40:35,810
Most of the crocodile family, when adult,
feed largely on carrion,
322
00:40:36,010 --> 00:40:41,900
but the gavial eats only fish, and has long,
narrow jaws, studded with abundant teeth,
323
00:40:42,100 --> 00:40:44,190
with which it catches them underwater.
324
00:40:47,360 --> 00:40:50,320
A host of birds also claim a share of the river fish.
325
00:40:50,950 --> 00:40:55,200
This is the hooded merganser,
one of a group of ducks called sawbills.
326
00:41:04,920 --> 00:41:11,220
Its beak, like the gavial's jaws, is long and narrow
so it's easily snapped together underwater,
327
00:41:11,470 --> 00:41:15,890
and it also has a notched edge
to give it a grip on the slippery fish.
328
00:41:19,680 --> 00:41:25,360
But their feathers trap so much air that the pair
have to work very hard to get down to any depths.
329
00:41:26,940 --> 00:41:29,280
Coming up again is easy enough.
330
00:41:30,360 --> 00:41:34,490
But the meal was a mere mouthful,
and the merganser must look for another one.
331
00:41:38,540 --> 00:41:41,750
And on the bottom lurks more danger for a fish.
332
00:41:42,580 --> 00:41:43,620
A worm, perhaps?
333
00:41:49,510 --> 00:41:52,510
No, the deceiving tongue of a turtle.
334
00:42:23,080 --> 00:42:27,330
And in the sky above the river,
more trouble for a fish.
335
00:42:38,300 --> 00:42:40,060
The kingfisher.
336
00:43:05,120 --> 00:43:07,540
And there's still one left for next time.
337
00:43:10,710 --> 00:43:16,470
The fish eagle is not a diver but a pouncer,
with a marvellously coordinated action.
338
00:43:21,220 --> 00:43:25,730
The aerial onslaught on the fish continues
not only throughout the day but at night.
339
00:43:26,020 --> 00:43:28,980
An owl goes fishing in Africa.
340
00:43:34,440 --> 00:43:37,700
Its legs are bare.
Feathers would drag in the water.
341
00:43:37,910 --> 00:43:43,160
And it has spines on the underside of its toes
which give it a firm grasp on a fish.
342
00:44:17,610 --> 00:44:23,280
In the last phase of their lives,
these great rivers often flow out of control.
343
00:44:23,830 --> 00:44:28,910
Their tributaries in the mountains,
fed by the heavy storms of the rainy season,
344
00:44:29,080 --> 00:44:32,630
pour so much water into them
that they burst their banks.
345
00:44:34,340 --> 00:44:39,800
The Amazon rises every year to flood
tens of thousands of square miles of forest,
346
00:44:40,050 --> 00:44:42,970
in some parts as much as 40 feet deep.
347
00:44:49,560 --> 00:44:53,730
Some of these trees
are flooded for eight to ten months every year.
348
00:44:54,020 --> 00:44:58,110
They need only a few months annually
out of water for them to grow
349
00:44:58,280 --> 00:45:00,820
and for their seeds to sprout.
350
00:45:01,070 --> 00:45:03,780
We still don't know exactly how they manage it.
351
00:45:13,250 --> 00:45:18,300
As the floods well out over the land,
fish from the river travel with them.
352
00:45:18,710 --> 00:45:22,680
This is going to be their best feeding time
in the whole year.
353
00:45:27,680 --> 00:45:30,180
And so it is for other creatures too.
354
00:45:35,940 --> 00:45:40,900
Among the fallen tree leaves
that carpet the bottom lies the mata-mata turtle,
355
00:45:41,110 --> 00:45:45,410
marvellously camouflaged,
waiting for a decent-size fish.
356
00:46:01,670 --> 00:46:07,680
And there are plenty already here, sheltering,
like the turtle, among the still unrotted leaves.
357
00:46:15,150 --> 00:46:18,730
Piranha are here too.
These are not the flesh-eating kind.
358
00:46:18,980 --> 00:46:24,110
Their teeth are used for something different, fruit.
359
00:46:42,630 --> 00:46:47,850
As the river becomes older and older,
its riches increase still further.
360
00:46:51,180 --> 00:46:56,730
All over the world as rivers approach their end,
they begin to deposit the sand and mud
361
00:46:56,900 --> 00:47:00,360
that they've gathered from so far
and carried for so long.
362
00:47:00,650 --> 00:47:05,280
In many parts of the world reeds grow thickly
on these shoals and banks,
363
00:47:05,490 --> 00:47:10,490
and their stems collect even more sediment
as the river waters swirl through them.
364
00:47:11,620 --> 00:47:15,080
Living in these dense reed beds
requires considerable skill.
365
00:47:15,500 --> 00:47:19,250
The little bittern is able to find its nest
366
00:47:19,460 --> 00:47:23,960
hidden out of sight somewhere
in this seemingly uniform stretch of reeds.
367
00:47:27,510 --> 00:47:33,100
It regurgitates from its crop
ample supplies of fish and frogs for its young.
368
00:47:45,740 --> 00:47:51,950
Their world is an infinity of vertical stems,
but they're nimble climbers from an early age,
369
00:47:52,120 --> 00:47:54,910
and they leave the nest
within a few days of hatching.
370
00:48:05,050 --> 00:48:10,430
There they wait, almost invisible,
for their parents to return with restocked crops.
371
00:48:31,030 --> 00:48:35,290
The reed-clogged waters of a river delta
are full of potential riches,
372
00:48:35,450 --> 00:48:38,330
not only for birds but for human beings.
373
00:48:38,830 --> 00:48:43,590
The reeds themselves are used
for many purposes, but it's not an easy life here.
