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Birds calling
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Man speaking native language
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Narrator: Patagonia's
forests are magical places.
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Here, age-old relationships between animals,
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people, and trees still survive.
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These bonds are needed like never before...
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...as these ancient forests
face unprecedented threats.
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At the ends of
the Earth is a land of extremes...
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...nome to spectacular wildlife.
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For centuries, people and animals
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have battled for supremacy.
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But now enemies are becoming allies.
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Together, they face new challenges...
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...Iin our rapidly changing world.
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You are at the mercy of the elements.
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Narrator: This is
the story of what it takes to survive...
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...on the edge of the world.
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Birds calling
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Patagonia's forests are
filled with fascinating wildlife
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and jaw-dropping vistas...
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...unlike anywhere else on Earth.
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We're on a journey of discovery
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through Patagonia's wild woodlands...
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... from its northern rainforests
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to the tip of South America,
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where the trees have to
tough out long, freezing winters.
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Forests filled with
a host of miraculous creatures...
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...many found nowhere else on Earth.
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Today, though, these
ancient woodlands are under siege,
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sometimes from surprising threats.
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These are araucarias,
Patagonia's most iconic trees.
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Because of their intricate branching,
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they're also known as "monkey puzzles."
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Found only in southern South America,
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they were once far more common.
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They're hanging on in a few remote spots,
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peppered along
the slopes of Patagonia's volcanoes
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in both Chile and Argentina.
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Reaching up to 160 feet,
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these giants are
survivors from the Jurassic era
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more than 145 million years ago.
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Distinct spiny leaves evolved as a defense
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against hungry long-necked dinosaurs.
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But today's visitors are less destructive...
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Birds squawking
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...though they do raise a racket.
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Squawking continues |
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Austral parakeets โโ
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the southernmost species of parrot on Earth.
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A restless bunch, they flit from tree to tree
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in flocks of up to 15 birds.
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When they find a good feeding spot,
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numbers can swell to over 100.
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Their preferred way
to fatten up for the winter?
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Gorging on monkey puzzle pine nuts.
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In return, the birds
spread the seeds far and wide.
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But the parakeets aren't
the only ones here for the harvest.
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The Mapuche - indigenous people
who have lived here
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for almost 3,000 years.
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They rely on these seeds for food...
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...grinding them into flour to make bread.
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The Mapuches' unique bond
with the trees was almost broken.
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For hundreds of years, European colonizers
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stole their land and forests,
stripping them for lumber.
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And the devastation
continued through the 1990s.
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Petrona Pellao watched as homes were torched
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and many of her relatives
fled to neighboring countries.
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But she remained to defend her community
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and the trees.
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Pellao speaking native language
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Narrator: In recent decades,
the Mapuche battled with loggers
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and the government,
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demanding legal protection for the trees.
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And they won.
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Today, these once
besieged monkey puzzle forests
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are protected by law across Patagonia,
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to the relief of parrots and humans alike.
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But while these giants may
yet survive for more millennia...
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...one of Patagonia's tiniest creatures
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could really use a helping hand.
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Narrator: The wild forests of Patagonia...
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...a vast region straddling
southern Chile and Argentina.
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North to south, it's over 1,000 miles,
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more than 200 miles longer than California,
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and its mountain spine is blanketed
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by distinct forest kingdoms.
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In the north, nestled in a narrow strip
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between the mountains
and the warm waters of the Pacific
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is the Valdivian rainforest.
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Bordered by ice caps, oceans, and deserts,
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it has been cut off from the outside world
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for millions of years.
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This is the forest that time forgot...
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...nome to tiny, magical creatures...
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...many found nowhere else on Earth.
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Only 13 inches high,
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say hello to the world's smallest deer...
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...the southern pudu.
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This miniature mom has her fawn in tow.
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They'll stay close for up to a year.
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But pudus aren't the only tiny marvels here.
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Insects chirping
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This elusive speedster
is the monito del monte.
