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Australia -
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an island continent
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cast adrift
during the time of the dinosaurs.
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00:01:05,760 --> 00:01:11,280
Isolated from the rest of life on land
for millions of years,
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the animals cast away here
are today like none elsewhere.
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This is a land of survivors.
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The jungles of northern Australia -
the oldest on our planet.
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Unchanged for 180 million years.
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The animals and plants here are armed...
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...built to live alongside dinosaurs.
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Now there is just one giant left.
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With claws longer than a velociraptor
and nearly two metres tall...
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...the cassowary rules this forest.
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(BOOMING CALL)
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But the key to its success
is not its stature...
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...it's the male's abilities as a parent.
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This one's chicks are six weeks old,
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and he will raise them by himself.
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Every morsel of food is valuable
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if his chicks are to grow up
tall and strong.
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But in this forest,
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most of the fruit
is too big for the chicks.
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It must be cut up for them.
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There is food to be gathered
throughout their territory...
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...but it's not easy to find.
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He shows them how to cross water.
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But when your legs are only 20cm long,
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a stream like this is very deep.
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One takes the plunge...
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...but for the other,
this is too daunting.
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He turns and goes back the way he came.
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Out of sight and without
his father's protection,
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he's vulnerable.
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Only half of cassowary chicks
make it to adulthood...
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...and for very good reason.
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Australia's prehistoric forests
are still full of predators.
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(CHEEPS)
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Many manage to survive here
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by eating almost anything
that's smaller than they are.
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- He needs to find his father...
- (CHEEPS)
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...and quickly.
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(CHEEPS)
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The male hears his cries and answers...
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...using a special call that carries well
through the thick forest.
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(THROATY CALL)
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And then a glimpse of some reassuring
bright colours.
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Their bonds are stronger than their fears.
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The male will guide and protect his chicks
for another eight months
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before he mates again.
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Australia was once part of
the vast supercontinent of Gondwanaland...
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- (THUNDER RUMBLES)
- ...covered in forest and full of life.
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Dinosaurs dominated.
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Mammals had only just appeared.
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Then Australia began to break away.
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Cast adrift on this new island were
reptiles, birds and early mammals
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that then evolved in isolation
from the rest of the world.
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None could now leave this giant island,
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and very few could get here...
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...unless they could fly.
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A little red flying fox.
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Their ancestors flew here,
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travelling along the chain
of volcanic islands
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that links Asia to Australia.
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But their huge wings, which stretch
from their fingers to their toes,
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make it difficult for them
to walk or take off from the ground,
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so, when they want to rest,
they hang upside down in trees.
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But the bats have to drink every day.
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And they do so on the wing.
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They swoop just low enough
to wet their bellies
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and then, back in their roosts,
they will suck out the water.
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Each evening, 10,000 of them come here.
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Not all of them return.
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- Every two metres of river, there is...
- (BATS SCREECH)
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...a crocodile.
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They were here long before the bats...
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...survivors from
Australia's prehistoric past.
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00:10:31,680 --> 00:10:36,120
These dramas have been taking place
for millions of years...
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00:10:40,240 --> 00:10:42,280
...aerial agility...
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...versus patience...
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...and deadly speed.
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00:11:05,480 --> 00:11:11,240
Australia's forests are hostile places
in which to make your home.
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As you move inland,
the forest thins, the air cools
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00:11:23,640 --> 00:11:27,600
and the land, as it gets higher,
changes dramatically.
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(WIND BLOWS)
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00:11:39,120 --> 00:11:43,960
The Great Dividing Range,
2,000 metres above the jungle.
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00:11:47,120 --> 00:11:52,080
To survive here, you must be able to
tolerate really harsh conditions.
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00:12:05,880 --> 00:12:10,520
Kangaroos, like nearly all
of the continent's native mammals,
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are marsupials...
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...mammals that rear their young
usually in a pouch on the mother's belly.
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00:12:21,400 --> 00:12:25,480
And the young up here
certainly need such shelter.
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00:12:37,520 --> 00:12:42,240
No kangaroos can survive for long
higher than this.
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00:13:01,200 --> 00:13:05,200
But there is an even tougher marsupial
up here.
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A wombat.
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She usually shelters underground
in a burrow,
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but now that is under a metre of snow,
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together with all the grass
on which she lives.
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She weighs as much a big dog
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and has the legs of a small one -
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not ideal for deep snow.
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Fragments of bark hardly count
even as a snack...
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...and she's hungry.
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00:14:02,280 --> 00:14:04,680
She needs grass.
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00:14:13,200 --> 00:14:17,520
But it's over a mile away,
across a frozen river.
