All language subtitles for Blue.Planet.II.S00E07.1080p.iP.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Kitsune_track3_[eng]

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,040 --> 00:00:08,480 Sharks - nature's perfect solution to an underwater life. 2 00:00:10,560 --> 00:00:13,880 They've been swimming in the oceans for over 400 million years... 3 00:00:15,200 --> 00:00:16,920 ..and, as top predators, 4 00:00:16,920 --> 00:00:19,800 play a vital role in keeping our seas healthy 5 00:00:19,800 --> 00:00:21,400 and productive. 6 00:00:23,840 --> 00:00:26,360 But they're coming under increasing pressure, 7 00:00:26,360 --> 00:00:29,200 millions are hunted and killed every year. 8 00:00:31,760 --> 00:00:33,720 Never have sharks needed friends 9 00:00:33,720 --> 00:00:35,600 more than they do today. 10 00:00:39,800 --> 00:00:43,240 For three weeks, I've been in the Bahamas for Blue Planet Live. 11 00:00:45,160 --> 00:00:46,840 Watching, 12 00:00:46,840 --> 00:00:48,560 monitoring, 13 00:00:48,560 --> 00:00:53,280 and diving with one of the richest shark populations on the planet. 14 00:00:56,160 --> 00:00:59,240 I want to reveal why sharks are thriving here 15 00:00:59,240 --> 00:01:01,800 and find out if there are lessons to be learned 16 00:01:01,800 --> 00:01:04,640 from these crystal clear waters 17 00:01:04,640 --> 00:01:08,520 that could help secure their future elsewhere around the world. 18 00:01:45,520 --> 00:01:49,960 Our blue planet is home to more than a thousand species of shark... 19 00:01:51,200 --> 00:01:53,000 ..and their cousins, the rays. 20 00:01:57,760 --> 00:02:00,200 They come in a myriad of shapes... 21 00:02:04,640 --> 00:02:06,360 ..and sizes... 22 00:02:07,520 --> 00:02:09,760 ..and are found across all of our oceans... 23 00:02:11,200 --> 00:02:12,360 ..from the tropics... 24 00:02:13,480 --> 00:02:15,360 ..to the Arctic... 25 00:02:15,360 --> 00:02:17,320 ..and into the deep abyss. 26 00:02:22,120 --> 00:02:25,760 There are a few places where the number and diversity of sharks 27 00:02:25,760 --> 00:02:27,440 is unparalleled. 28 00:02:30,160 --> 00:02:32,640 The Bahamas is one of them, 29 00:02:32,640 --> 00:02:36,240 earning it the title of shark diving capital of the world. 30 00:02:40,760 --> 00:02:45,800 700 islands are scattered over 84,000 square miles of ocean. 31 00:02:51,040 --> 00:02:53,440 This location is unique - 32 00:02:53,440 --> 00:02:55,600 perched on the edge of deep water, 33 00:02:55,600 --> 00:02:59,600 where the seabed plunges to a depth of 4,000 metres. 34 00:03:02,720 --> 00:03:06,600 The meeting of shallow water and deep, open ocean 35 00:03:06,600 --> 00:03:09,040 leads to a profusion of life. 36 00:03:15,480 --> 00:03:18,920 In winter, the resident Caribbean reef sharks 37 00:03:18,920 --> 00:03:20,360 and bull sharks 38 00:03:20,360 --> 00:03:23,080 are joined by visitors, 39 00:03:23,080 --> 00:03:27,760 bolstering the shark and ray population to 78 species. 40 00:03:42,360 --> 00:03:47,480 In 2011, the Bahamas were declared a shark sanctuary, 41 00:03:47,480 --> 00:03:51,800 making it illegal to fish for or kill any species of shark. 42 00:03:59,960 --> 00:04:03,400 These protected waters offer me a unique chance 43 00:04:03,400 --> 00:04:05,760 to get close to these amazing top predators... 44 00:04:07,840 --> 00:04:10,240 ..and to see first-hand what it takes 45 00:04:10,240 --> 00:04:14,000 to have a healthy, thriving population of sharks. 46 00:04:20,840 --> 00:04:23,600 Within seconds of coming down here, 47 00:04:23,600 --> 00:04:27,400 I'm greeted with one of the most dazzling displays 48 00:04:27,400 --> 00:04:29,280 you'll ever see underwater. 49 00:04:43,840 --> 00:04:46,760 There's probably two or three different sort of shark 50 00:04:46,760 --> 00:04:50,040 at this location, but the dominant kind 51 00:04:50,040 --> 00:04:53,320 is going to be the Caribbean reef shark. 52 00:04:53,320 --> 00:04:57,760 And I can already see at least 20 of them here in the water around us. 53 00:05:00,160 --> 00:05:03,240 I guess the first question that people would ask would be, 54 00:05:03,240 --> 00:05:06,040 isn't it dangerous, isn't it risky to be surrounded 55 00:05:06,040 --> 00:05:08,440 by this many apex predators? 56 00:05:08,440 --> 00:05:10,000 And I have to say, 57 00:05:10,000 --> 00:05:12,800 I feel just as comfortable being in here, 58 00:05:12,800 --> 00:05:15,920 surrounded by all these extraordinary animals, 59 00:05:15,920 --> 00:05:19,200 as I would do going for a walk with a pack of poodles. 60 00:05:22,760 --> 00:05:27,600 These animals are so good at sensing their environment, 61 00:05:27,600 --> 00:05:30,280 they know what's prey in the water around them, 62 00:05:30,280 --> 00:05:32,240 and it's not us. 63 00:05:32,240 --> 00:05:35,200 They may well swim in close but at the last second, 64 00:05:35,200 --> 00:05:37,080 they just bank away. 65 00:05:37,080 --> 00:05:39,320 They could not be less interested, 66 00:05:39,320 --> 00:05:42,960 and the statistics about sharks prove that's true. 67 00:05:42,960 --> 00:05:47,760 Around the world, you're more likely to be killed taking a selfie 68 00:05:47,760 --> 00:05:50,680 than you are to be killed by a shark. 69 00:05:52,320 --> 00:05:54,520 In fact, statistically speaking, 70 00:05:54,520 --> 00:05:59,320 the chance of being killed by a cow, a deer or even a vending machine 71 00:05:59,320 --> 00:06:02,280 is higher than the risk posed by one of these. 72 00:06:07,880 --> 00:06:12,040 Sadly, this abundance of sharks is not typical 73 00:06:12,040 --> 00:06:14,160 across all of our oceans. 74 00:06:15,520 --> 00:06:18,880 This is not a sight that you get to see just anywhere. 75 00:06:18,880 --> 00:06:22,080 So, around the world, we human beings are taking 76 00:06:22,080 --> 00:06:25,760 at least 100 million sharks from the world's oceans 77 00:06:25,760 --> 00:06:27,160 every single year. 78 00:06:29,680 --> 00:06:34,640 In some places, sharks have declined by over 90%. 79 00:06:34,640 --> 00:06:38,280 And in the time it'll take for you to watch this programme, 80 00:06:38,280 --> 00:06:41,280 over 11,500 will be killed. 81 00:06:43,520 --> 00:06:46,280 It's a number that simply cannot be sustained. 82 00:06:46,280 --> 00:06:48,080 If it carries on like this, 83 00:06:48,080 --> 00:06:51,160 then our children will not have the opportunity 84 00:06:51,160 --> 00:06:53,000 to dive in seas like this, 85 00:06:53,000 --> 00:06:55,760 surrounded by these stunning predators. 86 00:06:57,960 --> 00:07:02,840 The Bahamas isn't the only place to offer protection to sharks. 87 00:07:02,840 --> 00:07:07,360 Today, a total of 17 sanctuaries have been created around the world, 88 00:07:07,360 --> 00:07:10,560 covering over 7.5 million square miles. 89 00:07:12,920 --> 00:07:16,760 But this still amounts to only 5% of our oceans. 90 00:07:19,720 --> 00:07:22,200 Sharks need more help, 91 00:07:22,200 --> 00:07:24,200 and if we don't give it to them, 92 00:07:24,200 --> 00:07:26,920 much of the life in our oceans will suffer. 93 00:07:28,960 --> 00:07:30,640 As apex predators, 94 00:07:30,640 --> 00:07:33,280 they remove any sick or injured animals, 95 00:07:33,280 --> 00:07:35,240 keeping fish stocks healthy. 96 00:07:36,800 --> 00:07:38,600 Animals below them in the food chain 97 00:07:38,600 --> 00:07:40,440 are kept in check. 98 00:07:40,440 --> 00:07:44,680 And removing sharks would unbalance whole ecosystems. 99 00:07:47,280 --> 00:07:50,920 Over 3 billion people depend on the ocean for their livelihoods. 