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The world's greatest wilderness,
the open ocean.
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00:00:37,080 --> 00:00:40,480
It covers over half
the surface of our planet.
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00:00:46,320 --> 00:00:50,680
Here, there is nowhere to hide
and little to eat.
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00:00:55,040 --> 00:00:58,280
It's the marine equivalent
of a desert.
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00:01:00,880 --> 00:01:03,960
CLICKING AND SQUEAKING
6
00:01:10,240 --> 00:01:14,040
And patrolling this desert,
spinner dolphins.
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00:01:25,840 --> 00:01:27,440
They stick together...
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00:01:35,240 --> 00:01:39,320
..in a super-pod, 5,000 strong.
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00:01:44,240 --> 00:01:48,040
That maximises their chances
of finding something to eat.
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00:01:55,800 --> 00:02:00,440
Like all who live here, they must go
to extraordinary lengths
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00:02:00,440 --> 00:02:03,600
to make their home in the big blue.
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00:02:25,960 --> 00:02:30,880
There are rare moments when these
empty seas can explode with life.
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00:02:38,560 --> 00:02:42,960
Lanternfish, off the Pacific coast
of Costa Rica.
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00:02:42,960 --> 00:02:45,480
They're scarcely bigger
than minnows,
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00:02:45,480 --> 00:02:49,880
but what they lack in size
they make up for in numbers.
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00:02:53,080 --> 00:02:56,680
They are one of the most
numerous fish anywhere.
17
00:03:02,840 --> 00:03:05,720
Normally, they only come
to the surface at night,
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00:03:05,720 --> 00:03:07,400
to feed on plankton,
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00:03:07,400 --> 00:03:10,840
but this immense shoal
has risen during the day,
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00:03:10,840 --> 00:03:13,840
almost certainly in order to spawn.
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00:03:21,680 --> 00:03:25,040
For the dolphins,
this would be a bonanza.
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00:03:29,240 --> 00:03:31,200
CLICKING AND SQUEAKING
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00:03:36,400 --> 00:03:41,240
They have located the shoal
using their echo-sounding calls.
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00:03:51,520 --> 00:03:53,840
But they have to get to it quickly.
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00:03:58,920 --> 00:04:01,600
They are not the only hunters here.
26
00:04:01,600 --> 00:04:04,800
Yellowfin tuna have also
detected the shoal.
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00:04:13,920 --> 00:04:18,800
And behind them, with their
two-metre wingspans, mobula rays.
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00:04:28,000 --> 00:04:31,960
Now sailfish, one of
the fastest fish in the sea,
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00:04:31,960 --> 00:04:34,320
have joined the chase.
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00:04:40,640 --> 00:04:43,920
The lanternfish may return
to the deep at any moment.
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00:04:50,720 --> 00:04:53,720
But now the dolphins have got here.
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00:05:21,360 --> 00:05:24,880
They swim beneath the shoal,
pinning it to the surface
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00:05:24,880 --> 00:05:29,720
and forcing the lanternfish
to pack more closely together.
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00:05:29,720 --> 00:05:32,040
CLICKING AND SQUEAKING
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00:05:35,400 --> 00:05:39,000
And now the sea begins to boil.
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00:05:47,520 --> 00:05:52,000
The tuna charge into the shoal
at over 40mph.
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00:06:21,720 --> 00:06:25,520
The slower-swimming rays
arrive at last.
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00:06:31,800 --> 00:06:33,920
With their immense mouths agape,
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00:06:33,920 --> 00:06:37,120
they scoop up the lanternfish
by the hundred.
40
00:06:40,600 --> 00:06:44,160
The shoal has now been
largely dispersed,
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00:06:44,160 --> 00:06:47,080
and the sailfish
pick off the survivors.
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00:06:49,640 --> 00:06:52,880
In just 15 minutes,
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00:06:52,880 --> 00:06:57,280
all that's left is
a silvery confetti of scales.
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00:07:07,800 --> 00:07:12,560
But here, such feasts
are only too infrequent.
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00:07:21,080 --> 00:07:25,120
Whilst the dolphins perform
great feats of endurance,
46
00:07:25,120 --> 00:07:27,960
others are driven
to even greater extremes
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00:07:27,960 --> 00:07:31,240
to find food
in this ocean desert.
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00:07:49,120 --> 00:07:51,440
A sleeping giant.
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00:07:55,760 --> 00:07:57,760
A sperm whale.
50
00:08:04,520 --> 00:08:08,520
This family is resting
between bouts of feeding.
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00:08:15,880 --> 00:08:17,480
Who knows what the owners
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00:08:17,480 --> 00:08:20,640
of the biggest brain
in the planet dream about.
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00:08:23,040 --> 00:08:25,360
CLICKING
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00:08:27,960 --> 00:08:30,120
One has a calf.
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00:08:31,200 --> 00:08:36,560
It's about two weeks old but still
dependent on its mother's milk.
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00:08:36,560 --> 00:08:37,760
It's hungry.
