All language subtitles for Surviving.Earth.S01E05.1080p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.H.264-RAWR_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 00:00:06,745 --> 00:00:09,661 The story of life on Earth... 2 00:00:12,621 --> 00:00:16,842 has been marked by a series of catastrophic extinction events. 3 00:00:18,018 --> 00:00:21,369 Natural disasters which have threatened to wipe out 4 00:00:21,499 --> 00:00:24,372 many of the creatures that call our planet home. 5 00:00:25,025 --> 00:00:29,029 But, after every brush with death, life has come back 6 00:00:30,334 --> 00:00:32,684 even stronger. 7 00:00:36,427 --> 00:00:40,736 One such event took place 305 million years ago, 8 00:00:42,216 --> 00:00:46,046 when huge swamp forests dominated much of the earth. 9 00:00:50,789 --> 00:00:54,054 And were home to strange new creatures. 10 00:01:00,147 --> 00:01:03,411 But the forests were so astonishingly successful, 11 00:01:05,152 --> 00:01:07,241 they changed the planet, 12 00:01:08,416 --> 00:01:11,114 making Earth colder and drier. 13 00:01:12,202 --> 00:01:17,512 Unfortunately, this then drove them to extinction. 14 00:01:27,870 --> 00:01:32,962 But life returned more resilient and diverse... 15 00:01:35,182 --> 00:01:37,184 than ever. 16 00:02:02,861 --> 00:02:05,168 Long before the dinosaurs 17 00:02:06,038 --> 00:02:08,998 the world is dominated by plants. 18 00:02:13,568 --> 00:02:17,485 Lush, water-logged swamp forests cover the land. 19 00:02:18,790 --> 00:02:20,052 And down among the roots, 20 00:02:20,705 --> 00:02:23,969 live countless strange and wonderful creatures. 21 00:02:28,887 --> 00:02:32,804 A little amphibian called Diplocaulus. 22 00:02:36,373 --> 00:02:39,115 This is a very special night for her. 23 00:02:42,640 --> 00:02:44,033 It's that time of year 24 00:02:44,120 --> 00:02:47,079 when she looks for a burrow to lay her eggs. 25 00:02:58,656 --> 00:03:01,181 But this riverbank is fully booked. 26 00:03:06,838 --> 00:03:09,537 Every mother is taking advantage of the damp night 27 00:03:10,059 --> 00:03:12,061 to find their own nesting spot. 28 00:03:19,199 --> 00:03:21,549 All the burrows are occupied. 29 00:03:28,077 --> 00:03:29,426 As morning dawns, 30 00:03:30,384 --> 00:03:33,561 she realizes she waited too long to book a burrow. 31 00:03:34,344 --> 00:03:36,477 So, she makes her own. 32 00:03:53,189 --> 00:03:56,758 The world she lives in is a triumph of plant power. 33 00:03:58,760 --> 00:04:00,414 Herbivores have yet to evolve 34 00:04:01,023 --> 00:04:05,549 so the vegetation can grow untouched by all but insects. 35 00:04:10,685 --> 00:04:13,340 Horsetails and tree ferns stretch as far 36 00:04:13,557 --> 00:04:14,863 as the eye can see. 37 00:04:18,127 --> 00:04:22,827 Towering above are scale trees, the giants of this forest, 38 00:04:23,611 --> 00:04:26,091 but they are nothing like the trees we know today. 39 00:04:28,485 --> 00:04:32,576 Their trunks are rigid hollow tubes that can grow as tall 40 00:04:32,663 --> 00:04:37,233 as a 14 story building in less than 15 years. 41 00:04:44,893 --> 00:04:47,635 The extent of these forests is staggering. 42 00:04:50,072 --> 00:04:51,813 For 50 million years 43 00:04:52,292 --> 00:04:55,164 plants have been the dominant life force on land. 44 00:04:59,690 --> 00:05:03,955 As the continents have drifted together vast lowland basins 45 00:05:04,129 --> 00:05:05,609 have formed along the equator 46 00:05:08,133 --> 00:05:10,962 and these have filled with billions of swamp trees. 47 00:05:15,402 --> 00:05:18,100 These forests have released so much oxygen, 48 00:05:18,970 --> 00:05:21,451 that they've supercharged the Earth's atmosphere. 49 00:05:26,456 --> 00:05:29,764 Oxygen levels are the highest the planet has ever seen. 50 00:05:31,331 --> 00:05:33,594 This has boosted the animals. 