100 00:07:52,880 --> 00:07:56,000 It's essential we protect sharks for our sake 101 00:07:56,000 --> 00:07:57,280 as well as theirs. 102 00:07:58,640 --> 00:08:03,400 And a vital step towards this is combatting the reputation of fear 103 00:08:03,400 --> 00:08:05,520 that many sharks still hold. 104 00:08:18,240 --> 00:08:20,760 I always had a passion for the ocean. 105 00:08:22,040 --> 00:08:24,200 I fell in love with scuba diving. 106 00:08:24,200 --> 00:08:26,320 I fell in love with everything. 107 00:08:26,320 --> 00:08:29,480 It was a calling, I think. 108 00:08:37,200 --> 00:08:41,800 Cristina Zenato left her homeland of Italy over 20 years ago, 109 00:08:41,800 --> 00:08:43,440 heading for the Bahamas. 110 00:08:46,480 --> 00:08:50,080 Ever since, she's become an advocate for sharks. 111 00:09:00,240 --> 00:09:02,920 And two decades of diving at one site, 112 00:09:02,920 --> 00:09:05,200 off the island of Grand Bahama, 113 00:09:05,200 --> 00:09:09,080 has convinced her that these animals are a long way from being 114 00:09:09,080 --> 00:09:10,440 mindless killers. 115 00:09:14,000 --> 00:09:17,720 Cristina is known locally as the Shark Dancer... 116 00:09:21,560 --> 00:09:23,960 ..and this is her stage. 117 00:09:26,600 --> 00:09:30,920 I love that there is a busy silence. 118 00:09:38,640 --> 00:09:42,440 It is the most peaceful and calming moment of my day. 119 00:09:48,320 --> 00:09:51,200 My babies are Caribbean reef sharks. 120 00:09:54,280 --> 00:09:56,920 I love watching their behaviours 121 00:09:56,920 --> 00:09:58,760 and their interactions. 122 00:10:01,840 --> 00:10:03,960 They appear to me as different 123 00:10:03,960 --> 00:10:07,000 as any other human being that I encounter. 124 00:10:08,560 --> 00:10:10,600 Some of them are more dominant. 125 00:10:11,800 --> 00:10:13,640 Some of them are shy. 126 00:10:15,480 --> 00:10:20,040 And some seemingly seek out a closer encounter with Cristina. 127 00:10:22,840 --> 00:10:27,120 The first time that shark settled in my lap... 128 00:10:28,960 --> 00:10:31,320 ..and every time, she settles in my lap, 129 00:10:31,320 --> 00:10:33,520 and I feel her weight over my legs, 130 00:10:33,520 --> 00:10:36,760 that is the most amazing feeling... 131 00:10:37,920 --> 00:10:41,480 ..and there's nothing, to this day, that beats that. 132 00:10:45,960 --> 00:10:48,920 You can feel everything about the shark. 133 00:10:48,920 --> 00:10:52,920 You can feel that it's a living, breathing creature 134 00:10:52,920 --> 00:10:56,040 that is aware of her surroundings, 135 00:10:56,040 --> 00:10:59,360 that is aware of what I am doing to her, 136 00:10:59,360 --> 00:11:02,040 that is aware of my touch. 137 00:11:02,040 --> 00:11:05,800 And the suit might actually have a nice feeling to their skin. 138 00:11:08,120 --> 00:11:10,840 These sharks are 8ft long. 139 00:11:10,840 --> 00:11:13,880 I could never force an animal of that size 140 00:11:13,880 --> 00:11:16,120 to do anything or to sit anywhere. 141 00:11:18,680 --> 00:11:20,800 It's their decision to come in, 142 00:11:20,800 --> 00:11:23,080 it's their decision to stay, 143 00:11:23,080 --> 00:11:25,280 it's their decision to go. 144 00:11:29,680 --> 00:11:35,240 There is a total disconnect from humans to sharks. 145 00:11:37,400 --> 00:11:41,200 We can swim in the ocean with sharks in a way that you could never 146 00:11:41,200 --> 00:11:44,720 walk around on the snow with a polar bear following you. 147 00:11:47,360 --> 00:11:50,760 We have to make that connection with the sharks, 148 00:11:50,760 --> 00:11:53,640 understanding they are way, way less dangerous 149 00:11:53,640 --> 00:11:55,440 than many creatures out there. 150 00:11:59,000 --> 00:12:01,960 Cristina's unique relationship with sharks 151 00:12:01,960 --> 00:12:05,080 allows her to do something quite extraordinary. 152 00:12:13,760 --> 00:12:17,840 She can take out fishing hooks that are caught in their mouths. 153 00:12:26,200 --> 00:12:31,000 Over the years, she's removed more than 300 hooks. 154 00:12:41,520 --> 00:12:42,960 We must change our ways, 155 00:12:42,960 --> 00:12:45,200 because we need to protect the oceans 156 00:12:45,200 --> 00:12:47,320 and we need to protect the sharks. 157 00:12:47,320 --> 00:12:49,680 And when you reach that message, 158 00:12:49,680 --> 00:12:51,280 then you have a victory. 159 00:12:57,680 --> 00:13:01,200 A greater understanding of these misunderstood creatures 160 00:13:01,200 --> 00:13:03,600 can undoubtedly help sharks. 161 00:13:07,480 --> 00:13:11,120 And with such a diverse and healthy population on its doorstep... 162 00:13:14,040 --> 00:13:18,880 ..the Bahamas has long been at the forefront of global shark research. 163 00:13:21,640 --> 00:13:23,800 The Bimini Biological Field Station, 164 00:13:23,800 --> 00:13:25,600 or Shark Lab, 165 00:13:25,600 --> 00:13:28,760 has been increasing our knowledge of sharks and rays 166 00:13:28,760 --> 00:13:30,680 for the last 29 years. 167 00:13:37,560 --> 00:13:39,760 Heading this institute is Matt Smukall, 168 00:13:39,760 --> 00:13:42,000 who's had a passion for the marine world 169 00:13:42,000 --> 00:13:43,520 for as long as he can remember. 170 00:13:45,720 --> 00:13:48,680 MATT: My first memories were snorkelling in the Florida Keys. 171 00:13:48,680 --> 00:13:52,040 Growing up, I always had an affinity and a connection with, you know, 172 00:13:52,040 --> 00:13:55,320 spending pretty much every weekend and all summer in the ocean. 173 00:13:55,320 --> 00:13:57,640 My favourite group of animals are the sharks. 174 00:13:57,640 --> 00:13:59,960 That's what originally brought me to the Shark Lab, 175 00:13:59,960 --> 00:14:02,000 that's what makes me enjoy waking up every day 176 00:14:02,000 --> 00:14:03,240 and doing this job. 177 00:14:04,560 --> 00:14:07,360 The Bimini Shark Lab started in 1990. 178 00:14:07,360 --> 00:14:10,600 Right now at the Shark Lab, we're studying everything from 179 00:14:10,600 --> 00:14:13,400 southern stingrays to bull sharks, tiger sharks, 180 00:14:13,400 --> 00:14:15,280 lemon sharks, hammerheads, 181 00:14:15,280 --> 00:14:19,280 but we take it from a very ecosystem-driven model, 182 00:14:19,280 --> 00:14:20,840 where we want to understand 183 00:14:20,840 --> 00:14:22,920 everything that's going on around Bimini 184 00:14:22,920 --> 00:14:25,120 and how that's impacting these big sharks. 185 00:14:29,320 --> 00:14:32,080 One of the biggest and most impressive species, 186 00:14:32,080 --> 00:14:34,960 and the focus for a number of Shark Lab studies, 187 00:14:34,960 --> 00:14:39,160 can be found a stone's throw from the heart of a busy marina. 188 00:14:46,040 --> 00:14:48,280 These are bull sharks... 189 00:14:49,720 --> 00:14:52,840 ..drawn in by the scraps discarded from fishing boats. 190 00:14:56,320 --> 00:14:59,040 They spend much of their lives in murky estuaries... 191 00:15:00,800 --> 00:15:04,080 ..so this clear water gives me a unique opportunity 192 00:15:04,080 --> 00:15:07,800 to see them up close, and Matt a chance to learn more 193 00:15:07,800 --> 00:15:10,880 about this little understood species of shark. 194 00:15:13,360 --> 00:15:15,840 I'm here on the bottom of the harbour 195 00:15:15,840 --> 00:15:18,960 and, as you can probably see, 196 00:15:18,960 --> 00:15:22,680 I'm absolutely surrounded by bull sharks. 197 00:15:28,480 --> 00:15:32,760 This is an opportunist that has a very wide array 198 00:15:32,760 --> 00:15:35,040 of different kinds of prey, 199 00:15:35,040 --> 00:15:40,000 so they'll feed on fish, on rays, on birds at the surface, 200 00:15:40,000 --> 00:15:45,080 on dolphins, they'll even bite through the shells of turtles. 