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00:14:21,920 --> 00:14:24,560
Wombats might not be fast,
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00:14:24,600 --> 00:14:26,560
but then they don't need to be up here.
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They can survive on next to nothing.
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A few mouthfuls will be enough food
for over a week.
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00:14:42,080 --> 00:14:46,760
And there's not much competition for it
in this small corner of the continent.
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00:14:54,720 --> 00:14:58,960
Snowy peaks are hardly typical
of Australia,
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00:14:59,000 --> 00:15:02,360
but the Great Dividing Range is a remnant
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of what were once some of
the longest mountain chains on Earth.
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They connected Australia and Antarctica.
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But then these sister continents
broke apart.
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Antarctica, drifting southwards,
became locked in ice.
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00:15:23,320 --> 00:15:27,240
Australia drifted northwards
towards the equator
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and became hotter and drier.
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Woodlands developed,
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and in places where rainfall was low -
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open grasslands.
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00:15:45,400 --> 00:15:47,560
On these grassy plains,
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animals had the space to thrive.
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These are also eastern grey kangaroos,
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and this is their true home.
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00:15:58,440 --> 00:16:01,320
Here, they are well fed and powerful.
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00:16:02,800 --> 00:16:08,920
Adults can stand over two metres tall
and travel as fast as a racehorse.
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00:16:08,960 --> 00:16:11,240
(BIRD SCREECHES)
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00:16:14,160 --> 00:16:16,080
(SCREECHES)
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00:16:16,120 --> 00:16:20,440
And on these open plains,
you need speed...
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00:16:21,800 --> 00:16:27,000
...because where there are large herds,
there will be predators.
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00:16:29,600 --> 00:16:30,600
(DINGO HOWLS)
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Dingoes - descendants of wolves
that were brought here
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00:16:37,040 --> 00:16:41,200
over 4,000 years ago
by human visitors from Asia.
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00:16:45,840 --> 00:16:49,360
This pack is led by a white female...
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...and they are hunting.
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00:17:15,280 --> 00:17:19,520
Creating panic tests the herd.
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00:17:47,560 --> 00:17:50,120
Mothers with young in their pouches
might be slower...
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...but they can still outrun a dingo.
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00:18:00,840 --> 00:18:03,040
Maybe an ambush will work.
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00:18:11,040 --> 00:18:17,040
But even young, newly independent
kangaroos seem uncatchable.
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00:18:23,560 --> 00:18:26,840
Across these open, flat plains,
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the dingoes are just not fast enough.
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00:18:33,320 --> 00:18:37,200
But what makes the white female
their leader is her stamina
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00:18:37,240 --> 00:18:40,760
and, particularly, her intelligence.
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00:18:43,560 --> 00:18:47,880
She has run 18 miles today,
but she still doesn't give up.
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A different group of kangaroos,
this time on uneven ground.
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It's what she's been looking for.
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00:19:08,120 --> 00:19:11,560
Driving them uphill,
she's struggling to keep up with them.
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00:19:29,760 --> 00:19:34,200
And as they hurtle down the other side,
the kangaroos pick up speed.
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They will easily outpace her,
if they stay in control.
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00:20:22,360 --> 00:20:26,600
The white dingo has more than one reason
to be so relentless.
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(PUPS WHINE)
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She's a mother.
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This is a rare sight.
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Dingo pups are hardly ever seen.
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With so much effort for just one meal,
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the open plains are tough places
on which to raise young.
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00:21:01,200 --> 00:21:03,640
These are gumtrees.
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00:21:04,800 --> 00:21:08,120
They have leaves
that are poisonous to most animals.
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00:21:10,080 --> 00:21:12,040
But not the koala.
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00:21:12,080 --> 00:21:14,080
They eat almost nothing else.
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00:21:17,760 --> 00:21:20,440
There are echidnas in these forests, too -
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mammals that don't even have pouches
but lay eggs, like reptiles.
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00:21:33,040 --> 00:21:37,560
And there is an assassin here
that has only recently been discovered.
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00:21:42,720 --> 00:21:45,280
A Jotus jumping spider.
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00:21:47,240 --> 00:21:49,880
She's only 5mm long,
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but, nonetheless,
she's a stealthy and ferocious hunter.
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00:21:56,240 --> 00:21:59,360
She searches for prey
among the grass stems.
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00:22:19,880 --> 00:22:23,480
She's single-minded
and focused on hunting.
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00:22:30,960 --> 00:22:33,000
But today might be different.
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This is something new,
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something fast...
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...and a little trickier.
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00:22:53,880 --> 00:22:55,800
But what is it?
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Is it food?
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00:23:16,800 --> 00:23:21,240
It's a male Jotus, looking for a mate.