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It's a marsupial,
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raising its young in
pouches like koalas and kangaroos.
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The monito is the only
creature in South America
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to truly hibernate.
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Remarkably, it's lived
here virtually unchanged
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for 60 million years.
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Biologist Robert Nespolo
studies animal metabolism.
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He first encountered one
of these puzzling little creatures
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at the start of his career.
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The monito's ability to
survive the winter fascinated him,
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and he made it his life's work to figure out
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exactly how they pull it off.
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Solve the mystery, and it might just help us
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to better understand our own metabolism.
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Roberto quickly discovered that monitos
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really know how to pack on the pounds.
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Nespolo speaking Spanish
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Narrator: Like all monitos,
this tiny critter is nocturnal.
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To learn its secrets, Roberto and his team
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leave out baited cage traps overnight.
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Insects chirping
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This little guy just
couldn't resist a free meal.
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Now he's ready to be weighed and measured.
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Narrator: Hibernation has enabled monitos
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to survive the winters here.
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Narrator:
The truth is
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the monito's future is looking bleak.
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Their forest home is being
cut down to make way for farmland.
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But Roberto remains optimistic.
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Just as the monito has
Roberto fighting for its protection...
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...other creatures also have
champions going the extra mile.
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Narrator: Summer in the magnificent
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ancient Valdivian rainforest.
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Birds calling
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Tapping
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Everyone's making
the most of the good weather.
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Magellanic woodpeckers...
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...they're
South America's largest woodpecker,
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up to a foot and a half tall.
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Dad sports a scarlet hood...
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...while mom's feathers are all black.
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They're kept busy by their growing chick.
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He's beginning to get his own red crest,
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but his face still has some black feathers.
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He has a way to go.
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Magellanic woodpecker couples are monogamous,
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defending their territory
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and sharing parenting
duties for over two years.
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The family depends on old-growth forest
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with plenty of rotting wood
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teeming with juicy insects and grubs.
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The hungry chick gives it a shot.
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Right idea...
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...wrong wood.
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It's not rotten enough.
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Dad shows him how it's done...
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...displaying his well-honed
technique as he digs out grubs.
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The chick's got a lot
to learn before he can fend for himself.
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While woodpeckers stand out among the trees,
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the Valdivian rainforest is a sanctuary
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for an extraordinary number
of smaller, less obvious species...
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...many still undiscovered...
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...which attracts
intrepid scientists like Isai Madriz.
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Isai explores extreme environments,
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searching for some of
the Earth's least loved creatures...
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...bugs.
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His passion began in college
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when he first looked at one
through a microscope.
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Madriz: | started
seeing how beautiful they were.
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A bug could be as beautiful
as any mammal you might like.
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Narrator: His mission
to track down new species
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has led him to
Alerce Andino National Park in Chile.
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Madriz: This forest is special
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because it's
considered a biodiversity hotspot.
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If you're looking for insects,
this is the place to be.
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Narrator: Today Isai is on the hunt
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for a bug he's never captured before...
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...a primitive cranefly.
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It's lived here for millions of years.
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Like the monito, it's virtually unchanged
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since the time of the dinosaurs.
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Being nocturnal,
the cranefly is tricky to find
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and even trickier to catch.
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Isai uses a light trap.
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A small light bulb on top
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attracts the night-flying insects,
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and a fan sucks them in.
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The next morning, he checks the trap,
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hoping to find a new friend.
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Very careful so | don't damage the legs.
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Wow.
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So beautiful.
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Narrator: Isai has finally caught
one of these incredibly rare insects.
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Madriz: What makes this
species of primitive cranefly
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that we're after special
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is it's the largest
species of that entire family.
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Narrator: Some would
assume it's simply a pest,
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but every creature here in
the forest has a part to play.
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Isai sees the craneflies
as the forest's cleaning crew.
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Their larvae chew up dead trees,
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helping them to rot
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and stopping them from damming up the rivers.