201 00:15:46,480 --> 00:15:49,800 Now, all the sharks that I'm seeing around me at the moment 202 00:15:49,800 --> 00:15:52,640 are females, I haven't seen a single male. 203 00:15:53,640 --> 00:15:57,040 And they're quite big in the belly. 204 00:15:59,840 --> 00:16:02,520 Why the warm waters of the Bahamas attract 205 00:16:02,520 --> 00:16:05,000 these large, slightly rotund females 206 00:16:05,000 --> 00:16:06,920 has long been a mystery. 207 00:16:06,920 --> 00:16:10,680 One Matt and his team from Shark Lab are hoping to solve. 208 00:16:11,720 --> 00:16:14,520 But to do that, they first have to catch one. 209 00:16:16,880 --> 00:16:20,400 To go ahead and catch, say, a big female bull shark, 210 00:16:20,400 --> 00:16:23,360 what we'll do is drop a baited hook, throw it right in, 211 00:16:23,360 --> 00:16:26,040 and they pretty quickly will normally take the hook. 212 00:16:31,680 --> 00:16:33,880 All right. On, on, on. 213 00:16:33,880 --> 00:16:36,000 Hooking the bull shark is the easy part. 214 00:16:36,000 --> 00:16:39,640 As soon as they start running around with the balls and the rope, 215 00:16:39,640 --> 00:16:42,720 this is a bit of a dance between the person bringing it in 216 00:16:42,720 --> 00:16:44,040 and the shark. 217 00:16:55,520 --> 00:16:57,200 We have to be very careful 218 00:16:57,200 --> 00:17:00,280 cos they are not expecting to be caught and handled by humans. 219 00:17:03,040 --> 00:17:04,600 In order to help, number one, 220 00:17:04,600 --> 00:17:07,280 for human safety but also for shark safety, 221 00:17:07,280 --> 00:17:09,520 we'll put a tail rope on. 222 00:17:09,520 --> 00:17:12,680 That helps to secure the shark to the boat. 223 00:17:12,680 --> 00:17:14,240 Quick! Quick! 224 00:17:15,240 --> 00:17:17,640 INDISTINCT CHATTER 225 00:17:19,320 --> 00:17:21,680 With the shark safely harnessed and calm, 226 00:17:21,680 --> 00:17:23,840 the team can take the measurements 227 00:17:23,840 --> 00:17:25,920 and assess the shark's condition. 228 00:17:28,080 --> 00:17:30,120 And one of the most crucial jobs 229 00:17:30,120 --> 00:17:32,560 is to find out her reproductive state... 230 00:17:34,520 --> 00:17:36,280 ..using a very familiar method. 231 00:17:38,400 --> 00:17:39,840 Ultrasound. 232 00:17:42,800 --> 00:17:45,680 I think there's something right there. 233 00:17:49,080 --> 00:17:51,240 You can see it moving slightly there. 234 00:17:51,240 --> 00:17:52,480 That looks like the pup. 235 00:17:56,040 --> 00:18:00,720 Over 50% of the females that we catch are actually pregnant. 236 00:18:01,760 --> 00:18:03,440 They have paired uterus, 237 00:18:03,440 --> 00:18:05,080 so we check both sides. 238 00:18:05,080 --> 00:18:06,560 And we're going to try to count 239 00:18:06,560 --> 00:18:08,080 the number of pups that we can see, 240 00:18:08,080 --> 00:18:09,960 the size of pups in both sides, 241 00:18:09,960 --> 00:18:13,480 to get a better understanding of her offspring litter. 242 00:18:15,120 --> 00:18:19,520 After ten months, bull sharks give birth to up to 13 pups. 243 00:18:21,320 --> 00:18:24,000 These fully-formed pint-size sharks 244 00:18:24,000 --> 00:18:26,680 are then left to fend for themselves. 245 00:18:29,480 --> 00:18:31,440 Now that we've confirmed she's pregnant, 246 00:18:31,440 --> 00:18:34,120 we're going to go ahead and let her go on her way. 247 00:18:34,120 --> 00:18:36,800 Give her a push. 248 00:18:36,800 --> 00:18:38,320 All right, nice job. 249 00:18:40,240 --> 00:18:41,680 At the end of the procedure, 250 00:18:41,680 --> 00:18:44,280 it's great to be able to give that shark a push. 251 00:18:44,280 --> 00:18:46,280 We're blessed here with beautiful, clear water 252 00:18:46,280 --> 00:18:48,240 and we can always observe the shark, 253 00:18:48,240 --> 00:18:50,880 basically follow her to make sure that she's swimming strong 254 00:18:50,880 --> 00:18:52,640 and that she's doing well. 255 00:18:54,080 --> 00:18:56,760 And it's not just the visiting bull sharks 256 00:18:56,760 --> 00:18:58,720 who are carrying the next generation. 257 00:19:03,480 --> 00:19:05,800 Many other species found in the Bahamas 258 00:19:05,800 --> 00:19:07,400 are also pregnant. 259 00:19:13,080 --> 00:19:16,880 It's thought that the warm waters and rich feeding grounds here 260 00:19:16,880 --> 00:19:20,840 help raise the shark's metabolism and speed up gestation. 261 00:19:30,880 --> 00:19:33,320 MATT: We know a lot about sharks but there's so much more 262 00:19:33,320 --> 00:19:35,120 that we still need to understand. 263 00:19:35,120 --> 00:19:38,760 We still don't even know some of the basic reproductive biology, 264 00:19:38,760 --> 00:19:40,400 some of their life history things, 265 00:19:40,400 --> 00:19:42,880 and these are all very important for conservation. 266 00:19:42,880 --> 00:19:45,400 This is what's really going to help us manage 267 00:19:45,400 --> 00:19:47,000 the next generation of sharks. 268 00:19:49,520 --> 00:19:52,080 And it's managing this next generation 269 00:19:52,080 --> 00:19:55,080 and the habitats that are essential to their survival 270 00:19:55,080 --> 00:19:58,960 that's vital to maintaining a healthy population of sharks. 271 00:20:14,640 --> 00:20:19,040 This tangled mass of roots is the mangroves. 272 00:20:19,040 --> 00:20:21,560 It's an environment that changes constantly 273 00:20:21,560 --> 00:20:23,520 with the tides throughout the day. 274 00:20:23,520 --> 00:20:27,880 And provides the perfect spot for baby marine animals 275 00:20:27,880 --> 00:20:29,320 to hide out in. 276 00:20:31,160 --> 00:20:34,560 {\an8}I'm joining Clemency White from Bimini Shark Lab 277 00:20:34,560 --> 00:20:37,760 {\an8}to see how these mangroves are key to the success of sharks 278 00:20:37,760 --> 00:20:39,120 {\an8}in the Bahamas. 279 00:20:42,720 --> 00:20:44,480 Whoa! Look at that! 280 00:20:45,560 --> 00:20:47,600 Yep, they're all waiting for us. 281 00:20:47,600 --> 00:20:49,000 Baby sharks! 282 00:20:50,360 --> 00:20:52,680 That's absolutely incredible. 283 00:20:57,960 --> 00:21:00,000 These are lemon sharks. 284 00:21:00,000 --> 00:21:03,160 And they've been studied by Clemency and her fellow researchers 285 00:21:03,160 --> 00:21:04,640 for over 30 years. 286 00:21:07,200 --> 00:21:08,960 It looks like they want to be fed. 287 00:21:08,960 --> 00:21:11,120 Yeah, we actually have a little bit of squid 288 00:21:11,120 --> 00:21:12,720 if you want to give it a go. 289 00:21:12,720 --> 00:21:14,760 I...I would genuinely love to. 290 00:21:17,480 --> 00:21:20,240 So, Clemency, how old are the sharks we're looking at here? 291 00:21:20,240 --> 00:21:22,600 Most of these sharks are in their first few years of life. 292 00:21:22,600 --> 00:21:25,040 So the majority of them will be maybe two or three years old. 293 00:21:25,040 --> 00:21:26,760 And some of those larger sharks you can see 294 00:21:26,760 --> 00:21:28,360 are maybe four or five. 295 00:21:28,360 --> 00:21:29,560 So this is a refuge. 296 00:21:29,560 --> 00:21:31,840 This is an area that's pretty much only accessible 297 00:21:31,840 --> 00:21:33,360 to these guys at high tide. 298 00:21:33,360 --> 00:21:35,840 So that small, narrow walkway that we walked in, 299 00:21:35,840 --> 00:21:37,280 bigger sharks can't use that. 300 00:21:37,280 --> 00:21:39,360 What sort of things are they taking shelter from? 301 00:21:39,360 --> 00:21:41,760 The biggest predator of juvenile lemon sharks is actually 302 00:21:41,760 --> 00:21:43,800 lemon sharks themselves, adult lemon sharks. 