374
00:48:44,130 --> 00:48:46,920
Firm land on which to live is hard to find.
375
00:48:47,300 --> 00:48:52,640
In the Danube delta, the few solid sandbanks
are tightly packed with dwellings.
376
00:48:52,970 --> 00:48:59,060
Earth has to be conserved with piles to prevent
a slight change in the current washing it away.
377
00:48:59,640 --> 00:49:05,650
And there's the threat of a rise in the water level
caused not only by rainstorms upstream
378
00:49:05,860 --> 00:49:10,650
but an unusually high tide,
backed by a storm sweeping up from the sea,
379
00:49:10,820 --> 00:49:13,320
which can cause devastating floods.
380
00:49:15,910 --> 00:49:19,870
In the twin joined deltas
of the Tigris and Euphrates in Iraq,
381
00:49:20,080 --> 00:49:24,670
the marsh Arabs have become specialists
in an amphibian life.
382
00:49:32,470 --> 00:49:35,890
Their houses seem to have
solid enough foundations.
383
00:49:36,310 --> 00:49:40,560
In fact, they are floating on rafts of reeds.
384
00:49:57,700 --> 00:50:00,410
Some are the most elaborate constructions,
385
00:50:00,620 --> 00:50:07,040
yet all these soaring arches and roofs
are also made from bundles of reeds.
386
00:50:07,670 --> 00:50:14,800
And reeds provide food for the livestock, so
gathering them is a daily and never-ending chore.
387
00:50:30,360 --> 00:50:35,780
The herds have to be as much at home in
the water are they are on their floating platforms
388
00:50:45,750 --> 00:50:48,880
The rewards of this precarious existence
are, of course,
389
00:50:49,090 --> 00:50:53,840
the abundant fish which live all around the houses
and even underneath them.
390
00:50:57,930 --> 00:51:03,730
So the fish and the marsh Arabs and the pelicans
all flourish in one integrated community.
391
00:51:03,930 --> 00:51:08,150
The river has delivered the minerals
it eroded from the mountains
392
00:51:08,310 --> 00:51:11,480
and the nutrients it collected from the forests.
393
00:51:12,070 --> 00:51:16,950
They sustain plants which are the food
for small animals which are eaten by fish
394
00:51:17,110 --> 00:51:20,700
and which are gathered by great flocks of birds
395
00:51:20,910 --> 00:51:25,500
that, from the tropics to the Arctic,
are the glories of the deltas.
396
00:51:32,250 --> 00:51:35,760
A blizzard of snow geese in northern Canada.
397
00:51:42,310 --> 00:51:47,850
Across the world in the tropics,
on a delta in Papua New Guinea, magpie geese.
398
00:51:56,360 --> 00:51:59,700
In Australia, brolga cranes.
399
00:52:07,870 --> 00:52:10,830
Scarlet ibis in Venezuela.
400
00:52:13,130 --> 00:52:19,010
Plovers on almost any delta in the world.
And, equally widespread, stilts.
401
00:52:35,480 --> 00:52:37,950
Flamingos in Africa.
402
00:52:47,750 --> 00:52:49,410
And spoonbills.
403
00:52:56,960 --> 00:53:01,970
Of all the deltas in the world,
none is greater than that of the Amazon.
404
00:53:10,850 --> 00:53:13,310
For hundreds of miles along its lower course,
405
00:53:13,520 --> 00:53:18,860
the river has been so broad that it has been
impossible to see from one side to another.
406
00:53:19,360 --> 00:53:24,870
Now, instead of receiving more tributaries,
it splits into a tangle of separate channels.
407
00:53:27,830 --> 00:53:33,540
And on the last firm land on its banks
stands a great and thriving port,
408
00:53:34,040 --> 00:53:37,960
for the river is so wide and deep
that cargo ships from overseas
409
00:53:38,130 --> 00:53:44,850
can use it as a highway that can take them
for 1,000 miles into the heart of South America.
410
00:53:46,810 --> 00:53:50,310
The Amazon's vital statistics are astounding.
411
00:53:50,600 --> 00:53:56,860
At any one time, two thirds of all the river water
in the world is flowing between its banks.
412
00:53:57,190 --> 00:54:03,490
Here at its mouth, at Belem, it's 200 miles across
a maze of channels and islands,
413
00:54:03,780 --> 00:54:07,780
one of which is, alone,
bigger than the whole of Switzerland.
414
00:54:07,950 --> 00:54:14,540
The river maintains its identity far into the sea.
It was because of this that it was discovered.
415
00:54:14,710 --> 00:54:19,880
In 1499 a Spanish sea captain,
sailing well beyond the sight of land,
416
00:54:20,050 --> 00:54:25,390
suddenly became aware that the water
he was crossing was fresh and not salty.
417
00:54:25,640 --> 00:54:29,310
He turned west
and discovered this immense river.
418
00:54:29,560 --> 00:54:34,270
Indeed, it's not until 100 miles
beyond the edge of the continent
419
00:54:34,440 --> 00:54:40,900
that particles of water which fell on the Andes
complete their 4,000-mile-long journey
420
00:54:41,110 --> 00:54:44,700
and mingle with the salt water of the ocean.
421
00:54:49,950 --> 00:54:56,170
But along the coast, where the thrust of the river
flood is not so great, is a halfway house.
422
00:54:56,670 --> 00:55:00,670
Here the water is neither fresh nor salt,
but brackish.
423
00:55:00,920 --> 00:55:04,420
It's neither land nor sea,
but banks of mud and sand
424
00:55:04,630 --> 00:55:08,430
that are half the time submerged
and half the time exposed.
44913
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