51 00:05:35,247 --> 00:05:37,772 Some insects have grown enormous, 52 00:05:37,989 --> 00:05:39,774 like the Griffinfly... 53 00:05:41,036 --> 00:05:43,952 with a wingspan as big as a crow's. 54 00:05:48,565 --> 00:05:51,220 But oxygen doesn't just fuel growth. 55 00:05:54,049 --> 00:05:56,617 But it also fuels fire. 56 00:06:02,362 --> 00:06:04,320 Even in this wet swamp, 57 00:06:04,494 --> 00:06:08,237 a single lightning strike can set off a forest inferno. 58 00:06:14,809 --> 00:06:17,072 Our little Diplocaulus will be safe here 59 00:06:17,289 --> 00:06:19,683 in a labyrinth of drowned roots. 60 00:06:27,604 --> 00:06:29,998 But water isn't the natural habitat 61 00:06:30,085 --> 00:06:31,739 for many forest dwellers. 62 00:06:36,134 --> 00:06:37,832 Dendromaia. 63 00:06:39,486 --> 00:06:43,403 Her dry scaly skin shows she is a reptile, 64 00:06:44,795 --> 00:06:47,232 one of the first vertebrates to leave the water 65 00:06:47,407 --> 00:06:49,931 and live permanently on land. 66 00:06:52,020 --> 00:06:55,284 So, for her, the fire is a huge threat. 67 00:06:58,983 --> 00:07:01,159 In this oxygen rich atmosphere, 68 00:07:01,333 --> 00:07:05,250 one ember can quickly become a raging blaze. 69 00:07:24,574 --> 00:07:28,535 To save herself she needs to run now but she has a nest 70 00:07:28,622 --> 00:07:32,713 full of babies nearby and she won't abandon them. 71 00:07:39,894 --> 00:07:43,811 The fire is moving so fast she only has seconds. 72 00:07:49,730 --> 00:07:55,170 She and her babies are surrounded by chaos. 73 00:08:13,318 --> 00:08:15,886 305 million years ago 74 00:08:16,844 --> 00:08:20,369 dense fast-growing forests cover the equator. 75 00:08:23,633 --> 00:08:26,723 They are so successful they have pushed up the amount of 76 00:08:26,941 --> 00:08:30,031 oxygen in the atmosphere to record levels. 77 00:08:32,555 --> 00:08:35,863 But all this oxygen has intensified forest fires 78 00:08:36,037 --> 00:08:39,127 so much so that even waterlogged wood burns. 79 00:08:41,956 --> 00:08:45,263 The fire has cut this mother off from her babies. 80 00:08:51,226 --> 00:08:54,229 She is desperately trying to reach them before the flames. 81 00:08:58,712 --> 00:09:03,020 She's got them, but now she needs to get them out of there. 82 00:09:30,004 --> 00:09:31,440 She's done it. 83 00:09:33,529 --> 00:09:35,531 As the wind changes direction, 84 00:09:35,705 --> 00:09:38,012 it starts to drive the fire away. 85 00:09:40,318 --> 00:09:44,540 Our heroic mother has saved her babies from the flames. 86 00:09:51,808 --> 00:09:53,331 The next morning, 87 00:09:53,505 --> 00:09:55,943 it looks as though the smoke is still lingering. 88 00:09:57,771 --> 00:09:59,686 But this isn't smoke. 89 00:10:01,905 --> 00:10:04,125 It's something very different. 90 00:10:05,082 --> 00:10:09,130 Spores, billions of them, 91 00:10:10,218 --> 00:10:14,135 So small they are almost invisible to the naked eye. 92 00:10:16,354 --> 00:10:18,052 These tiny spores are 93 00:10:18,269 --> 00:10:21,098 how these extraordinary scale trees begin life. 94 00:10:22,404 --> 00:10:24,667 They need just the right conditions to germinate, 95 00:10:25,625 --> 00:10:28,279 and the damp soil here is perfect. 96 00:10:35,069 --> 00:10:38,028 Our Diplocaulus mom has been busy digging. 97 00:10:38,899 --> 00:10:41,641 And she's made her own burrow in the riverbank. 98 00:10:44,556 --> 00:10:48,822 Here, water from the swamp has created a tiny pool. 99 00:10:50,824 --> 00:10:53,130 This is where she has laid her eggs. 100 00:10:56,046 --> 00:10:59,659 Over the next few weeks this mom will dedicate herself 101 00:10:59,789 --> 00:11:02,487 to protecting her brood until they hatch. 102 00:11:04,576 --> 00:11:07,754 Because these swamps are filled with predators. 