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He believes these tiny insects
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may support the whole rainforest.
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Madriz: This could have a huge impact
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in the biodiversity that you see in rivers
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in this part of the world.
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Narrator: Species
that play vital roles in the forest
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are worth seeking out and saving.
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All the evidence
that | am finding doing my fieldwork
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leads to conservation.
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If you don't know what's out there,
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you cannot preserve those species.
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If it's been around for millions of years,
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that means they're hugely
important for this ecosystem.
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We just don't know about it yet.
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Narrator: Isai isn't the only one hunting
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for extraordinary creatures.
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Further south, a man is on a mission
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to see one of
Patagonia's most elusive predators.
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Narrator: The vast and
magical Valdivian rainforest
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is home to many fascinating creatures...
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...like this peculiar
pocket-sized predator โ-
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the kodkod.
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They may look cute,
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but kodkods are ruthless Killers...
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...often preying on poultry...
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...which puts them on the locals' hit list.
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Kodkods are now threatened with extinction.
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One man has become their defender โโ
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Fernando Vidal.
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He's given up his life as a pilot,
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devoting himself to looking after
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captured and injured kodkods.
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It all started when he was 12 years old
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and he tried to persuade neighbors
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not to Kill the kodkod
raiding their chicken coop.
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Little did he know
their futures would become so entwined.
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Surprisingly little is
known about these wild cats.
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Vidal speaking Spanish
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Narrator: To try and understand them,
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Fernando wants to
observe kodkods behaving naturally,
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without fear of persecution.
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He's had a tip-off that some cats
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have been spotted 400 miles to the south
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in Laguna San Rafael National Park.
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He's got five days to try to find them.
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But it won't be easy.
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Kodkods are so elusive,
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some call them "the ghosts of the forest."
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Fernando spends the next
four days combing the forest
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for tracks and signs,
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trying to stay optimistic.
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But the tiny cats always seem one step ahead.
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00:25:59,975 --> 00:26:02,519
It's Fernando's fifth and final day...
259
00:26:04,772 --> 00:26:07,816
...his last chance to see a kodkod here.
260
00:26:13,155 --> 00:26:14,615
After searching all day,
261
00:26:16,575 --> 00:26:19,244
he finds evidence that he's getting close.
262
00:26:21,830 --> 00:26:23,373
Vidal speaking Spanish
263
00:26:39,973 --> 00:26:44,728
As the evening
approaches and hope begins to fade...
264
00:27:03,080 --> 00:27:05,499
...it's the rarest of the rare โโ
265
00:27:06,250 --> 00:27:09,503
a melanistic, or black, kodkod.
266
00:27:20,139 --> 00:27:22,641
This is almost certainly the first time
267
00:27:22,891 --> 00:27:26,979
a melanistic kodkod
has been fimed in the wild.
268
00:27:28,772 --> 00:27:30,941
Vidal speaking Spanish
269
00:27:52,087 --> 00:27:54,047
NF-Tag= o g
Though it was just a glimpse,
270
00:27:54,131 --> 00:27:58,510
seeing a wild kodkod unafraid of humans
271
00:27:58,594 --> 00:28:02,306
gives Fernando hope for
the future of these little cats.
272
00:28:14,651 --> 00:28:16,570
30 miles to the south,
273
00:28:16,987 --> 00:28:20,532
Patagonia's forests
are preparing for winter...
274
00:28:23,368 --> 00:28:27,206
...and life for one of
its most endangered creatures
275
00:28:27,956 --> 00:28:29,499
is about to change...
276
00:28:30,584 --> 00:28:31,793
forever.
277
00:28:41,845 --> 00:28:43,347
Narrator: Though summer's nearly over
278
00:28:43,430 --> 00:28:45,182
in Patagonia's mountain forests,
279
00:28:46,350 --> 00:28:49,895
temperatures are still
pushing 90 degrees Fahrenheit.