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00:23:27,280 --> 00:23:30,480
He needs to catch her attention,
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00:23:30,520 --> 00:23:34,600
but female Jotus only mate once.
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00:23:34,640 --> 00:23:37,800
If she's mated before, she might kill him.
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00:23:41,440 --> 00:23:44,040
He will need to seduce her with care.
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00:23:48,000 --> 00:23:52,400
Waving his arms
makes his intentions clear.
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He's a friend, not food.
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No sign of an attack...yet.
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00:24:06,560 --> 00:24:09,800
But she doesn't seem
particularly impressed.
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00:24:14,240 --> 00:24:17,240
Time to try his best move...
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00:24:18,800 --> 00:24:19,880
...the double paddle.
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00:24:21,320 --> 00:24:23,360
That surely will do the trick.
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One final wave...
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...and he's tamed her.
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00:24:54,440 --> 00:24:57,200
She stays still for just long enough.
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00:25:16,880 --> 00:25:20,760
And then he retreats quickly,
before she has second thoughts.
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00:25:37,280 --> 00:25:40,960
If you travel still further
towards the centre of Australia,
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00:25:41,000 --> 00:25:44,120
the landscape changes yet again.
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00:25:44,160 --> 00:25:46,800
Trees and grass disappear.
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00:25:50,080 --> 00:25:54,240
The continent, throughout prehistory,
continued to drift north,
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00:25:54,280 --> 00:25:58,400
and as it entered the tropics,
it got hotter and hotter.
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00:26:00,160 --> 00:26:04,360
Over thousands of years,
the grasslands of the centre dried,
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00:26:04,400 --> 00:26:06,760
and lakes and rivers turned dust.
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00:26:08,360 --> 00:26:13,720
The rocks have been reduced to sand
by the hot, blasting winds.
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00:26:15,880 --> 00:26:19,800
Now Australia's centre is one vast desert.
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00:26:21,440 --> 00:26:25,040
Its immensity is almost impossible
to comprehend.
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00:26:35,080 --> 00:26:39,160
This train running north
is a half a mile long.
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00:26:42,080 --> 00:26:44,560
Travelling at nearly 50 miles an hour,
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00:26:44,600 --> 00:26:48,160
it takes almost three days
to get from one side to another.
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00:26:56,320 --> 00:27:02,240
Australia today is the driest
inhabited continent on Earth.
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00:27:06,240 --> 00:27:10,280
Rain hardly ever falls in 70% of it.
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00:27:14,240 --> 00:27:19,880
From space, the continent is seen
to be stained red by iron oxide -
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00:27:19,920 --> 00:27:23,120
rust from its disintegrating rocks.
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00:27:26,400 --> 00:27:32,560
In the surface are lines carved by winds
over millennia.
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00:27:33,720 --> 00:27:37,560
The very bones of the continent
are now stripped bare...
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00:27:39,040 --> 00:27:43,240
...the foundations of what once
were mountains.
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00:27:54,840 --> 00:28:00,080
At its heart stands the
great rock mountain of Uluru...
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00:28:03,280 --> 00:28:08,800
...sacred to the first people
to arrive here 60,000 years ago.
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00:28:33,760 --> 00:28:39,040
There is almost no soil here,
few plants, few animals
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00:28:39,080 --> 00:28:41,400
and almost no permanent water.
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00:28:43,680 --> 00:28:47,440
It's a place
where only the toughest can survive.
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00:28:51,920 --> 00:28:55,160
This is the land of reptiles.
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00:28:56,680 --> 00:29:01,080
Australia has more species of them
than any other continent.
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00:29:03,040 --> 00:29:05,320
The perentie, two metres long,
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00:29:05,360 --> 00:29:09,040
is the biggest here, and he's thirsty.
220
00:29:15,920 --> 00:29:19,080
It only rains here once or twice a year.
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00:29:19,120 --> 00:29:22,120
And when there isn't any rain,
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00:29:22,160 --> 00:29:26,280
perenties get their water
from eating lizards.
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00:29:30,800 --> 00:29:34,280
There are several kinds to choose from...
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00:29:37,840 --> 00:29:39,400
...bearded dragons...
225
00:29:42,880 --> 00:29:44,880
...blue-tongued skinks...
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00:29:49,080 --> 00:29:50,560
...and thorny devils.
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00:29:50,600 --> 00:29:52,680
All are on the menu.
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00:29:55,480 --> 00:29:59,640
The thorny devil also gets its water
from its food.
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00:30:05,000 --> 00:30:07,040
It's only the size of a mouse,
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00:30:07,080 --> 00:30:12,400
but, even so, it must eat hundreds of ants
every day to get what it needs.