303 00:21:43,800 --> 00:21:46,400 So they're cannibalistic? Yes, they are cannibalistic. 304 00:21:46,400 --> 00:21:49,680 And also other large sharks, so maybe bull sharks, 305 00:21:49,680 --> 00:21:52,440 other species like that. 306 00:21:52,440 --> 00:21:54,880 So this genuinely is a nursery, 307 00:21:54,880 --> 00:21:58,080 it's a place where the youngsters are safe from other... 308 00:21:58,080 --> 00:22:00,600 Oh! That went right between my legs. 309 00:22:00,600 --> 00:22:04,120 Yeah. I should be wearing a cricket box or something. Um... 310 00:22:04,120 --> 00:22:05,240 Are you OK? 311 00:22:05,240 --> 00:22:07,160 THEY LAUGH 312 00:22:05,240 --> 00:22:07,160 No! 313 00:22:07,160 --> 00:22:09,200 Seriously, they're all making a beeline 314 00:22:09,200 --> 00:22:11,960 straight between my legs. 315 00:22:11,960 --> 00:22:13,560 This would be a disaster if 316 00:22:13,560 --> 00:22:15,440 all the things I've done in my life 317 00:22:15,440 --> 00:22:18,040 and I was to get savaged in the goolies by a baby shark. 318 00:22:18,040 --> 00:22:19,760 Well, they must like you. 319 00:22:21,440 --> 00:22:23,120 That one there's a decent size. 320 00:22:23,120 --> 00:22:26,360 Yeah, so they'll be pretty loyal to the mangrove that they were born in 321 00:22:26,360 --> 00:22:29,040 until they're about 13 years old, when they sexually mature. 322 00:22:29,040 --> 00:22:31,480 Then they'll also come back to give birth here as adults. 323 00:22:31,480 --> 00:22:33,080 So they really rely on those mangroves 324 00:22:33,080 --> 00:22:34,480 for their entire life cycle. 325 00:22:34,480 --> 00:22:37,280 What are the main threats to mangroves in the Bahamas? 326 00:22:37,280 --> 00:22:39,400 So, a lot of places, even in Bimini, 327 00:22:39,400 --> 00:22:42,760 we see the mangroves are being removed to facilitate bigger hotels, 328 00:22:42,760 --> 00:22:45,200 bigger resorts, and that in itself means 329 00:22:45,200 --> 00:22:47,320 that these pups will still be born in the same place, 330 00:22:47,320 --> 00:22:49,080 they'll still be using the same areas, 331 00:22:49,080 --> 00:22:51,840 but they won't have that same security from the larger fish. 332 00:22:51,840 --> 00:22:55,720 So, lose the mangroves and you lose the lemon sharks? Yep. 333 00:22:59,120 --> 00:23:02,600 It may not look like any other nursery you've seen before, 334 00:23:02,600 --> 00:23:05,400 but you can see how vital this environment is 335 00:23:05,400 --> 00:23:09,640 to these rather wonderful and surprisingly cute animals. Mm-hm. 336 00:23:17,840 --> 00:23:21,680 All over the world, baby sharks and rays seek refuge 337 00:23:21,680 --> 00:23:24,400 in mangroves, seagrass and estuaries. 338 00:23:30,920 --> 00:23:32,720 Throughout their lives, 339 00:23:32,720 --> 00:23:35,680 sharks need a whole variety of ocean habitats... 340 00:23:37,880 --> 00:23:40,160 ..and protecting these is essential 341 00:23:40,160 --> 00:23:42,600 if shark numbers are to bounce back. 342 00:23:55,000 --> 00:23:58,440 Most sharks take many years to reach sexual maturity. 343 00:24:00,160 --> 00:24:04,360 Female great white sharks need a whopping 33 years 344 00:24:04,360 --> 00:24:06,240 before they can breed. 345 00:24:07,880 --> 00:24:12,040 This, combined with their tendency to produce just a few offspring, 346 00:24:12,040 --> 00:24:16,400 means that shark populations are extremely vulnerable to overfishing. 347 00:24:40,200 --> 00:24:44,400 Right now, sharks are being killed at a staggering rate. 348 00:24:54,520 --> 00:24:56,600 They're deliberately caught for food. 349 00:24:58,680 --> 00:25:01,880 And accidentally caught in nets or long lines 350 00:25:01,880 --> 00:25:03,640 set for other species. 351 00:25:09,800 --> 00:25:13,680 They're also harvested in their millions for their fins, 352 00:25:13,680 --> 00:25:17,400 to make shark fin soup - 353 00:25:17,400 --> 00:25:23,240 a delicacy that's seen shark fins sell for $650 a kilo... 354 00:25:29,120 --> 00:25:32,360 ..fuelling a cruel, wasteful trade, 355 00:25:32,360 --> 00:25:35,960 which sees the rest of the shark being thrown back into the sea... 356 00:25:37,600 --> 00:25:39,280 ..often still alive. 357 00:25:43,560 --> 00:25:47,000 A third of all shark species are now threated with extinction. 358 00:25:48,960 --> 00:25:52,640 And this is being driven by human activities. 359 00:26:08,200 --> 00:26:10,240 But all is not yet lost. 360 00:26:11,240 --> 00:26:12,880 There is hope. 361 00:26:12,880 --> 00:26:15,400 And it comes from the fact that these sharks 362 00:26:15,400 --> 00:26:18,920 can be worth more alive than dead. 363 00:26:34,280 --> 00:26:37,160 I'm heading 12 miles north of Grand Bahama 364 00:26:37,160 --> 00:26:39,360 to a site of global importance. 365 00:26:50,520 --> 00:26:54,440 This could well be the best shark dive in the whole world. 366 00:26:56,080 --> 00:27:00,240 And what happens here is key to securing the future of sharks 367 00:27:00,240 --> 00:27:02,000 right across the world. 368 00:27:04,600 --> 00:27:08,840 Whoa! Great hammerhead! Amazing. 369 00:27:08,840 --> 00:27:13,680 Look at that. Powering straight in. 370 00:27:13,680 --> 00:27:15,600 That is just extraordinary. 371 00:27:17,440 --> 00:27:20,880 Drawn to the warm, productive waters, 372 00:27:20,880 --> 00:27:24,800 this is also the best place in the world to see tiger sharks. 373 00:27:28,480 --> 00:27:32,400 A tiger shark is unmistakable in form. 374 00:27:32,400 --> 00:27:35,480 It has the dappling running down its sides, 375 00:27:35,480 --> 00:27:38,880 which gives it its tiger name. 376 00:27:40,280 --> 00:27:43,160 They'll feed on just about anything they can find in the water. 377 00:27:44,320 --> 00:27:49,240 And with those teeth, they can even go through the shell of a turtle. 378 00:27:50,920 --> 00:27:54,160 This is absolutely dazzling. 379 00:27:54,160 --> 00:27:56,880 I don't know which way to look! 380 00:27:56,880 --> 00:27:58,840 Tiger sharks, great hammerheads, 381 00:27:58,840 --> 00:28:01,560 lemons, bull sharks, reef sharks. 382 00:28:04,240 --> 00:28:06,360 It's the world's greatest safari, 383 00:28:06,360 --> 00:28:08,680 it just all happens underwater. 384 00:28:10,880 --> 00:28:12,920 Here and throughout the Bahamas, 385 00:28:12,920 --> 00:28:15,600 sharks are drawn in with food 386 00:28:15,600 --> 00:28:18,080 so tourists can reliably get close to them. 387 00:28:23,200 --> 00:28:26,800 Feeding of sharks is a hotly debated topic. 388 00:28:26,800 --> 00:28:30,840 there's people who think that it's a bad idea 389 00:28:30,840 --> 00:28:34,200 and might, potentially, change the behaviour of sharks, 390 00:28:34,200 --> 00:28:36,640 and I can totally see that, 391 00:28:36,640 --> 00:28:40,440 but there's no doubt that shark tourism here in the Bahamas 392 00:28:40,440 --> 00:28:42,880 is incredibly important. 393 00:28:44,520 --> 00:28:48,800 Each year, 20,000 people come to the Bahamas to dive with sharks... 394 00:28:50,120 --> 00:28:53,680 ..making it the largest shark diving industry in the world. 395 00:28:55,160 --> 00:28:57,840 Shark diving here in the Bahamas 396 00:28:57,840 --> 00:29:05,400 is worth an estimated $114 million every year to the local economy. 397 00:29:07,320 --> 00:29:11,560 Unquestionably, the sharks are worth more alive than they are dead. 398 00:29:13,360 --> 00:29:15,000 And that's hugely important 399 00:29:15,000 --> 00:29:17,480 for the survival of these extraordinary animals. 