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00:08:39,360 --> 00:08:41,320
CLICKING
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00:08:41,320 --> 00:08:45,480
It communicates with its mother
using a pattern of clicks.
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00:08:46,960 --> 00:08:49,120
CLICKING CONTINUES
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00:08:51,920 --> 00:08:54,000
But its mother slumbers on.
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00:08:59,880 --> 00:09:04,760
The calf, covered in sucker fish,
of which it can't yet rid itself,
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00:09:04,760 --> 00:09:06,840
has to be patient.
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00:09:32,840 --> 00:09:37,840
Sleep over and refreshed,
the whales move on.
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00:09:40,400 --> 00:09:43,960
Sperm whales don't wait for
their prey to rise to the surface.
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00:09:43,960 --> 00:09:48,320
They swim down into the depths
to find it.
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00:09:53,640 --> 00:09:57,320
They take a series
of heavy breaths...
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00:09:59,440 --> 00:10:01,760
..to saturate their blood
with oxygen.
68
00:10:03,680 --> 00:10:06,800
Then down they go.
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00:10:14,800 --> 00:10:19,000
This entire family dives together
in search of squid.
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00:10:26,640 --> 00:10:30,360
A mother will push her body
to the limits of her endurance,
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00:10:30,360 --> 00:10:33,960
and already it's hard for
her calf to keep up with her.
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00:10:35,080 --> 00:10:37,440
CLICKING
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00:10:44,680 --> 00:10:48,240
The calf sticks to its mother
as closely as it can...
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00:10:50,160 --> 00:10:56,520
..touching her frequently,
as if for reassurance.
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00:10:56,520 --> 00:10:58,800
FASTER CLICKING
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00:11:09,400 --> 00:11:12,360
But 300 metres down,
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00:11:12,360 --> 00:11:15,840
it seems the calf
can't hold its breath any longer.
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00:11:15,840 --> 00:11:19,040
CLICKING CONTINUES
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00:11:40,000 --> 00:11:44,520
In their early years, calves
are forced to sit out the hunt.
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00:11:49,520 --> 00:11:52,080
The adults continue their dive.
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00:11:57,360 --> 00:11:59,760
CLICKING
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00:12:04,920 --> 00:12:07,400
The mother changes her calls
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00:12:07,400 --> 00:12:10,920
into a series of louder
and more rapid clicks.
84
00:12:17,280 --> 00:12:21,200
She's now using sonar
to hunt down shoals of squid.
85
00:12:29,560 --> 00:12:33,080
At 800 metres, a burst of clicks.
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00:12:33,080 --> 00:12:35,480
CLICKING BECOMES VERY FAST
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00:12:39,080 --> 00:12:41,400
CLICKING STOPS
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00:12:41,400 --> 00:12:43,320
Then silence.
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00:12:46,240 --> 00:12:48,000
She's made a catch.
90
00:12:59,880 --> 00:13:03,440
A calf can have a long wait
at the surface.
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00:13:09,920 --> 00:13:14,000
A mother returns from the deep
after as much as an hour.
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00:13:16,240 --> 00:13:18,800
She has a stomach full of squid.
93
00:13:38,320 --> 00:13:41,960
Finally, this hungry calf
can take some milk.
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00:13:47,320 --> 00:13:51,640
It's one of the richest
produced by any mammal,
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00:13:51,640 --> 00:13:55,640
and the calf guzzles
a bathful of it a day.
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00:14:11,400 --> 00:14:17,360
It may be six years before a calf
masters the art of deep diving
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00:14:17,360 --> 00:14:20,840
and is able to find food for itself.
98
00:14:37,000 --> 00:14:42,160
The emptiness of the big blue is
what makes life so hard for hunters.
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00:14:48,360 --> 00:14:53,680
But it's this emptiness that makes
it comparatively safe for prey.
100
00:15:02,240 --> 00:15:07,640
A baby turtle, hatched just days
ago, is leaving the crowded,
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00:15:07,640 --> 00:15:12,360
dangerous waters of the coast
and heading for the open ocean.
102
00:15:19,640 --> 00:15:23,280
To start with, they fill
their little stomachs with plankton.
103
00:15:25,200 --> 00:15:28,520
But soon they need
something more substantial.
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00:15:39,400 --> 00:15:41,760
Only recently have we begun to solve
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00:15:41,760 --> 00:15:46,760
the mystery of where baby turtles
disappear to in their early years.
106
00:16:02,400 --> 00:16:05,720
Hundreds of miles offshore,
in every ocean,
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00:16:05,720 --> 00:16:08,920
there are communities
of young castaways.
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00:16:17,520 --> 00:16:21,160
So anything that floats
attracts them.
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00:16:28,520 --> 00:16:30,440
A log.
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00:16:30,440 --> 00:16:33,000
It may have been at sea
for several years,
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00:16:33,000 --> 00:16:36,280
and it has already become
the centre of a small community.
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00:16:38,400 --> 00:16:41,200
Young puffer fish are here
for the same reason.