231
00:30:12,440 --> 00:30:14,560
(THUNDER RUMBLES)
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00:30:19,800 --> 00:30:25,560
Most storm clouds pass by
without releasing any water.
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00:30:29,400 --> 00:30:31,520
But just sometimes,
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00:30:31,560 --> 00:30:34,120
there's a brief shower.
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00:30:57,440 --> 00:31:00,800
Everyone makes the most
of the opportunity.
236
00:31:09,160 --> 00:31:13,640
It's so hot the droplets will disappear
within minutes.
237
00:31:14,720 --> 00:31:17,280
But the thorny devil has a trick.
238
00:31:22,960 --> 00:31:25,400
He's found a tiny puddle,
239
00:31:25,440 --> 00:31:27,400
only a few millimetres deep,
240
00:31:27,440 --> 00:31:29,840
and he dips his toe into it.
241
00:31:41,960 --> 00:31:45,080
His skin is like blotting paper.
242
00:31:50,640 --> 00:31:53,400
It collects moisture by capillary action,
243
00:31:53,440 --> 00:31:58,000
sucking it up along the inter-connecting
grooves until he glistens all over.
244
00:32:02,080 --> 00:32:04,000
When the water reaches his mouth,
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00:32:04,040 --> 00:32:05,360
he can collect it...
246
00:32:06,600 --> 00:32:10,200
...while still keeping his head up,
on the lookout for danger.
247
00:32:13,800 --> 00:32:18,440
The perentie is 200 times the size
of a thorny devil.
248
00:32:18,480 --> 00:32:22,560
Tiny puddles and droplets
are of no use to him.
249
00:32:25,360 --> 00:32:29,360
What he needs is a juicy lizard.
250
00:32:51,160 --> 00:32:55,480
That was a bearded dragon
that wasn't quite quick enough.
251
00:33:03,400 --> 00:33:08,040
Even the perentie sometimes
gets a chance to quench his thirst.
252
00:33:16,000 --> 00:33:21,960
There is one species that has truly
conquered the Australian desert.
253
00:33:24,040 --> 00:33:26,920
They don't wait for water to come to them.
254
00:33:26,960 --> 00:33:32,640
They sometimes travel over 300 miles
in a single day to find it.
255
00:33:34,200 --> 00:33:36,920
Australia's hardiest animal...
256
00:33:38,000 --> 00:33:39,720
(CHIRPS)
257
00:33:39,760 --> 00:33:41,720
...the wild budgerigar...
258
00:33:41,760 --> 00:33:44,840
(BUDGIES CHIRP)
259
00:33:44,880 --> 00:33:48,760
...the most accomplished
of all desert nomads.
260
00:33:48,800 --> 00:33:51,680
These have been travelling together
for weeks...
261
00:33:54,360 --> 00:33:58,240
...and that has evidently caused
a few domestic arguments.
262
00:34:07,280 --> 00:34:11,240
This is truly an immense community.
263
00:34:11,280 --> 00:34:14,760
There are over 10,000 budgies
in this flock.
264
00:34:21,760 --> 00:34:24,320
Every one of them is thirsty.
265
00:34:32,360 --> 00:34:34,880
But although they've found
this billabong...
266
00:34:36,080 --> 00:34:38,080
...they must be wary.
267
00:34:40,560 --> 00:34:43,720
A hawk - and one that eats budgies.
268
00:34:50,320 --> 00:34:55,400
As long as it remains on the ground,
the budgies will risk taking a drink.
269
00:35:14,000 --> 00:35:18,680
Once it takes to the air, however,
the budgies are in danger.
270
00:35:22,200 --> 00:35:25,920
And it's not the only bird of prey here.
271
00:35:27,680 --> 00:35:32,360
The budgies have a simple
but very effective defence -
272
00:35:32,400 --> 00:35:34,240
they all take to the wing at once.
273
00:35:38,360 --> 00:35:42,440
An aerial hunter needs to lock on to
a single target for a few seconds
274
00:35:42,480 --> 00:35:44,400
if it is to catch it,
275
00:35:44,440 --> 00:35:47,400
but in this swirl, that's very hard to do.
276
00:35:57,640 --> 00:36:03,000
Flying in a flock keeps the budgies safe,
but they're still desperate to drink.
277
00:36:10,400 --> 00:36:14,920
As soon as a particularly brave one
takes the plunge, they all do.
278
00:36:21,120 --> 00:36:24,680
But once on the water,
they are easier to target.
279
00:36:30,160 --> 00:36:33,280
They must drink quickly
and stick together.
280
00:36:52,960 --> 00:36:57,560
The last ones to leave
will be the ones in most danger.