400 00:29:27,960 --> 00:29:30,000 INDISTINCT CHATTER 401 00:29:38,320 --> 00:29:39,880 All across the world, 402 00:29:39,880 --> 00:29:44,440 shark tourism is fast becoming a thriving industry - 403 00:29:44,440 --> 00:29:46,920 not just for dive operators, 404 00:29:46,920 --> 00:29:49,840 but boat drivers, hotels, restaurants, 405 00:29:49,840 --> 00:29:53,360 and bringing much-needed income to shark hot spots 406 00:29:53,360 --> 00:29:55,200 from all over the world. 407 00:29:57,960 --> 00:29:59,920 I came from Philadelphia today 408 00:29:59,920 --> 00:30:01,440 to swim with the sharks. 409 00:30:01,440 --> 00:30:03,320 It was just invigorating. 410 00:30:03,320 --> 00:30:05,080 It's a whole 'nother world down there. 411 00:30:10,200 --> 00:30:13,000 I'm from Argentina. 412 00:30:13,000 --> 00:30:15,920 It was a long trip but it's amazing. 413 00:30:18,320 --> 00:30:21,920 It's estimated that well over half a million people 414 00:30:21,920 --> 00:30:24,560 come to watch sharks every year. 415 00:30:24,560 --> 00:30:27,160 Not only are sharks gaining more advocates, 416 00:30:27,160 --> 00:30:30,760 but they now hold an indisputable monetary value. 417 00:30:34,560 --> 00:30:37,640 And this will certainly help to secure their future. 418 00:30:44,600 --> 00:30:47,880 Shark conservation is something that will require human effort 419 00:30:47,880 --> 00:30:49,680 for many years to come. 420 00:30:49,680 --> 00:30:51,560 And right here in the Bahamas, 421 00:30:51,560 --> 00:30:54,320 there's a very special project that's training up 422 00:30:54,320 --> 00:30:56,960 the next generation of shark champions. 423 00:31:02,080 --> 00:31:06,120 Marine biologist Jillian Morris has set up Sharks4Kids. 424 00:31:10,600 --> 00:31:13,000 A charity to show children across the Bahamas 425 00:31:13,000 --> 00:31:15,520 that sharks are something to celebrate, 426 00:31:15,520 --> 00:31:16,880 not to fear. 427 00:31:19,200 --> 00:31:23,840 I really believe that the best way to change the way people see sharks 428 00:31:23,840 --> 00:31:26,000 is to let them get in the water. 429 00:31:30,400 --> 00:31:32,200 We take kids out to see sharks 430 00:31:32,200 --> 00:31:34,240 and a lot of them are very afraid. 431 00:31:34,240 --> 00:31:35,880 They don't want to get off the boat, 432 00:31:35,880 --> 00:31:37,960 they don't want to step off the beach, 433 00:31:37,960 --> 00:31:40,120 and we get them to put a mask and a snorkel on, 434 00:31:40,120 --> 00:31:41,920 and we kind of ease them in. 435 00:31:41,920 --> 00:31:43,760 And then they're snorkelling around 436 00:31:43,760 --> 00:31:46,200 and they're seeing the sharks and the rays up close 437 00:31:46,200 --> 00:31:48,760 and realising they're not trying to attack them, 438 00:31:48,760 --> 00:31:51,200 that they're actually really beautiful animals. 439 00:32:03,160 --> 00:32:06,000 It's really incredible to see students go from being terrified 440 00:32:06,000 --> 00:32:07,560 and not wanting to get in the water, 441 00:32:07,560 --> 00:32:09,600 to we're having to drag them out - 442 00:32:09,600 --> 00:32:11,640 "We've got to go. It's time to go home." 443 00:32:11,640 --> 00:32:15,040 And to see that transition happen right in front of you, 444 00:32:15,040 --> 00:32:17,680 very quickly, is really, really powerful. 445 00:32:20,200 --> 00:32:22,200 The Bahamas is a shark sanctuary, 446 00:32:22,200 --> 00:32:25,520 which is incredible and has set a standard around the world 447 00:32:25,520 --> 00:32:28,680 for shark conservation, shark diving, shark science, 448 00:32:28,680 --> 00:32:33,320 and so it's vital to have the locals involved at all levels, 449 00:32:33,320 --> 00:32:34,640 from kids to adults, 450 00:32:34,640 --> 00:32:37,280 to protect the future of this sanctuary 451 00:32:37,280 --> 00:32:39,080 and the sharks here in the Bahamas. 452 00:32:49,880 --> 00:32:52,360 While places like the Bahamas offer protection 453 00:32:52,360 --> 00:32:53,840 when the sharks are here... 454 00:32:55,600 --> 00:32:58,640 ..once beyond the invisible boundary of the sanctuary, 455 00:32:58,640 --> 00:33:00,920 sharks are immediately vulnerable. 456 00:33:04,880 --> 00:33:08,200 Knowing where they go in this vast, featureless landscape 457 00:33:08,200 --> 00:33:11,320 is essential if we're to offer them protection. 458 00:33:14,840 --> 00:33:17,240 A few miles off the coast of Andros, 459 00:33:17,240 --> 00:33:19,480 the endless blue is interrupted... 460 00:33:22,320 --> 00:33:24,080 ..by a naval buoy. 461 00:33:30,560 --> 00:33:34,480 This lone beacon is a big draw for passing travellers... 462 00:33:37,600 --> 00:33:40,400 ..providing shelter for schools of fish... 463 00:33:42,600 --> 00:33:44,520 ..which attract the hunters. 464 00:33:46,240 --> 00:33:49,120 Top of the food chain out here are these - 465 00:33:49,120 --> 00:33:50,720 silky sharks. 466 00:33:53,400 --> 00:33:56,400 They get their name from the silky sheen of their skin. 467 00:34:01,240 --> 00:34:04,080 So little is known about the migrations 468 00:34:04,080 --> 00:34:06,080 of these open ocean drifters. 469 00:34:10,400 --> 00:34:12,520 When shark biologist Tristan Guttridge 470 00:34:12,520 --> 00:34:15,480 heard rumours of this location, 471 00:34:15,480 --> 00:34:19,360 it was an opportunity for him to try and uncover these secrets, 472 00:34:19,360 --> 00:34:22,680 which might just help protect these threatened sharks. 473 00:34:27,960 --> 00:34:30,400 There's nothing that gives me more energy 474 00:34:30,400 --> 00:34:32,800 than being in the water with sharks. 475 00:34:37,640 --> 00:34:41,320 These silky sharks, they're a completely different type of animal. 476 00:34:43,920 --> 00:34:46,280 There's just something about them that, you know, 477 00:34:46,280 --> 00:34:48,480 brings them closer and draws them in to you. 478 00:34:51,840 --> 00:34:55,280 They have this curious, bold personality 479 00:34:55,280 --> 00:34:57,480 and it is a bit intoxicating. 480 00:34:57,480 --> 00:34:58,640 And I love it. 481 00:35:00,280 --> 00:35:04,200 But this inquisitiveness is this shark's Achilles heel. 482 00:35:05,520 --> 00:35:08,120 Silkies are in trouble globally. 483 00:35:08,120 --> 00:35:12,280 And, in fact, silky sharks are the second-highest caught shark species 484 00:35:12,280 --> 00:35:13,520 in the world. 485 00:35:15,680 --> 00:35:19,000 Industrial fishing often uses floating objects, 486 00:35:19,000 --> 00:35:20,840 working just like the naval buoy, 487 00:35:20,840 --> 00:35:23,200 to attract an aggregate fish like tuna 488 00:35:23,200 --> 00:35:24,560 in the open ocean. 489 00:35:27,840 --> 00:35:29,840 But they don't just attract tuna. 490 00:35:32,120 --> 00:35:35,120 Every year, hundreds of thousands of silky sharks 491 00:35:35,120 --> 00:35:36,680 get accidentally caught. 492 00:35:38,200 --> 00:35:42,640 I see the evidence of the pressures that these animals are under 493 00:35:42,640 --> 00:35:44,080 from the hooks in the mouths 494 00:35:44,080 --> 00:35:46,400 and the leader wire that's coming out of it, 495 00:35:46,400 --> 00:35:49,480 you can see these sharks are...they're in trouble. 496 00:35:49,480 --> 00:35:52,400 They've got a lot to deal with out in the open ocean. 497 00:35:54,800 --> 00:35:56,640 Tristan wants to catch a shark 498 00:35:56,640 --> 00:35:58,760 in order to attach a tracker, 499 00:35:58,760 --> 00:36:01,080 which will reveal, for the first time, 500 00:36:01,080 --> 00:36:02,720 where these curious sharks go. 501 00:36:06,720 --> 00:36:10,080 One method that we can use to catch silkies is 502 00:36:10,080 --> 00:36:13,440 that you can actually bend the top of the tail over 503 00:36:13,440 --> 00:36:17,880 and it sends them into this kind of bizarre trance-like state. 