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00:16:46,520 --> 00:16:49,400
A floating log is just
the kind of refuge
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00:16:49,400 --> 00:16:52,280
this young turtle
has been looking for.
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00:16:53,600 --> 00:16:58,280
Here, there's not only seaweed
on which to graze, but barnacles.
116
00:17:11,160 --> 00:17:14,160
But it's important
to stay under cover.
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00:17:20,280 --> 00:17:24,000
A young ocean-going silky shark
is here, too.
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00:17:42,640 --> 00:17:45,000
It's learning what tastes good.
119
00:17:48,840 --> 00:17:50,960
And what doesn't.
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00:18:09,880 --> 00:18:14,240
We now know that many young turtles
stay in such places
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00:18:14,240 --> 00:18:17,160
for several years, until adulthood.
122
00:18:30,320 --> 00:18:34,920
Even if it means facing
the full force of the high seas.
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00:18:42,400 --> 00:18:45,840
The sun beating down
on the deep blue
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00:18:45,840 --> 00:18:49,040
warms the surface waters
so that they evaporate.
125
00:18:56,560 --> 00:19:00,320
As the vapour rises,
it condenses into clouds.
126
00:19:02,280 --> 00:19:06,960
They rapidly build into
gigantic, burgeoning towers,
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00:19:06,960 --> 00:19:12,360
which eventually generate violent
storms, some 1,000 miles across.
128
00:19:28,480 --> 00:19:32,680
Hurricane-force winds sweep across
the open ocean,
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00:19:32,680 --> 00:19:35,840
building waves
that can rise to 30 metres tall.
130
00:19:50,120 --> 00:19:53,520
Out here, ships have been known
to sink without trace.
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00:20:07,560 --> 00:20:13,960
130 million containers are shipped
across the oceans every year.
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00:20:15,600 --> 00:20:20,080
And on average, four of them
fall into the sea every day.
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00:20:34,360 --> 00:20:37,920
In 1992, a few were lost
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00:20:37,920 --> 00:20:41,280
that contained
a consignment of bath toys...
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00:20:46,160 --> 00:20:51,000
..including 7,000 plastic ducks
like these.
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00:21:02,440 --> 00:21:06,760
They started their travels
1,000 miles off Alaska.
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00:21:09,800 --> 00:21:14,960
Some drifted right across the
Pacific Ocean and reached Australia.
138
00:21:21,320 --> 00:21:23,200
Others were carried north
139
00:21:23,200 --> 00:21:26,800
and landed on shores
between Russia and Alaska.
140
00:21:28,880 --> 00:21:32,200
They even found their way
into the High Arctic.
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00:21:45,920 --> 00:21:49,600
One duck, having been at sea
for 15 years
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00:21:49,600 --> 00:21:51,880
and crossing three oceans,
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00:21:51,880 --> 00:21:55,960
eventually landed
on the west coast of Scotland.
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00:22:03,200 --> 00:22:07,360
Their travels vividly illustrate
how a network of currents
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00:22:07,360 --> 00:22:12,880
connects all our oceans into
one gigantic circulatory system.
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00:22:27,360 --> 00:22:31,880
Many of the inhabitants of
the big blue rely on these currents
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00:22:31,880 --> 00:22:34,680
to carry them to feeding grounds.
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00:22:49,400 --> 00:22:51,680
The blue shark.
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00:22:55,960 --> 00:22:59,440
It travels over 5,000 miles a year,
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00:22:59,440 --> 00:23:04,360
riding on the currents, supported
by its broad wing-shaped fins.
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00:23:09,640 --> 00:23:13,000
This one may not have eaten
for two months.
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00:23:19,640 --> 00:23:23,720
But the currents can carry promising
traces of fatty oils
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00:23:23,720 --> 00:23:27,480
from many miles away
and will lead it to its next meal.
154
00:23:34,840 --> 00:23:39,120
After days of travel,
the smell of food gets stronger.
155
00:24:00,840 --> 00:24:04,200
A dead whale, recently
struck by a ship.
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00:24:08,320 --> 00:24:11,160
This could be a real feast,
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00:24:11,160 --> 00:24:13,840
but the blue shark must be cautious.
158
00:24:23,160 --> 00:24:25,480
Great white sharks...
159
00:24:28,080 --> 00:24:30,680
..ten times heavier than a blue...
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00:24:33,000 --> 00:24:36,440
..are highly possessive
around a whale carcass.
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00:25:03,040 --> 00:25:07,080
Great whites are eager to feed
on energy-rich whale blubber,
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00:25:07,080 --> 00:25:10,480
which we now know
forms a major part of their diet.
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00:25:22,840 --> 00:25:25,240
Once the great white
has had its fill,
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00:25:25,240 --> 00:25:30,280
smaller sharks, like the blue shark,
tackle what's left of the carcass.
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00:25:40,000 --> 00:25:43,480
As the oils from this dead whale
spread more widely,
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00:25:43,480 --> 00:25:46,320
more and more blue sharks appear.
167
00:26:07,280 --> 00:26:11,040
Within days, the carcass
will be stripped of its blubber.