281
00:37:21,480 --> 00:37:26,440
Only one has been taken
from a flock of 10,000.
282
00:37:35,560 --> 00:37:38,600
In a few days,
they will leave the area,
283
00:37:38,640 --> 00:37:40,240
on their never-ending search
284
00:37:40,280 --> 00:37:43,680
for the next brief opportunity
to feed and drink.
285
00:38:01,200 --> 00:38:04,400
As the continent continued to drift north,
286
00:38:04,440 --> 00:38:07,760
it eventually entered warm, tropical seas.
287
00:38:10,520 --> 00:38:14,480
And here,
in the crystal-clear, sunlit water,
288
00:38:14,520 --> 00:38:17,480
just a metre or two beneath the surface,
289
00:38:17,520 --> 00:38:19,600
life proliferated.
290
00:38:23,560 --> 00:38:27,480
Coral grows into reefs
in these shallow seas.
291
00:38:30,520 --> 00:38:32,480
This is Ningaloo...
292
00:38:33,800 --> 00:38:37,280
...today one of the richest
anywhere in the world.
293
00:38:45,640 --> 00:38:50,320
Thousands of species of fish
and all kinds of other organisms
294
00:38:50,360 --> 00:38:53,160
thrive in these coral cities.
295
00:38:54,600 --> 00:38:59,680
And they have attracted
the most ancient of living predators.
296
00:39:06,920 --> 00:39:08,880
Sharks.
297
00:39:08,920 --> 00:39:14,600
They were around 200 million years
before the dinosaurs.
298
00:39:17,560 --> 00:39:20,440
They're fast and agile,
299
00:39:20,480 --> 00:39:24,040
well able to pick off the small reef fish.
300
00:39:26,240 --> 00:39:29,640
But they come here for bigger rewards.
301
00:39:34,200 --> 00:39:37,960
These are fish from the open ocean,
302
00:39:38,000 --> 00:39:42,360
and every so often, for some reason,
they swim over the reef.
303
00:39:52,800 --> 00:39:57,720
The small fish swirl like the budgies,
and for the same reason.
304
00:39:57,760 --> 00:40:01,960
It makes it harder for a hunter to
single out a particular target.
305
00:40:07,560 --> 00:40:11,400
But, in fact, the sharks aren't trying
to catch them individually.
306
00:40:17,960 --> 00:40:22,760
They're driving them closer to the shore,
penning them against the beach.
307
00:40:27,400 --> 00:40:32,640
Slowly, the sharks drive
each new wave of fish into shallow water,
308
00:40:32,680 --> 00:40:35,200
and the bait ball grows.
309
00:40:43,440 --> 00:40:47,960
More sharks arrive,
some from many miles away.
310
00:40:56,720 --> 00:40:59,040
And still the sharks don't attack.
311
00:41:00,160 --> 00:41:02,080
They're waiting...
312
00:41:03,160 --> 00:41:04,840
...for the right moment.
313
00:41:12,480 --> 00:41:16,440
Millions of fish are now trapped
in these shallow waters.
314
00:41:18,200 --> 00:41:22,440
It only happens like this
once in every decade or so.
315
00:41:29,040 --> 00:41:31,840
The time has come to strike.
316
00:41:43,680 --> 00:41:47,080
For the sharks, this is a bonanza.
317
00:41:49,200 --> 00:41:51,200
They work together.
318
00:41:52,320 --> 00:41:55,960
Each shark now fills its stomach.
319
00:42:02,280 --> 00:42:07,280
These shallow seas
are exceptionally rich in sharks.
320
00:42:09,160 --> 00:42:13,520
There are more species here
than anywhere else on Earth.
321
00:42:25,080 --> 00:42:29,840
Australia is not only fringed
by rich reefs
322
00:42:29,880 --> 00:42:35,280
but girdled with islands -
some big, some small.
323
00:42:41,440 --> 00:42:45,320
Off the south coast
lies by far the biggest of them.
324
00:42:46,760 --> 00:42:48,560
Tasmania.
325
00:42:51,440 --> 00:42:55,440
And that has its own special marsupial...
326
00:42:56,560 --> 00:43:00,360
...one that seldom appears
until after dark.
327
00:43:03,360 --> 00:43:05,680
The Tasmanian devil.
328
00:43:11,600 --> 00:43:15,600
Many predators inhabit
a territory packed with prey.
329
00:43:15,640 --> 00:43:18,400
But here,
there's nothing like that for them.
330
00:43:27,400 --> 00:43:31,240
Each may travel for miles
night after night,
331
00:43:31,280 --> 00:43:35,600
prepared to eat anything it can find,
dead or alive.