504 00:36:17,880 --> 00:36:20,840 And if you turn them upside down at the same time, 505 00:36:20,840 --> 00:36:24,240 then they're almost playing dead, they're just out. 506 00:36:24,240 --> 00:36:26,280 It's not fully understood why, 507 00:36:26,280 --> 00:36:29,680 but many shark species enter this trance-like state 508 00:36:29,680 --> 00:36:32,920 called tonic immobility when upside down, 509 00:36:32,920 --> 00:36:36,280 enabling the team to tether the shark next to the boat. 510 00:36:36,280 --> 00:36:38,000 INDISTINCT SPEECH 511 00:36:42,360 --> 00:36:44,920 A satellite tag is fixed to its dorsal fin. 512 00:36:47,120 --> 00:36:50,720 Every five minutes, this tag will record important information, 513 00:36:50,720 --> 00:36:54,720 including depth, light level and water temperature. 514 00:36:58,520 --> 00:37:01,400 After 30 days, it'll pop to the surface 515 00:37:01,400 --> 00:37:04,280 and start sending a stream of data to Tristan. 516 00:37:06,800 --> 00:37:09,400 TRISTAN: There's nothing more exciting than the few days 517 00:37:09,400 --> 00:37:11,200 when we know a tag is going to pop 518 00:37:11,200 --> 00:37:12,680 as to where it's going to pop. 519 00:37:14,080 --> 00:37:18,440 It's very important that we learn more about their migration patterns, 520 00:37:18,440 --> 00:37:19,920 their population structure, 521 00:37:19,920 --> 00:37:23,080 in order to try and put management measures in place 522 00:37:23,080 --> 00:37:24,760 to improve their conservation. 523 00:37:27,560 --> 00:37:30,600 They deserve to be on this planet. 524 00:37:30,600 --> 00:37:33,840 Like us and like anything, they deserve to be here 525 00:37:33,840 --> 00:37:37,880 and we, as humans, should be responsible. 526 00:37:37,880 --> 00:37:41,440 So it is critical that we learn more about these animals 527 00:37:41,440 --> 00:37:43,440 and it's critical that we protect them. 528 00:37:47,040 --> 00:37:50,920 Tristan's tags have shown that these sharks not only traverse oceans... 529 00:37:53,040 --> 00:37:56,480 ..but dive down to feed at depths of over 400 metres. 530 00:37:58,800 --> 00:38:01,200 Showing that if we want to protect sharks, 531 00:38:01,200 --> 00:38:04,120 we need to look after every part of our oceans. 532 00:38:13,120 --> 00:38:15,280 Satellite tags are now being deployed 533 00:38:15,280 --> 00:38:17,960 on many different species of sharks 534 00:38:17,960 --> 00:38:20,520 and they're revealing some incredible journeys. 535 00:38:24,560 --> 00:38:26,760 The greatest distance ever recorded 536 00:38:26,760 --> 00:38:30,040 was by a great white shark named Nicole, 537 00:38:30,040 --> 00:38:33,560 who swam from South Africa to Australia 538 00:38:33,560 --> 00:38:35,160 and back again - 539 00:38:35,160 --> 00:38:39,120 a staggering 12,000 miles in just nine months. 540 00:38:48,720 --> 00:38:53,080 While understanding where these top predators go is important, 541 00:38:53,080 --> 00:38:55,920 another vital piece of this conservation puzzle 542 00:38:55,920 --> 00:38:58,120 is understanding why they go. 543 00:39:07,800 --> 00:39:10,920 Just off the coast of Bimini in the Bahamas, 544 00:39:10,920 --> 00:39:14,000 there's a dive site that, for a few months each year, 545 00:39:14,000 --> 00:39:16,200 provides a close encounter 546 00:39:16,200 --> 00:39:20,360 with one of our most iconic and well-known migratory sharks. 547 00:39:24,240 --> 00:39:27,040 This is the only place in the whole world 548 00:39:27,040 --> 00:39:31,120 where you can reliably see great hammerhead sharks. 549 00:39:33,360 --> 00:39:35,360 So we have dozens of sharks around us. 550 00:39:35,360 --> 00:39:38,440 Most are like this one here. 551 00:39:38,440 --> 00:39:39,720 It's a nurse shark. 552 00:39:42,040 --> 00:39:44,800 And the reason they have this name is that when they're feeding, 553 00:39:44,800 --> 00:39:46,960 they make a sucking noise, 554 00:39:46,960 --> 00:39:50,240 kind of like a baby when it's nursing, 555 00:39:50,240 --> 00:39:52,560 when it's feeding. 556 00:39:52,560 --> 00:39:55,280 You can see that they're quite content lying on the bottom. 557 00:39:55,280 --> 00:39:59,720 They can pump water through their gills 558 00:39:59,720 --> 00:40:03,000 and they don't have to swim constantly in order to breathe, 559 00:40:03,000 --> 00:40:04,680 like many other sharks do. 560 00:40:06,880 --> 00:40:10,400 But this creature that's heading towards us now, 561 00:40:10,400 --> 00:40:12,800 that really is the main event. 562 00:40:13,960 --> 00:40:15,440 It's a great hammerhead. 563 00:40:17,080 --> 00:40:22,120 There are at least three of them around us right now. 564 00:40:22,120 --> 00:40:26,400 And while the nurse sharks are quite dopey 565 00:40:26,400 --> 00:40:28,640 and just hanging out on the bottom, 566 00:40:28,640 --> 00:40:31,520 this is a far more targeted predator. 567 00:40:32,600 --> 00:40:36,320 There is nothing else quite like a great hammerhead shark. 568 00:40:36,320 --> 00:40:38,520 The shape of the head, 569 00:40:38,520 --> 00:40:40,760 the giant dorsal fin. 570 00:40:40,760 --> 00:40:43,080 It's so unusual-looking 571 00:40:43,080 --> 00:40:46,600 and, yet, so perfectly adapted to its job. 572 00:40:48,240 --> 00:40:50,560 Shaking the hammerhead from side to side 573 00:40:50,560 --> 00:40:52,160 as it moves along the bottom, 574 00:40:52,160 --> 00:40:55,360 sensing the potential moving muscles of its prey. 575 00:41:02,400 --> 00:41:05,280 Perhaps the most incredible thing about this 576 00:41:05,280 --> 00:41:09,000 is that great hammerheads are an endangered species. 577 00:41:10,400 --> 00:41:13,400 There are very, very few of these almighty sharks left 578 00:41:13,400 --> 00:41:15,000 in the whole world. 579 00:41:16,680 --> 00:41:19,720 And right now, I think we have seven. 580 00:41:21,960 --> 00:41:24,320 I don't quite know what to say. 581 00:41:24,320 --> 00:41:26,040 I'm completely blown away. 582 00:41:33,120 --> 00:41:36,200 These great hammerheads are seasonal visitors, 583 00:41:36,200 --> 00:41:37,920 spending the winter months here, 584 00:41:37,920 --> 00:41:39,520 between December and April. 585 00:41:43,240 --> 00:41:45,640 Many return year after year. 586 00:41:49,600 --> 00:41:52,720 The scientists have at least 30 individuals 587 00:41:52,720 --> 00:41:54,800 that they know by name... 588 00:41:56,080 --> 00:41:59,280 ..and not just by name, but by personality 589 00:41:59,280 --> 00:42:00,960 and character and behaviour. 590 00:42:02,480 --> 00:42:05,520 And even in the short time since I've been here, 591 00:42:05,520 --> 00:42:09,520 I've been starting to get to know the individual personalities here. 592 00:42:11,040 --> 00:42:13,800 You might not think of a shark as having a personality, 593 00:42:13,800 --> 00:42:15,440 but they very much do. 594 00:42:15,440 --> 00:42:19,320 Some of them are quite bold and dramatic, 595 00:42:19,320 --> 00:42:22,280 and others are real gentle giants. 596 00:42:25,240 --> 00:42:29,720 This almighty great hammerhead here is called Gaia. 597 00:42:29,720 --> 00:42:32,080 She's a female. 598 00:42:32,080 --> 00:42:33,840 And the largest that they see here. 599 00:42:36,720 --> 00:42:38,760 What an absolute beauty! 600 00:42:44,040 --> 00:42:46,560 I will never, ever get tired of this. 601 00:42:49,160 --> 00:42:51,160 Holy Moley! 