168
00:26:19,880 --> 00:26:23,400
Then, no longer
kept buoyant by its oil,
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00:26:23,400 --> 00:26:26,880
it will sink into the depths below.
170
00:26:30,160 --> 00:26:33,640
The blue, with its reserves
of fat replenished,
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00:26:33,640 --> 00:26:37,280
can now survive for another
two months without eating.
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00:27:00,440 --> 00:27:06,600
Over half of all animals
in the open ocean drift in currents.
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00:27:15,000 --> 00:27:18,120
Jellyfish cross entire oceans
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00:27:18,120 --> 00:27:22,160
feeding on whatever happens
to tangle with their tentacles.
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00:27:27,360 --> 00:27:30,440
Some can grow to a metre,
even two metres, across.
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00:27:31,960 --> 00:27:34,280
And when, by lucky chance,
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00:27:34,280 --> 00:27:38,200
they encounter a patch of sea
rich in plankton,
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00:27:38,200 --> 00:27:40,520
their numbers explode.
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00:28:23,320 --> 00:28:26,120
It's such a successful strategy
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00:28:26,120 --> 00:28:30,560
that jellies are one of the most
common life forms on the planet.
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00:28:39,880 --> 00:28:44,000
But among the jellies,
and looking somewhat like them,
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00:28:44,000 --> 00:28:47,520
is a rather more complex
and sinister creature.
183
00:28:52,520 --> 00:28:54,800
The Portuguese man-o'-war.
184
00:29:00,080 --> 00:29:04,360
It floats with the help
of a gas-filled bladder,
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00:29:04,360 --> 00:29:06,720
topped by a vertical membrane.
186
00:29:08,240 --> 00:29:10,400
With that serving as a sail,
187
00:29:10,400 --> 00:29:13,600
it maintains a steady course
through the waves.
188
00:29:37,520 --> 00:29:43,080
Long threads trail behind it,
some as much as 30 metres long.
189
00:29:47,320 --> 00:29:51,120
Each is armed with many thousands
of stinging cells.
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00:29:52,880 --> 00:29:57,600
A single tentacle could kill a fish
or, in rare cases, a human.
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00:30:02,920 --> 00:30:06,160
But among its lethal tentacles lurks
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00:30:06,160 --> 00:30:10,880
a man-o'-war fish
that feeds by nibbling them.
193
00:30:16,560 --> 00:30:20,320
Whilst this fish has
some resistance to the stings,
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00:30:20,320 --> 00:30:22,600
it must still be extremely careful.
195
00:30:26,040 --> 00:30:28,920
Most other fish are not so lucky.
196
00:30:50,120 --> 00:30:53,640
A tentacle has caught this one
and reels it in.
197
00:31:04,760 --> 00:31:07,000
It's already paralysed.
198
00:31:11,640 --> 00:31:16,360
Specialised muscular tentacles
transfer the victim to others
199
00:31:16,360 --> 00:31:21,400
that digest the catch, liquefying it
with powerful chemicals.
200
00:31:27,600 --> 00:31:30,680
Eventually, all that is left...
201
00:31:32,880 --> 00:31:35,240
..is a scaly husk.
202
00:31:43,000 --> 00:31:44,960
This voracious man-o'-war
203
00:31:44,960 --> 00:31:48,640
may collect over 100 small fish
in a day.
204
00:32:11,640 --> 00:32:15,880
For the most part, the big blue
seems featureless...
205
00:32:18,520 --> 00:32:22,480
..a place where the winds blow,
uninterrupted by land.
206
00:32:27,240 --> 00:32:31,600
But beneath the surface
there are long mountain ranges,
207
00:32:31,600 --> 00:32:35,040
deep trenches
and isolated volcanic peaks
208
00:32:35,040 --> 00:32:39,440
that make it far more varied
than the human eye can see.
209
00:32:45,760 --> 00:32:49,000
We are only just discovering
in any detail
210
00:32:49,000 --> 00:32:52,320
how the inhabitants of the big blue
exploit that.
211
00:33:02,040 --> 00:33:06,520
A lonely whale shark
on a special journey.
212
00:33:12,280 --> 00:33:18,560
She is as long as a small aircraft
and she weighs over 20 tonnes.
213
00:33:22,240 --> 00:33:27,320
Like many sharks, she does not lay
eggs but gives birth to live young.
214
00:33:43,000 --> 00:33:47,480
She carries up to 300 of them
in her swollen belly.
215
00:33:54,080 --> 00:33:56,760
She may be the biggest fish
in the sea,
216
00:33:56,760 --> 00:34:01,400
but the place where whale sharks
give birth has not yet been found.
217
00:34:07,680 --> 00:34:11,800
Today, however, we may be a step
closer to solving this mystery.
218
00:34:14,360 --> 00:34:17,240
We have known that great numbers
of whale sharks,
219
00:34:17,240 --> 00:34:21,760
at certain times of the year,
appear around the Galapagos Islands.