280
00:28:49,978 --> 00:28:51,855
Bird screeches
281
00:28:51,939 --> 00:28:54,483
Young pumas are getting older
282
00:28:54,566 --> 00:28:56,026
and bolder...
283
00:29:01,907 --> 00:29:04,117
...honing their climbing skills.
284
00:29:16,129 --> 00:29:18,340
But their claws are no defense
285
00:29:18,423 --> 00:29:21,009
against the season's greatest threat.
286
00:29:27,349 --> 00:29:29,268
Thunder rumbles
287
00:29:30,477 --> 00:29:32,521
The forests are tinder dry.
288
00:29:34,022 --> 00:29:35,190
All it takes...
289
00:29:35,274 --> 00:29:36,733
Thunder crashes
290
00:29:36,817 --> 00:29:37,818
...iIs a spark.
291
00:29:49,079 --> 00:29:51,331
Devastating fires are all too common
292
00:29:51,415 --> 00:29:53,417
in Patagonia's drier forests.
293
00:29:56,003 --> 00:29:58,213
Though lightning starts a few of them,
294
00:29:58,463 --> 00:30:01,633
more than 90% are caused by humans,
295
00:30:01,925 --> 00:30:06,555
either accidentally or
to clear land for grazing.
296
00:30:15,814 --> 00:30:19,985
Every year, tens of
thousands of acres of forest
297
00:30:20,277 --> 00:30:21,737
are turned to ash.
298
00:30:26,074 --> 00:30:29,619
Fires are even a problem in
the colder regions of Patagonia.
299
00:30:31,621 --> 00:30:33,415
At the far end of the continent,
300
00:30:34,166 --> 00:30:38,920
majestic southern beech
forests stretch for nearly 700 miles
301
00:30:39,463 --> 00:30:41,381
down towards the Antarctic.
302
00:30:52,225 --> 00:30:56,146
Autumn's here, so
deciduous trees prepare for winter...
303
00:30:58,315 --> 00:31:01,026
...drawing back nutrients from their leaves.
304
00:31:04,112 --> 00:31:05,030
The result?
305
00:31:07,240 --> 00:31:09,451
A stunning blanket of color
306
00:31:10,702 --> 00:31:13,914
rivaling any tree-scape on Earth.
307
00:31:22,464 --> 00:31:26,009
But this magical display doesn't last long.
308
00:31:27,135 --> 00:31:29,304
WIind whistling
309
00:31:33,767 --> 00:31:36,478
The first snows of winter have arrived.
310
00:31:40,273 --> 00:31:42,776
For ranger Daniel Valazquez Romero,
311
00:31:43,151 --> 00:31:44,861
it's a special time of year.
312
00:31:49,783 --> 00:31:52,285
He used to be a commercial sheep rancher,
313
00:31:52,744 --> 00:31:56,206
but his love of nature
has led him to a new calling...
314
00:31:58,500 --> 00:32:02,421
...rounding up a very
different kind of creature...
315
00:32:05,382 --> 00:32:09,052
...the incredibly rare south Andean deer,
316
00:32:10,595 --> 00:32:11,805
the huemul.
317
00:32:14,683 --> 00:32:16,476
Their short legs and stocky build
318
00:32:16,560 --> 00:32:20,147
are perfectly adapted
for life in upland forests.
319
00:32:24,985 --> 00:32:26,611
Daniel uses radio-tracking collars
320
00:32:26,945 --> 00:32:29,072
to follow them over the rough terrain.
321
00:32:31,116 --> 00:32:33,368
They're necessary for their survival.
322
00:32:35,328 --> 00:32:37,414
Poaching and habitat loss
323
00:32:37,497 --> 00:32:40,917
has driven the huemul
to the brink of extinction.
324
00:32:42,085 --> 00:32:44,504
Fewer than 1,500 remain โ
325
00:32:44,713 --> 00:32:48,091
just 1% of their former population โ
326
00:32:48,925 --> 00:32:53,972
making them one of
the rarest mammals on the planet.