602 00:42:51,160 --> 00:42:53,320 HE LAUGHS EXCITEDLY 603 00:42:56,200 --> 00:42:58,080 For five months of the year, 604 00:42:58,080 --> 00:43:00,560 these hammerheads are seen virtually every day. 605 00:43:02,400 --> 00:43:05,200 But in April, they suddenly disappear. 606 00:43:16,400 --> 00:43:19,760 One female was tagged here at Bimini. 607 00:43:19,760 --> 00:43:22,640 She then headed north to the coast of the Carolinas, 608 00:43:22,640 --> 00:43:24,720 before turning south again, 609 00:43:24,720 --> 00:43:27,800 ending up off the coast of Florida. 610 00:43:27,800 --> 00:43:32,000 A journey of over 3,000 miles in less than two months. 611 00:43:39,680 --> 00:43:43,080 But what's causing these ocean wanderers to travel so far 612 00:43:43,080 --> 00:43:44,680 and so fast? 613 00:43:51,680 --> 00:43:53,880 I'm taking to the air to find out. 614 00:44:02,360 --> 00:44:04,800 This is Palm Beach, Florida. 615 00:44:04,800 --> 00:44:07,320 It's a playground for the rich and the famous. 616 00:44:07,320 --> 00:44:10,280 But little do they know that just off the coast 617 00:44:10,280 --> 00:44:13,680 is one of the greatest gatherings of large predators on the planet. 618 00:44:22,880 --> 00:44:24,920 These are blacktip sharks. 619 00:44:31,400 --> 00:44:33,160 Massing in their thousands 620 00:44:33,160 --> 00:44:36,680 before migrating north to their summer feeding grounds 621 00:44:36,680 --> 00:44:38,640 off the coast of North Carolina. 622 00:44:40,560 --> 00:44:45,040 It's these sharks that attract a host of larger predatory sharks, 623 00:44:45,040 --> 00:44:47,120 including the great hammerheads, 624 00:44:47,120 --> 00:44:50,920 which travel from the Bahamas to feast on this bounty of food. 625 00:44:54,400 --> 00:44:56,360 I've joined Stephen Kajiura, 626 00:44:56,360 --> 00:44:59,080 a professor at Florida Atlantic University. 627 00:45:01,160 --> 00:45:05,040 Each year, he takes to the air to monitor the number of sharks. 628 00:45:08,040 --> 00:45:14,000 Just a slick of sharks going on all the way parallel to the coast. 629 00:45:14,000 --> 00:45:15,800 That is absolutely fantastic. 630 00:45:17,040 --> 00:45:20,280 They stand out so well against the sandy bottom, don't they? 631 00:45:20,280 --> 00:45:22,240 That's one of the reasons we're so successful 632 00:45:22,240 --> 00:45:23,920 with the aerial surveys here. 633 00:45:23,920 --> 00:45:26,000 We have clear water, a light, sandy bottom, 634 00:45:26,000 --> 00:45:27,280 we're able to see everything. 635 00:45:27,280 --> 00:45:29,720 And they're in nice and shallow. They're nice and shallow. 636 00:45:29,720 --> 00:45:31,960 They really make it easy for you, don't they? 637 00:45:33,000 --> 00:45:35,200 But all's not what it seems. 638 00:45:35,200 --> 00:45:37,320 Stephen's long-term study has shown 639 00:45:37,320 --> 00:45:40,240 that this spectacular migration is changing. 640 00:45:41,960 --> 00:45:45,120 And this could have serious consequences. 641 00:45:45,120 --> 00:45:48,280 I've been doing these aerial surveys for the last nine years. 642 00:45:48,280 --> 00:45:51,000 We've seen this decline in the number of sharks 643 00:45:51,000 --> 00:45:52,400 over the past nine years. 644 00:45:52,400 --> 00:45:53,760 At the same time, 645 00:45:53,760 --> 00:45:56,400 we've seen an increase in the water temperature down here. 646 00:45:56,400 --> 00:45:58,440 They have a very narrow thermal tolerance. 647 00:45:58,440 --> 00:46:01,640 They like water between about 21 and 25 Celsius. 648 00:46:01,640 --> 00:46:03,880 And as water temperatures keep rising, 649 00:46:03,880 --> 00:46:06,400 we're getting fewer and fewer sharks coming this far south. 650 00:46:06,400 --> 00:46:09,120 Presumably the blacktips that you've got here, 651 00:46:09,120 --> 00:46:11,320 there are constant interactions between them 652 00:46:11,320 --> 00:46:12,920 and the larger predatory sharks 653 00:46:12,920 --> 00:46:15,480 like the tigers, the great hammerheads and the bulls. 654 00:46:15,480 --> 00:46:17,600 How is that likely to be affected? 655 00:46:17,600 --> 00:46:19,040 That's a really good question. 656 00:46:19,040 --> 00:46:21,880 If you don't have these blacktips sweeping down here 657 00:46:21,880 --> 00:46:24,240 in the tens of thousands every spring, 658 00:46:24,240 --> 00:46:26,400 there's no food for the big hammerheads 659 00:46:26,400 --> 00:46:28,840 and these blacktips are not eating all the bait fish. 660 00:46:28,840 --> 00:46:31,240 And so, we don't even know what might happen. 661 00:46:36,760 --> 00:46:38,080 You know, these ecosystems 662 00:46:38,080 --> 00:46:40,400 have remained pretty much unchanged for millennia, 663 00:46:40,400 --> 00:46:43,720 but they are dramatically changing in my lifetime, 664 00:46:43,720 --> 00:46:46,600 and where that will lead we simply don't know. 665 00:46:53,720 --> 00:46:57,240 The rate at which our seas are heating up is accelerating. 666 00:46:59,000 --> 00:47:02,120 And the effects of this warming are now being felt 667 00:47:02,120 --> 00:47:04,080 in every one of our oceans. 668 00:47:17,680 --> 00:47:21,120 Sharks are under pressure from all sides - 669 00:47:21,120 --> 00:47:23,760 fishing, their habitats changing, 670 00:47:23,760 --> 00:47:26,800 and now, in these protected waters, 671 00:47:26,800 --> 00:47:28,640 their fellow sea creatures. 672 00:47:35,160 --> 00:47:39,240 Recently, an unwanted visitor has appeared in Caribbean waters. 673 00:47:46,400 --> 00:47:49,080 This is a lionfish. 674 00:47:52,520 --> 00:47:56,600 A predator that could eat fish populations out of existence... 675 00:47:58,200 --> 00:48:01,120 ..threatening the future of the resident sharks. 676 00:48:07,680 --> 00:48:09,920 Ten years ago, I saw for myself 677 00:48:09,920 --> 00:48:14,000 just what devastating predators they are in their native waters 678 00:48:14,000 --> 00:48:15,440 off Malaysia. 679 00:48:17,360 --> 00:48:19,520 There's a small fish over here. 680 00:48:19,520 --> 00:48:21,200 The lionfish has spotted it. 681 00:48:22,600 --> 00:48:24,440 This could be trouble. 682 00:48:25,760 --> 00:48:28,000 {\an8}It's moving in. 683 00:48:28,000 --> 00:48:31,560 {\an8}Oh! Unbelievable! 684 00:48:31,560 --> 00:48:34,120 {\an8}Did you see the speed of that strike? 685 00:48:36,880 --> 00:48:41,520 Lionfish eat about 70 different species of fish and invertebrate. 686 00:48:44,480 --> 00:48:46,320 If it fits in their mouth, 687 00:48:46,320 --> 00:48:48,040 they'll eat it. 688 00:48:52,880 --> 00:48:54,360 It did it again. 689 00:48:55,840 --> 00:49:00,000 This is just the most astounding display of feeding 690 00:49:00,000 --> 00:49:02,160 I think I've ever seen. 691 00:49:09,800 --> 00:49:12,880 Such an elegant fish is, unsurprisingly, 692 00:49:12,880 --> 00:49:14,880 a favourite of the aquarium trade. 693 00:49:16,240 --> 00:49:20,920 And in the 1980s, a few unwanted pets ended up being released 694 00:49:20,920 --> 00:49:22,440 in the seas off Florida... 695 00:49:25,000 --> 00:49:26,920 ..with devastating results. 696 00:49:31,200 --> 00:49:34,920 In just over 30 years, they've spread from coastal Florida 697 00:49:34,920 --> 00:49:36,360 with alarming speed. 698 00:49:38,600 --> 00:49:41,600 They're now found as far north as New York 699 00:49:41,600 --> 00:49:44,280 and south to Brazil. 700 00:49:45,480 --> 00:49:48,560 This is the wrong fish in the wrong place 701 00:49:48,560 --> 00:49:50,040 and at the wrong time. 702 00:49:53,320 --> 00:49:57,320 And it's threatening to unbalance the already fragile system 703 00:49:57,320 --> 00:49:59,480 upon which the sharks depend. 