220
00:34:23,600 --> 00:34:26,440
Here they assemble around
a tiny islet
221
00:34:26,440 --> 00:34:30,280
that rises abruptly
from particularly deep water.
222
00:34:33,840 --> 00:34:36,720
It's known as Darwin Island.
223
00:34:45,320 --> 00:34:49,360
Here, swirling currents
bring up nutrients from the deep,
224
00:34:49,360 --> 00:34:52,520
so enriching these waters
that they attract
225
00:34:52,520 --> 00:34:55,960
great concentrations of fish
from far and wide.
226
00:35:04,360 --> 00:35:08,360
Thousands of hammerhead sharks
also assemble here.
227
00:35:11,480 --> 00:35:13,840
They are nearly all female.
228
00:35:21,040 --> 00:35:24,480
They, too, it seems,
have come here to breed.
229
00:35:31,960 --> 00:35:35,800
The whale shark receives
an extraordinary welcome.
230
00:35:55,720 --> 00:35:59,960
Silky sharks, themselves
three metres long,
231
00:35:59,960 --> 00:36:02,040
bounce against her rough skin...
232
00:36:04,720 --> 00:36:08,560
..perhaps to scrape off
any parasites they might have.
233
00:36:13,280 --> 00:36:16,960
These sharks could be a danger
to any newly born young.
234
00:36:20,560 --> 00:36:24,040
So, perhaps to avoid them,
235
00:36:24,040 --> 00:36:26,240
the whale shark dives...
236
00:36:29,040 --> 00:36:32,640
..down to around 600 metres.
237
00:36:57,960 --> 00:37:01,640
And there she may release her young.
238
00:37:04,040 --> 00:37:05,560
In these great depths,
239
00:37:05,560 --> 00:37:09,080
away from the predators
that hunt in the waters above,
240
00:37:09,080 --> 00:37:10,920
and with abundant food,
241
00:37:10,920 --> 00:37:15,040
her babies could grow
and eventually disperse.
242
00:37:24,920 --> 00:37:26,920
No-one, it is true,
243
00:37:26,920 --> 00:37:30,640
has ever seen young ones
in these little-visited depths.
244
00:37:36,080 --> 00:37:40,600
But the fact that hundreds
of expectant whale sharks
245
00:37:40,600 --> 00:37:42,400
come here every year
246
00:37:42,400 --> 00:37:45,480
is strong evidence
that somewhere here
247
00:37:45,480 --> 00:37:50,280
lies the nursery of
the biggest fish in the sea.
248
00:38:16,480 --> 00:38:20,200
There are almost
30,000 sizeable islands
249
00:38:20,200 --> 00:38:22,160
scattered across the world's oceans.
250
00:38:25,880 --> 00:38:28,160
One of them is South Georgia...
251
00:38:32,760 --> 00:38:35,520
..an ideal place for
those ocean dwellers
252
00:38:35,520 --> 00:38:38,880
who are compelled to land
in order to breed.
253
00:38:42,320 --> 00:38:44,440
The wandering albatross.
254
00:38:54,520 --> 00:38:58,760
It may spend as much as a year
continuously at sea.
255
00:39:01,560 --> 00:39:03,600
Searching for food,
256
00:39:03,600 --> 00:39:07,880
gliding on wings that are
3.5 metres across -
257
00:39:07,880 --> 00:39:10,520
the biggest of any living bird.
258
00:39:23,440 --> 00:39:28,880
The entire world population
of 16,000 wanderers
259
00:39:28,880 --> 00:39:30,480
nest on South Georgia
260
00:39:30,480 --> 00:39:34,080
and half a dozen or so of the other
smaller islands
261
00:39:34,080 --> 00:39:36,200
that lie in the Southern Ocean.
262
00:39:41,400 --> 00:39:44,240
It's spring and this bird
is returning
263
00:39:44,240 --> 00:39:46,800
to the nest site
it's always used.
264
00:39:49,560 --> 00:39:52,080
THEY CALL TO EACH OTHER
265
00:39:56,400 --> 00:39:59,840
Its lifelong partner
is already here.
266
00:39:59,840 --> 00:40:02,960
THEY CALL AND CLUCK
267
00:40:08,760 --> 00:40:10,400
In South Georgia,
268
00:40:10,400 --> 00:40:13,960
individual birds have been studied
for their entire lives,
269
00:40:13,960 --> 00:40:17,840
revealing that older pairs,
in their late 30s,
270
00:40:17,840 --> 00:40:21,240
will go to extraordinary lengths
to give their young
271
00:40:21,240 --> 00:40:23,160
the best possible start in life.
272
00:40:43,400 --> 00:40:46,200
This chick is now several weeks old,
273
00:40:46,200 --> 00:40:49,400
but still has its warm, downy coat.
274
00:41:03,280 --> 00:41:08,240
The chick will need a regular supply
of regurgitated fish and squid.
275
00:41:30,400 --> 00:41:33,240
With food so scarce in
the open ocean,
276
00:41:33,240 --> 00:41:37,320
both parents may have
to scour thousands of square miles
277
00:41:37,320 --> 00:41:40,200
just to provide enough for one meal.