327
00:32:56,850 --> 00:33:00,395
At the start of winter,
Daniel fits the young huemuls
328
00:33:00,479 --> 00:33:02,939
with their first radio-tracking collars.
329
00:33:04,733 --> 00:33:07,569
He's joined by
colleague and wildlife veterinarian
330
00:33:07,652 --> 00:33:09,404
Cristian Saucedo.
331
00:33:10,489 --> 00:33:12,282
They've both dedicated their lives
332
00:33:12,365 --> 00:33:16,077
to a project that is transforming Patagonia.
333
00:33:21,791 --> 00:33:23,793
In a ground-breaking partnership,
334
00:33:24,127 --> 00:33:26,630
the governments of Chile and Argentina
335
00:33:26,838 --> 00:33:30,592
have teamed up with
the charity Tompkins Conservation.
336
00:33:32,552 --> 00:33:33,595
Their mission?
337
00:33:33,678 --> 00:33:37,015
To rewild vast areas of former farmland.
338
00:33:41,186 --> 00:33:43,355
Cristian is in charge of the project,
339
00:33:43,438 --> 00:33:45,774
hoping to save the huemul.
340
00:33:46,525 --> 00:33:48,693
Cristian:
341
00:34:10,507 --> 00:34:11,758
Narrator:
To do this...
342
00:34:14,803 --> 00:34:17,097
...Cristian must take drastic measures.
343
00:34:30,402 --> 00:34:31,528
Radio beeps
344
00:34:34,656 --> 00:34:37,367
This year's fawns need
to be darted and sedated.
345
00:34:44,165 --> 00:34:47,335
It may look dramatic,
but it's harmless for the deer.
346
00:34:50,505 --> 00:34:51,715
They get a health check
347
00:34:52,173 --> 00:34:54,634
and a collar that will help keep them safe.
348
00:34:57,178 --> 00:34:59,931
Cristian
349
00:35:14,362 --> 00:35:16,698
Narrator:
For this new generation of huemuls,
350
00:35:16,865 --> 00:35:18,450
life will now be a little safer
351
00:35:18,533 --> 00:35:21,077
with Cristian and Daniel watching over them.
352
00:35:29,794 --> 00:35:32,380
But for another of Patagonia's forests,
353
00:35:32,964 --> 00:35:34,841
the future is less certain.
354
00:35:37,469 --> 00:35:38,928
In the far south,
355
00:35:39,429 --> 00:35:42,641
an unwelcome developer is causing big trouble
356
00:35:44,017 --> 00:35:46,353
with deadly consequences.
357
00:36:00,533 --> 00:36:02,661
Narrator: In Patagonia's far south
358
00:36:02,911 --> 00:36:04,788
sits Tierra del Fuego,
359
00:36:06,456 --> 00:36:08,249
a rugged collection of islands
360
00:36:08,333 --> 00:36:11,711
covering almost 30,000 square miles.
361
00:36:14,130 --> 00:36:18,468
In Karukinka Park,
winter's icy grip is tightening.
362
00:36:28,645 --> 00:36:30,605
Beavers are getting busy.
363
00:36:34,901 --> 00:36:37,404
And their numbers are booming...
364
00:36:39,781 --> 00:36:41,032
...which is a problem,
365
00:36:41,491 --> 00:36:43,827
because they're not supposed to be here.
366
00:36:48,248 --> 00:36:52,627
el IggElElgl eIt
chewing is decimating the forests.
367
00:37:04,556 --> 00:37:08,143
INn 1946, just 10 pairs of beavers
368
00:37:08,226 --> 00:37:10,353
were imported here from Canada.
369
00:37:11,062 --> 00:37:14,691
The idea was to launch a new fur trade.
370
00:37:16,651 --> 00:37:19,821
No one realized how
much damage beavers can do
371
00:37:19,904 --> 00:37:22,991
if left unchecked by predators.