332
00:43:45,040 --> 00:43:47,800
The shoreline is a good place to search.
333
00:43:48,920 --> 00:43:52,480
There might be some small creatures
to catch here,
334
00:43:52,520 --> 00:43:54,880
or maybe something
that the tide has brought in.
335
00:44:05,400 --> 00:44:08,880
The carcass of a wallaby
has been washed ashore.
336
00:44:16,320 --> 00:44:21,840
Tasmanian devils can eat
40% of their body weight in one session,
337
00:44:21,880 --> 00:44:24,640
and they have hugely powerful jaws.
338
00:44:24,680 --> 00:44:28,320
They tackle everything - even bones.
339
00:44:32,480 --> 00:44:33,880
Back at the den,
340
00:44:33,920 --> 00:44:36,640
there are other hungry mouths.
341
00:44:37,960 --> 00:44:40,160
(YAWNS)
342
00:44:43,680 --> 00:44:46,480
Her two youngsters are six months old.
343
00:44:48,120 --> 00:44:54,080
They still rely on their mother's milk,
but they're feeling peckish!
344
00:44:57,880 --> 00:45:01,480
There must be something solid
they could find for themselves
345
00:45:01,520 --> 00:45:03,240
while they're waiting for a drink.
346
00:45:11,160 --> 00:45:12,680
Is this food?
347
00:45:14,640 --> 00:45:15,720
(YELPS)
348
00:45:19,560 --> 00:45:20,840
(SNIFFS)
349
00:45:20,880 --> 00:45:23,280
That possum smells tasty...
350
00:45:25,680 --> 00:45:28,160
...but it's a little high up.
351
00:45:30,520 --> 00:45:33,120
This looks more promising.
352
00:45:43,160 --> 00:45:46,760
At last, a giant stick!
353
00:45:48,640 --> 00:45:50,680
Not bad for a first go.
354
00:45:56,200 --> 00:46:00,840
Their mother will protect and feed
these youngsters for another three months.
355
00:46:02,800 --> 00:46:07,640
Their survival is important to her,
but also for us...
356
00:46:08,880 --> 00:46:13,320
...because these are one
of the last devil families in the world.
357
00:46:19,680 --> 00:46:22,400
Tasmanian devils are now endangered...
358
00:46:23,440 --> 00:46:25,600
...found in only a few places,
359
00:46:25,640 --> 00:46:30,160
such as this remote islet
off the coast of Tasmania.
360
00:46:36,400 --> 00:46:39,840
But they once lived
across the whole of Australia.
361
00:46:41,480 --> 00:46:44,240
Evidence that this was so
362
00:46:44,280 --> 00:46:49,120
can be seen nearly 2,500 miles away
from the devils' family den,
363
00:46:49,160 --> 00:46:53,000
on Australia's northern coast.
364
00:47:00,360 --> 00:47:03,440
This great stretch of boulders
365
00:47:03,480 --> 00:47:10,080
is covered by the largest concentration of
prehistoric images anywhere in the world.
366
00:47:15,920 --> 00:47:19,360
Over one million pictures of wildlife...
367
00:47:23,720 --> 00:47:25,200
...and among them...
368
00:47:26,960 --> 00:47:28,600
...a Tasmanian devil.
369
00:47:31,440 --> 00:47:36,320
It was engraved on stone
60,000 years ago
370
00:47:36,360 --> 00:47:40,080
by some of the first human beings
to reach the continent.
371
00:47:43,800 --> 00:47:46,440
Then, just 200 years ago,
372
00:47:46,480 --> 00:47:52,200
European settlers arrived
with guns and dogs, foxes and cats.
373
00:47:53,480 --> 00:47:57,520
Together, they decimated
Australia's unique wildlife.
374
00:48:03,400 --> 00:48:07,600
This was one of the continent's
biggest animal predators -
375
00:48:07,640 --> 00:48:10,240
a marsupial wolf, or thylacine.
376
00:48:12,320 --> 00:48:17,200
The last-known remaining one
was filmed in 1936
377
00:48:17,240 --> 00:48:19,480
in a zoo just before it died...
378
00:48:20,920 --> 00:48:25,680
...and so brought the final extinction
of its species.
379
00:48:30,680 --> 00:48:33,960
These rocks are now its memorial.
380
00:48:38,520 --> 00:48:42,320
And they may become that
for the Tasmanian devil as well.
381
00:48:44,680 --> 00:48:50,680
Mammals in Australia are disappearing
faster than anywhere else on Earth.
382
00:48:54,680 --> 00:48:59,720
They succeeded in adapting to life
as their home changed around them.