278
00:42:03,280 --> 00:42:07,920
Ageing parents struggle on
all through the Antarctic winter
279
00:42:07,920 --> 00:42:11,280
to raise a chick that is
big, strong and healthy.
280
00:42:30,840 --> 00:42:33,440
After some 130 days,
281
00:42:33,440 --> 00:42:37,600
the youngster begins to replace
its down with flight feathers.
282
00:42:55,160 --> 00:42:59,080
Finally, nine months
after their egg was laid,
283
00:42:59,080 --> 00:43:02,040
this chick is ready to leave.
284
00:43:23,960 --> 00:43:27,840
Of all the chicks they've reared
in recent years,
285
00:43:27,840 --> 00:43:32,680
such a favoured chick will have
the best chance of survival.
286
00:43:35,360 --> 00:43:37,760
But it will also be their last.
287
00:43:40,840 --> 00:43:44,680
Elderly parents never recover
from their exertions.
288
00:43:46,400 --> 00:43:51,320
They will soon leave this island,
never to be seen again.
289
00:44:08,480 --> 00:44:10,240
Surviving in the open ocean
290
00:44:10,240 --> 00:44:12,920
has always tested animals
to the limit...
291
00:44:15,320 --> 00:44:18,520
..but today they face
a new additional threat.
292
00:44:24,560 --> 00:44:26,000
Plastic.
293
00:44:29,400 --> 00:44:31,160
Just over 100 years ago,
294
00:44:31,160 --> 00:44:34,120
we invented a
wonderful new material
295
00:44:34,120 --> 00:44:37,320
that could be moulded
into all kinds of shapes
296
00:44:37,320 --> 00:44:40,520
and we took great trouble to ensure
that it was hard-wearing,
297
00:44:40,520 --> 00:44:44,080
rot-proof
and virtually indestructible.
298
00:44:46,520 --> 00:44:48,080
Now, every year,
299
00:44:48,080 --> 00:44:52,640
we dump around eight million
tonnes of it into the sea.
300
00:44:55,400 --> 00:45:00,120
Here, it entangles and drowns
vast numbers of marine creatures.
301
00:45:06,200 --> 00:45:11,120
But it may have even more widespread
and far-reaching consequences.
302
00:45:19,400 --> 00:45:22,800
A pod of short-finned pilot whales.
303
00:45:22,800 --> 00:45:25,200
THEY CLICK AND BUZZ
304
00:45:31,400 --> 00:45:34,280
They live together
in what are, perhaps,
305
00:45:34,280 --> 00:45:37,680
the most closely knit of families
in the whole ocean.
306
00:45:45,040 --> 00:45:49,800
Today, in the Atlantic waters
off Europe, as elsewhere,
307
00:45:49,800 --> 00:45:53,160
they have to share the ocean
with plastic.
308
00:46:03,960 --> 00:46:07,600
A mother is holding
her newborn young.
309
00:46:10,560 --> 00:46:12,280
It's dead.
310
00:46:23,240 --> 00:46:25,880
She is reluctant to let it go
311
00:46:25,880 --> 00:46:29,800
and has been carrying
it around for many days.
312
00:46:38,760 --> 00:46:41,360
In top predators like these,
313
00:46:41,360 --> 00:46:44,720
industrial chemicals
can build up to lethal levels...
314
00:46:51,480 --> 00:46:54,280
..and plastic
could be part of the problem.
315
00:46:58,240 --> 00:46:59,880
As plastic breaks down,
316
00:46:59,880 --> 00:47:02,720
it combines with these other
pollutants
317
00:47:02,720 --> 00:47:06,480
that are consumed by vast numbers
of marine creatures.
318
00:47:19,480 --> 00:47:22,720
It's possible her calf
may have been poisoned
319
00:47:22,720 --> 00:47:25,480
by her own contaminated milk.
320
00:47:36,800 --> 00:47:40,480
Pilot whales have big brains.
321
00:47:40,480 --> 00:47:44,000
They can certainly
experience emotions.
322
00:47:46,200 --> 00:47:48,480
Judging from the behaviour
of the adults,
323
00:47:48,480 --> 00:47:52,680
the loss of the infant
has affected the entire family.
324
00:48:00,280 --> 00:48:04,160
Unless the flow of plastics
and industrial pollution
325
00:48:04,160 --> 00:48:07,320
into the world's oceans is reduced,
326
00:48:07,320 --> 00:48:11,800
marine life will be poisoned
by them for many centuries to come.
327
00:48:18,080 --> 00:48:22,600
The creatures that live in the
big blue are perhaps more remote
328
00:48:22,600 --> 00:48:24,760
than any animals on the planet.
329
00:48:28,440 --> 00:48:30,680
But not remote enough, it seems,
330
00:48:30,680 --> 00:48:35,720
to escape the effects of what
we are doing to their world.
331
00:49:03,000 --> 00:49:06,520
The biggest challenge of filming
in the vastness of the open ocean
332
00:49:06,520 --> 00:49:08,400
is to find your subject...