704 00:50:03,280 --> 00:50:05,400 This is a growing problem 705 00:50:05,400 --> 00:50:08,200 that people like marine biologist Alex Fogg 706 00:50:08,200 --> 00:50:10,080 are trying to find a solution to. 707 00:50:11,120 --> 00:50:13,280 ALEX: The reefs have changed actually quite a bit 708 00:50:13,280 --> 00:50:14,520 since I first started diving. 709 00:50:14,520 --> 00:50:17,840 I started diving about ten years ago and in this area in particular, 710 00:50:17,840 --> 00:50:19,560 lionfish weren't here yet. 711 00:50:26,640 --> 00:50:29,160 When we first started seeing lionfish on the reef 712 00:50:29,160 --> 00:50:32,320 it was one here or one there, but now you go to a reef site 713 00:50:32,320 --> 00:50:34,920 and you can see upwards of 100 lionfish. 714 00:50:34,920 --> 00:50:36,960 I mean, they're here eating everything. 715 00:50:36,960 --> 00:50:39,520 It's like an all-you-can-eat buffet, if you will. 716 00:50:41,520 --> 00:50:43,640 They're not just voracious hunters, 717 00:50:43,640 --> 00:50:45,720 they're prolific breeders too. 718 00:50:47,240 --> 00:50:53,640 A female lionfish can lay more than 20,000 eggs every four days. 719 00:50:55,400 --> 00:50:59,760 They can reach densities of over 200 adults per acre of reef 720 00:50:59,760 --> 00:51:04,920 and that quantity can hoover up nearly half a million fish a year. 721 00:51:08,200 --> 00:51:12,720 This is having a devastating effect on an already fragile ecosystem. 722 00:51:14,000 --> 00:51:16,280 But Alex has a plan. 723 00:51:20,320 --> 00:51:22,280 You can't really catch them on hook and lines. 724 00:51:22,280 --> 00:51:24,440 There's really only one way to harvest lion fish 725 00:51:24,440 --> 00:51:27,240 and that's through diving and harvesting with spears. 726 00:51:32,960 --> 00:51:35,360 And all these fish don't go to waste. 727 00:51:37,880 --> 00:51:41,080 Lionfish are definitely one of the most environmentally-friendly fish 728 00:51:41,080 --> 00:51:42,440 that you can actually eat. 729 00:51:44,200 --> 00:51:46,760 This is one fish that we want to eat into extinction. 730 00:51:48,200 --> 00:51:50,840 Hey, Chef. Got you a bunch of fish. Right, man. Appreciate it. 731 00:51:50,840 --> 00:51:52,440 Thank you very much. Thank you. 732 00:51:58,560 --> 00:52:01,120 Alex hopes that by making a commercial market 733 00:52:01,120 --> 00:52:03,520 for these lionfish, more will be caught... 734 00:52:04,760 --> 00:52:07,320 ..allowing reefs and sharks to recover. 735 00:52:10,520 --> 00:52:12,560 Ten years down the road from now, 736 00:52:12,560 --> 00:52:14,640 lionfish are still going to be here. 737 00:52:14,640 --> 00:52:17,080 Are they going to be at the numbers that we have today? 738 00:52:17,080 --> 00:52:20,440 I'm not sure. I think that if we can just get lionfish to a point 739 00:52:20,440 --> 00:52:22,680 to where the ecosystem can actually deal with it, 740 00:52:22,680 --> 00:52:24,760 or they find their space in the ecosystem, 741 00:52:24,760 --> 00:52:25,800 that's our best bet. 742 00:52:28,440 --> 00:52:31,760 The market for lionfish in restaurants is growing. 743 00:52:32,840 --> 00:52:35,040 But to fully combat this invasion, 744 00:52:35,040 --> 00:52:37,360 things are being taken a step further. 745 00:52:45,440 --> 00:52:50,440 Along the coast of America, locals have created lionfish derbies. 746 00:52:53,080 --> 00:52:57,120 The aim - to collect and remove as many lionfish as possible. 747 00:53:06,760 --> 00:53:10,600 Each fish is measured and prizes are awarded for catching the most, 748 00:53:10,600 --> 00:53:12,840 the biggest, 749 00:53:12,840 --> 00:53:15,040 and the smallest lionfish. 750 00:53:26,640 --> 00:53:28,920 Hundreds gather to share in the prize... 751 00:53:30,520 --> 00:53:31,960 ..and eat the catch. 752 00:53:42,120 --> 00:53:45,120 These derbies serve to reduce numbers, 753 00:53:45,120 --> 00:53:47,720 as well as raising awareness of a fish 754 00:53:47,720 --> 00:53:52,000 that threatens the ocean ecosystems upon which the sharks rely. 755 00:53:57,160 --> 00:53:59,720 INDISTINCT CHATTER 756 00:54:07,680 --> 00:54:10,720 Our blue planet is defined by its oceans... 757 00:54:15,360 --> 00:54:18,480 ..and if they are to stay healthy and productive, 758 00:54:18,480 --> 00:54:22,160 we need a healthy population of sharks. 759 00:54:25,120 --> 00:54:29,880 At present, sharks are being killed faster than they can reproduce 760 00:54:29,880 --> 00:54:33,800 and we're set to lose some of our most iconic species 761 00:54:33,800 --> 00:54:35,400 in the next 50 years. 762 00:54:41,760 --> 00:54:43,320 But across the globe, 763 00:54:43,320 --> 00:54:48,040 many people are working tirelessly to uncover the secrets of sharks 764 00:54:48,040 --> 00:54:49,640 in order to save them. 765 00:54:53,200 --> 00:54:56,560 People are seeing sharks in their true light 766 00:54:56,560 --> 00:54:58,800 and starting to appreciate them 767 00:54:58,800 --> 00:55:01,680 for the essential role they play in our oceans. 768 00:55:05,560 --> 00:55:08,200 There is still much work that needs to be done... 769 00:55:10,400 --> 00:55:12,400 ..but, for now, there is hope... 770 00:55:14,160 --> 00:55:18,320 ..for our oceans are packed with the ingredients for recovery. 771 00:55:23,160 --> 00:55:27,960 The seas are full of tiny, microscopic life 772 00:55:27,960 --> 00:55:32,680 just looking for somewhere to fix and make home. 773 00:55:37,320 --> 00:55:39,800 This is the Sapona. 774 00:55:44,360 --> 00:55:48,920 It was grounded here in a hurricane many decades ago, 775 00:55:48,920 --> 00:55:52,800 and ever since, it's become a living reef... 776 00:55:54,280 --> 00:55:56,560 ..absolutely bursting with life. 777 00:56:00,800 --> 00:56:02,160 So many fish. 778 00:56:04,960 --> 00:56:06,320 So beautiful. 779 00:56:11,680 --> 00:56:15,480 The superstructure makes a perfect habitat, 780 00:56:15,480 --> 00:56:19,320 places for them to hide from predators. 781 00:56:19,320 --> 00:56:24,600 And it's covered with encrusting soft corals and fans. 782 00:56:30,200 --> 00:56:33,120 All sorts of animals take up shelter inside. 783 00:56:37,600 --> 00:56:39,920 Oh, stingray! 784 00:56:44,040 --> 00:56:50,560 It's like swimming through the ribcage of an almighty whale 785 00:56:50,560 --> 00:56:52,560 lying on the bottom. 786 00:56:52,560 --> 00:56:54,120 Incredible. 787 00:56:59,400 --> 00:57:04,000 This is the basis of the food chain upon which sharks depend. 788 00:57:15,280 --> 00:57:19,760 If we protect our seas then life will bounce back in our oceans, 789 00:57:19,760 --> 00:57:21,600 if we give it the chance. 790 00:57:27,080 --> 00:57:30,600 The interconnectedness of our oceans and their inhabitants 791 00:57:30,600 --> 00:57:32,840 is intricate and far-reaching. 792 00:57:35,440 --> 00:57:38,360 Sharks depend on the creatures around them 793 00:57:38,360 --> 00:57:39,920 as these creatures in turn 794 00:57:39,920 --> 00:57:41,480 depend on the sharks. 795 00:57:44,080 --> 00:57:49,320 They've been stalking our seas for at least 400 million years. 796 00:57:49,320 --> 00:57:52,480 I hope they've got a few million more left in them yet. 797 00:57:55,200 --> 00:57:59,160 The Bahamas are at the forefront of shark research and conservation. 798 00:58:00,400 --> 00:58:03,280 And lessons learnt here now need to be applied 799 00:58:03,280 --> 00:58:04,960 all across our blue planet. 800 00:58:10,360 --> 00:58:13,320 The future of sharks is in our hands. 801 00:58:15,920 --> 00:58:20,160 And it's for us to decide where this sharks' tale goes next. 95637

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.