383
00:49:01,400 --> 00:49:04,680
But now they face
their greatest challenge -
384
00:49:04,720 --> 00:49:08,800
the change to their world
brought by humanity.
385
00:49:10,960 --> 00:49:15,000
Which of its unique species
will survive the coming decades
386
00:49:15,040 --> 00:49:17,200
now depends on us.
387
00:49:30,080 --> 00:49:33,320
DAVID ATTENBOROUGH: The most
ambitious shoot for the Australia team
388
00:49:33,360 --> 00:49:37,840
was filming the continent's top predator -
the dingo - hunting.
389
00:49:41,800 --> 00:49:45,080
Elusive and shy, they're rarely seen.
390
00:49:49,720 --> 00:49:54,280
The crew journeyed
to the high plains of Australia,
391
00:49:54,320 --> 00:49:59,840
where park rangers had reported sightings
of a white dingo and her pack.
392
00:50:03,360 --> 00:50:06,440
In their first week,
the team confirm the sightings...
393
00:50:06,480 --> 00:50:07,640
THEO: There she is.
394
00:50:09,000 --> 00:50:11,360
...and begin to catch glimpses.
395
00:50:12,960 --> 00:50:14,920
But with the dingoes
constantly on the move,
396
00:50:14,960 --> 00:50:18,800
keeping track of them is a challenge.
397
00:50:18,840 --> 00:50:22,680
They teleport around,
because you just lose them in the grass.
398
00:50:22,720 --> 00:50:24,120
It's madness.
399
00:50:24,160 --> 00:50:28,320
Each time the crew arrive to set up...
400
00:50:29,400 --> 00:50:31,400
...they're too late.
401
00:50:42,760 --> 00:50:44,920
I couldn't believe how far she'd gone.
402
00:50:44,960 --> 00:50:47,560
By the time we managed to drive
over the brow of the hill,
403
00:50:47,600 --> 00:50:49,880
she was a kilometre away.
404
00:50:51,040 --> 00:50:54,200
If they lose them,
it could take days to find them again.
405
00:50:56,280 --> 00:51:01,320
And searching in outback Australia
can be dangerous work.
406
00:51:01,360 --> 00:51:03,200
(PANICKED SCREAM)
407
00:51:09,480 --> 00:51:12,800
Brown snakes
are one of the world's most venomous.
408
00:51:14,400 --> 00:51:17,800
And it's not only the snakes
that have a nasty bite.
409
00:51:17,840 --> 00:51:18,920
Oh, dear!
410
00:51:18,960 --> 00:51:20,200
Look at that.
411
00:51:21,880 --> 00:51:23,000
Sorry.
412
00:51:27,600 --> 00:51:29,880
Turns out I just stood in an ants' nest.
413
00:51:33,640 --> 00:51:38,640
Over the coming weeks, the dingoes
continue to give the crew the runaround.
414
00:51:39,960 --> 00:51:42,080
With such a large area to search,
415
00:51:42,120 --> 00:51:45,160
they enlist the help
of two additional cameramen.
416
00:51:46,400 --> 00:51:51,400
Dan is a dingo expert
and studied them for five years,
417
00:51:51,440 --> 00:51:54,320
and even he struggled to follow them.
418
00:51:54,360 --> 00:51:58,880
Dingoes are Australia's most heavily
persecuted native animal...
419
00:51:58,920 --> 00:52:01,480
- (DINGO HOWLS)
- ...and that makes them
420
00:52:01,520 --> 00:52:04,160
so incredibly elusive and hard to film.
421
00:52:05,160 --> 00:52:07,000
They're very scared of humans.
422
00:52:08,120 --> 00:52:12,520
Dingoes have lived in Australia
for over 4,000 years,
423
00:52:12,560 --> 00:52:16,760
but when Europeans arrived with livestock,
they were seen as a threat.
424
00:52:17,800 --> 00:52:22,160
Today, they continue to be shot,
poisoned and trapped,
425
00:52:22,200 --> 00:52:24,440
which explains why they avoid the crew.
426
00:52:25,640 --> 00:52:29,320
So Dan suggests a new approach.
427
00:52:32,440 --> 00:52:35,200
From the air, they have a better view.
428
00:52:36,320 --> 00:52:40,480
Now they can track the dingoes
and follow their trails.
429
00:52:41,640 --> 00:52:46,880
And they notice the white dingo repeatedly
returning to the same patch of forest.
430
00:52:48,880 --> 00:52:53,440
Ben, the park ranger, goes to explore...
431
00:52:53,480 --> 00:52:55,000
Dog's had a scratch in here.
432
00:52:57,560 --> 00:52:58,920
Old roo leg.
433
00:52:58,960 --> 00:53:01,880
...and unearths a den site.