333
00:49:12,920 --> 00:49:15,440
..and the Blue Planet team
wanted to film
334
00:49:15,440 --> 00:49:18,320
one of the most elusive of them all,
335
00:49:18,320 --> 00:49:22,360
the rarely witnessed "boiling sea".
336
00:49:27,200 --> 00:49:31,160
Until now, this feeding frenzy
has been the stuff of legends.
337
00:49:36,600 --> 00:49:40,760
After some promising sightings off
the north-east coast of Australia,
338
00:49:40,760 --> 00:49:42,520
the team heads out to investigate.
339
00:49:46,640 --> 00:49:49,400
We know it's a phenomenon,
we know it's out there,
340
00:49:49,400 --> 00:49:51,160
the scientists have documented it,
341
00:49:51,160 --> 00:49:53,320
the fishermen have told us about it,
342
00:49:53,320 --> 00:49:57,320
so we know it's happening,
but no-one has been crazy enough
343
00:49:57,320 --> 00:50:01,160
to attempt to go out there and
actually film it - except for us.
344
00:50:03,000 --> 00:50:07,640
The team start their search
100 miles out in the Pacific Ocean.
345
00:50:10,680 --> 00:50:13,400
The reason it's called a
"boiling sea" is that the tuna
346
00:50:13,400 --> 00:50:16,280
are actually coming out of the water
347
00:50:16,280 --> 00:50:19,880
and attacking lanternfish
and it creates a lot of white water.
348
00:50:23,040 --> 00:50:25,200
To film the boiling seas,
349
00:50:25,200 --> 00:50:28,840
the team must first find
a large shoal of bait fish,
350
00:50:28,840 --> 00:50:31,200
most likely to be lanternfish
351
00:50:31,200 --> 00:50:33,520
rising to the surface
at night to spawn.
352
00:50:35,200 --> 00:50:36,440
A few days out,
353
00:50:36,440 --> 00:50:42,080
Adrian thinks he may have spotted
a giant shoal on the echo-sounder.
354
00:50:42,080 --> 00:50:44,920
What we're seeing is
a very, very dense layer
355
00:50:44,920 --> 00:50:46,960
at about 200 metres' water depth.
356
00:50:46,960 --> 00:50:49,880
And so, the fact that we've got
this would suggest
357
00:50:49,880 --> 00:50:54,960
that we have a very deep
and dense layer of fish.
358
00:50:54,960 --> 00:50:59,000
One of the best ways to film
at such depths in the open ocean
359
00:50:59,000 --> 00:51:03,440
is to use an ROV -
a remotely operated vehicle -
360
00:51:03,440 --> 00:51:05,320
carrying a light-sensitive camera.
361
00:51:08,480 --> 00:51:11,400
But working with such heavy
equipment in the high seas
362
00:51:11,400 --> 00:51:13,320
is a risky operation.
363
00:51:14,320 --> 00:51:17,120
CLANK, LOUD THUD
364
00:51:27,240 --> 00:51:30,800
Fortunately,
a team of technicians is on hand,
365
00:51:30,800 --> 00:51:34,400
and 24 hours later,
they're ready to relaunch.
366
00:51:38,680 --> 00:51:40,360
Adrian drops them on top
367
00:51:40,360 --> 00:51:43,360
of what he hopes is a
large shoal of lanternfish.
368
00:51:45,000 --> 00:51:47,720
Good news is,
we've just put the ROV down,
369
00:51:47,720 --> 00:51:49,720
we're down at 250 metres,
370
00:51:49,720 --> 00:51:52,560
which means we've gone
to almost the end of the cable
371
00:51:52,560 --> 00:51:55,040
and nothing's blown up
so we're back in business.
372
00:51:57,520 --> 00:51:59,640
But there's almost nothing there,
373
00:51:59,640 --> 00:52:01,600
just a thick layer of plankton.
374
00:52:06,680 --> 00:52:08,200
Over the next three weeks,
375
00:52:08,200 --> 00:52:10,840
they don't find
a single lanternfish.
376
00:52:18,680 --> 00:52:20,600
This trip is the perfect
illustration
377
00:52:20,600 --> 00:52:22,480
of why we know
so little about the ocean -
378
00:52:22,480 --> 00:52:23,960
we came out looking for something,
379
00:52:23,960 --> 00:52:25,920
we've searched and
searched and searched,
380
00:52:25,920 --> 00:52:27,280
and we still haven't found it
381
00:52:27,280 --> 00:52:29,720
even with every single tool
you could wish for.
382
00:52:29,720 --> 00:52:32,600
As it turned out,
the team had been filming
383
00:52:32,600 --> 00:52:34,840
at the very start of El Nino -
384
00:52:34,840 --> 00:52:37,560
an unpredictable climatic event
385
00:52:37,560 --> 00:52:40,320
when sea temperatures
can suddenly rise
386
00:52:40,320 --> 00:52:42,600
and disrupt
the spawning behaviour of fish.