372
00:37:27,078 --> 00:37:32,417
Today, more than 100,000
beavers are ravaging Patagonia.
373
00:37:35,253 --> 00:37:39,591
There's no easy solution,
as Cristobal Arredondo
374
00:37:39,674 --> 00:37:43,052
from the Wildlife Conservation Society
RV VY =
375
00:37:46,097 --> 00:37:48,433
Arredondo speaking Spanish
376
00:37:57,358 --> 00:37:59,611
Narrator: Unlike
their North American cousins,
377
00:37:59,694 --> 00:38:03,072
these trees can't grow
new shoots from chewed stumps.
378
00:38:04,783 --> 00:38:08,703
And in waterlogged
conditions, they simply drown.
379
00:38:11,080 --> 00:38:14,626
Thousands of acres of
trees are dying every year,
380
00:38:15,502 --> 00:38:19,798
driving Cristobal and
his team to do the unthinkable...
381
00:38:26,054 --> 00:38:27,847
...exterminate the invaders.
382
00:38:29,682 --> 00:38:30,892
They set up humane
383
00:38:32,227 --> 00:38:33,603
but lethal traps.
384
00:38:46,825 --> 00:38:49,619
Only then can they destroy the beaver dams.
385
00:39:02,715 --> 00:39:06,469
Finally, the forest
waters can flow freely again.
386
00:39:12,141 --> 00:39:14,394
Eradicating the beavers will be tough,
387
00:39:15,937 --> 00:39:18,189
but it's important work,
388
00:39:19,065 --> 00:39:21,276
not just for this wilderness,
389
00:39:21,693 --> 00:39:22,819
but for the planet.
390
00:39:24,904 --> 00:39:28,700
Patagonia's vast forests,
like the jungles of the Amazon,
391
00:39:29,075 --> 00:39:31,369
trap huge amounts of carbon,
392
00:39:31,828 --> 00:39:34,205
helping to fight climate change.
393
00:39:35,248 --> 00:39:37,208
Cristobal speaking Spanish
394
00:40:04,027 --> 00:40:06,696
NF-Tag= o g
Only now are we waking up to the importance
395
00:40:06,779 --> 00:40:09,324
of protecting Patagonia's forests.
396
00:40:13,995 --> 00:40:16,998
But some have known
how vital they are all along.
397
00:40:20,752 --> 00:40:22,670
In the monkey puzzle forests,
398
00:40:22,921 --> 00:40:27,383
conservation has been
going on unnoticed for generations.
399
00:40:30,678 --> 00:40:33,473
Petrona Pellao and her Mapuche community
400
00:40:33,556 --> 00:40:36,309
have been taking care
of their trees for hundreds,
401
00:40:36,392 --> 00:40:38,978
if not thousands, of years.
402
00:40:43,358 --> 00:40:47,236
Pellao speaking native language
403
00:41:10,802 --> 00:41:13,137
Narrator: The respect
the Mapuche show for their trees
404
00:41:13,221 --> 00:41:16,057
demonstrates how forests can survive...
405
00:41:17,934 --> 00:41:23,314
...and thrive long into the future.
406
00:41:36,494 --> 00:41:39,956
Next on "Patagonia: Life
on the Edge of the World,"
407
00:41:41,833 --> 00:41:43,584
we go behind the scenes...
408
00:41:43,668 --> 00:41:45,003
@s!
409
00:41:46,421 --> 00:41:49,048
...and reveal how
our crews battle the elements...
410
00:41:49,632 --> 00:41:51,009
@s!
411
00:41:53,219 --> 00:41:55,722
...to film the animals and the people
412
00:41:55,930 --> 00:41:59,225
who live in one of
the wildest places on Earth.
413
00:42:02,645 --> 00:42:03,813
Whispering Stay still.
414
00:42:04,230 --> 00:42:05,690
You don't run.
31749
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