434
00:53:01,920 --> 00:53:03,640
Den site in here. Look at it. Jeez.
435
00:53:03,680 --> 00:53:07,760
Only a handful of wild dingo dens
436
00:53:07,800 --> 00:53:10,320
have ever been filmed,
so the team set up a stakeout.
437
00:53:19,480 --> 00:53:22,880
And after a few days waiting...
438
00:53:28,280 --> 00:53:31,600
To the best of my knowledge,
this is some of the first footage
439
00:53:31,640 --> 00:53:33,200
of wild dingo pups at the den.
440
00:53:35,480 --> 00:53:39,960
Being able to capture this really
intimate, up-close footage is amazing.
441
00:53:40,000 --> 00:53:42,280
Really, really special.
442
00:53:43,720 --> 00:53:46,640
The den site is a major breakthrough.
443
00:53:50,120 --> 00:53:53,160
Now the team can find the white dingo
each morning...
444
00:53:53,200 --> 00:53:54,440
Yeah, I've got her.
445
00:53:54,480 --> 00:53:57,800
...and begin to understand
her hunting patterns.
446
00:54:01,200 --> 00:54:04,600
At this point, she's just testing
the water to see which...
447
00:54:04,640 --> 00:54:08,680
...which ones are weaker, or if there are
any joeys around that she can hunt easily.
448
00:54:11,200 --> 00:54:15,280
But her chases cover such vast distances
449
00:54:15,320 --> 00:54:19,280
that filming them from start to finish
is impossible.
450
00:54:20,640 --> 00:54:23,840
Time for the final crew members.
451
00:54:27,320 --> 00:54:31,360
With the filming helicopter,
452
00:54:31,400 --> 00:54:37,000
the team can stay airborne for long enough
to capture her marathon hunts.
453
00:54:37,040 --> 00:54:42,920
But to be successful, the ground and
aerial team will need to work together.
454
00:54:45,480 --> 00:54:47,840
So we've got spotters
all around the valley,
455
00:54:47,880 --> 00:54:49,880
and if anything happens,
if anything moves,
456
00:54:49,920 --> 00:54:51,200
we can run to the helicopter
457
00:54:51,240 --> 00:54:54,680
and we can be up in the air
in about three minutes and filming.
458
00:54:54,720 --> 00:54:58,240
We're just on standby all morning
and all afternoon.
459
00:55:01,000 --> 00:55:05,320
With nine people monitoring
the white dingo's every move,
460
00:55:05,360 --> 00:55:07,400
all they can do...
461
00:55:08,480 --> 00:55:09,480
...is wait.
462
00:55:18,840 --> 00:55:20,960
Until one morning...
463
00:55:21,000 --> 00:55:24,560
She really looks like she's eyeing up
those roos over there.
464
00:55:24,600 --> 00:55:26,320
She's just stopped
and just looking at them.
465
00:55:29,600 --> 00:55:33,600
RADIO: Yeah, she's definitely
looking for some roos. Over.
466
00:55:36,320 --> 00:55:38,320
(MUFFLED RADIO MESSAGE)
467
00:55:38,360 --> 00:55:41,400
DAVID: With the dingo on the move,
the hunt seems imminent.
468
00:55:45,160 --> 00:55:50,880
As the helicopter prepares to launch,
the ground team keep track of her.
469
00:55:58,320 --> 00:56:00,120
Yep, she's running, she's running,
she's running.
470
00:56:14,400 --> 00:56:15,800
She looks good.
471
00:56:33,280 --> 00:56:34,840
Finally able to keep up,
472
00:56:34,880 --> 00:56:40,880
the team film these dingoes
hunting kangaroos for the first time,
473
00:56:40,920 --> 00:56:45,320
adding to the little we know about
these remarkable predators.
474
00:56:48,360 --> 00:56:51,000
After five weeks
following the white dingo,
475
00:56:51,040 --> 00:56:54,520
the team are left in awe of her.
476
00:56:54,560 --> 00:56:56,160
She's worked so hard,
477
00:56:56,200 --> 00:56:59,240
catching roos
and looking after her babies,
478
00:56:59,280 --> 00:57:01,680
and it's been just amazing.
479
00:57:02,840 --> 00:57:04,480
I'll never forget it.
480
00:57:08,400 --> 00:57:14,000
Next time -
a world transformed by mankind...
481
00:57:15,200 --> 00:57:17,920
...where extraordinary animals
are found...
482
00:57:19,280 --> 00:57:22,000
...in surprising places.
483
00:57:29,880 --> 00:57:31,280
Europe.
484
00:57:31,320 --> 00:57:32,600
(GRUNTS)
37319
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