387
00:52:46,200 --> 00:52:49,520
It would be 18 months
before conditions would improve
388
00:52:49,520 --> 00:52:52,240
and the team could
continue their quest.
389
00:52:57,480 --> 00:53:01,080
The other side of the Pacific Ocean,
off Costa Rica.
390
00:53:06,640 --> 00:53:09,720
This time, rather than
searching for their prey,
391
00:53:09,720 --> 00:53:12,760
the team are looking
for their predators.
392
00:53:12,760 --> 00:53:15,800
BUZZING AND CLICKING
393
00:53:24,800 --> 00:53:26,560
But in the endless blue,
394
00:53:26,560 --> 00:53:30,200
even finding a massive pod
of dolphins isn't easy.
395
00:53:34,440 --> 00:53:38,120
20 miles offshore,
series producer Mark Brownlow
396
00:53:38,120 --> 00:53:40,480
leads an aerial filming team
397
00:53:40,480 --> 00:53:42,920
scanning thousands
of square miles of ocean...
398
00:53:46,440 --> 00:53:48,320
..but there's not a dolphin
in sight.
399
00:54:00,640 --> 00:54:03,840
Day three, no spinner dolphins.
400
00:54:05,720 --> 00:54:07,440
Getting worried now...
401
00:54:12,400 --> 00:54:15,520
Finally, after ten days
on the open ocean,
402
00:54:15,520 --> 00:54:17,920
they get their reward.
403
00:54:20,280 --> 00:54:22,240
OK, dolphins!
404
00:54:23,680 --> 00:54:24,880
Woohoo!
405
00:54:24,880 --> 00:54:26,240
Yes!
406
00:54:26,240 --> 00:54:27,600
Spinners!
407
00:54:31,720 --> 00:54:36,320
With dolphins in sight, the dive
team race to intercept them.
408
00:54:37,960 --> 00:54:39,440
Spinners, look!
409
00:54:41,240 --> 00:54:45,280
The plan is to film the dolphins'
feeding frenzy from underwater.
410
00:54:48,160 --> 00:54:50,680
Several hundred dolphins
jumping all over the place,
411
00:54:50,680 --> 00:54:52,640
it looks like this could be it.
412
00:54:56,800 --> 00:54:58,760
They catch up with the dolphins.
413
00:55:02,880 --> 00:55:04,800
But they're too late.
414
00:55:08,920 --> 00:55:10,240
Ah, dear.
415
00:55:10,240 --> 00:55:12,440
Nothing, Rog? Just...nothing.
416
00:55:12,440 --> 00:55:14,360
Just fish scales and bones,
417
00:55:14,360 --> 00:55:16,440
it's like turning up at a battle
418
00:55:16,440 --> 00:55:18,520
just to see
all the dead bodies left over.
419
00:55:20,280 --> 00:55:23,160
To stand a chance of filming
the dolphins' feeding,
420
00:55:23,160 --> 00:55:25,880
the dive team need
to be more proactive.
421
00:55:34,080 --> 00:55:37,320
Rachel hitches a ride,
following them underwater,
422
00:55:37,320 --> 00:55:40,280
searching for any clue
to where they might go next.
423
00:55:51,800 --> 00:55:55,720
Finally,
after three weeks of searching,
424
00:55:55,720 --> 00:56:00,360
the dive team catch a huge
feeding event,
425
00:56:00,360 --> 00:56:03,600
a massive shoal of lanternfish
426
00:56:03,600 --> 00:56:06,160
being rounded up by hundreds
of spinner dolphins.
427
00:56:10,800 --> 00:56:13,040
That was incredibly intense.
428
00:56:13,040 --> 00:56:14,640
A very large bait ball
429
00:56:14,640 --> 00:56:17,680
spread over probably the size
of a football field.
430
00:56:20,160 --> 00:56:23,080
Things coming in and over
your shoulder, over your head,
431
00:56:23,080 --> 00:56:24,360
it was incredible.
432
00:56:28,080 --> 00:56:29,360
For the first time,
433
00:56:29,360 --> 00:56:33,480
the aerial team can record
the epic scale of this spectacle.
434
00:56:33,480 --> 00:56:37,800
You know, we heard these stories
of boiling seas, but it's real!
435
00:56:37,800 --> 00:56:39,720
They're huge.
436
00:56:41,680 --> 00:56:44,800
The vastness of the ocean wilderness
437
00:56:44,800 --> 00:56:47,720
made capturing this extraordinary
event a great challenge.
438
00:56:51,880 --> 00:56:53,840
But this is the reward,
439
00:56:53,840 --> 00:56:56,440
a moment of unparalleled drama
440
00:56:56,440 --> 00:56:59,840
in the immense expanse
of the big blue.
441
00:57:05,000 --> 00:57:09,880
Next time, we journey
into the bountiful green sea.
442
00:57:12,880 --> 00:57:17,600
These are enchanted worlds,
home to strange creatures...
443
00:57:21,000 --> 00:57:25,520
..where only the most
ingenious will triumph.
34383
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