103 00:11:12,367 --> 00:11:15,022 They can be heard calling through the forest. 104 00:11:30,951 --> 00:11:36,043 The calls are coming from giant amphibians called Eryops. 105 00:11:37,305 --> 00:11:41,309 They are carnivores and can grow up to eight feet long. 106 00:11:44,921 --> 00:11:47,489 These beasts are among the largest land animals 107 00:11:47,707 --> 00:11:52,581 on the planet and things are about to get steamy. 108 00:11:54,235 --> 00:11:56,541 It's time for their annual courtship. 109 00:12:01,329 --> 00:12:03,766 Their calls are booming through the forest 110 00:12:03,940 --> 00:12:05,246 for one purpose... 111 00:12:08,423 --> 00:12:12,340 to attract a female and it's worked. 112 00:12:16,910 --> 00:12:19,042 Let the serenading begin! 113 00:12:30,097 --> 00:12:33,100 Hardly a classic love ballad but it'll do. 114 00:12:36,930 --> 00:12:40,107 Now a couple of the males want to show off different skills. 115 00:12:46,113 --> 00:12:48,855 One male starts a new contest. 116 00:12:53,163 --> 00:12:56,906 His low frequency rumbles make the water... dance. 117 00:13:06,394 --> 00:13:07,917 Interesting. 118 00:13:10,790 --> 00:13:12,922 But the other guy can do that too. 119 00:13:29,112 --> 00:13:31,941 She's still not sure who to choose. 120 00:13:36,903 --> 00:13:38,818 This could get ugly. 121 00:13:48,088 --> 00:13:51,439 Over 300 million years before humans evolve, 122 00:13:52,179 --> 00:13:54,790 the Earth's equatorial regions are cloaked 123 00:13:54,964 --> 00:13:59,186 in dense swamp forests dominated by mosses and ferns. 124 00:14:01,753 --> 00:14:05,540 The animals here thrive in the damp, oxygen-rich atmosphere. 125 00:14:07,629 --> 00:14:09,718 These Eryops are amphibians 126 00:14:10,284 --> 00:14:12,503 and among the largest creatures on land. 127 00:14:13,374 --> 00:14:16,203 Each as big a silverback gorilla, 128 00:14:18,031 --> 00:14:19,467 they are formidable predators 129 00:14:19,641 --> 00:14:22,383 with a mouthful of curved fangs. 130 00:14:23,340 --> 00:14:24,689 But they are not here to hunt, 131 00:14:25,995 --> 00:14:28,519 they are here to win a mate. 132 00:14:31,348 --> 00:14:36,179 These two suitors are sumo wrestling, swamp-style. 133 00:14:37,398 --> 00:14:39,748 Battling to impress a potential mate. 134 00:15:00,508 --> 00:15:02,597 Finally, a champion. 135 00:15:21,137 --> 00:15:22,747 The winner will stay firmly attached 136 00:15:22,965 --> 00:15:25,402 in a slippery embrace for hours. 137 00:15:36,848 --> 00:15:38,720 When she finally lays her eggs, 138 00:15:38,894 --> 00:15:40,896 he will be ready to fertilize them. 139 00:15:45,118 --> 00:15:48,730 Then, both parents abandon them. 140 00:15:50,427 --> 00:15:52,603 Of the 500 eggs she lays, 141 00:15:52,734 --> 00:15:56,259 only about 10 will survive to adulthood. 142 00:16:01,482 --> 00:16:04,746 Down in her burrow our Diplocaulus mom 143 00:16:04,964 --> 00:16:07,053 is a much more caring parent. 144 00:16:10,447 --> 00:16:14,321 Two weeks on and she's still devotedly tending her eggs. 145 00:16:15,539 --> 00:16:17,585 But she can tell something's not right. 146 00:16:20,544 --> 00:16:22,982 When she laid her eggs they were underwater, 147 00:16:24,505 --> 00:16:26,507 now some are exposed. 148 00:16:29,292 --> 00:16:30,859 The water level is dropping 149 00:16:32,382 --> 00:16:35,995 and the reason lies far beyond her little burrow. 150 00:16:40,347 --> 00:16:42,827 305 million years ago, 151 00:16:43,002 --> 00:16:45,961 while the endless forests are producing loads of oxygen, 152 00:16:47,006 --> 00:16:50,661 they are also absorbing huge amounts of carbon dioxide, 153 00:16:51,532 --> 00:16:54,361 a greenhouse gas that keeps the planet warm. 154 00:16:58,539 --> 00:17:01,890 As each tree falls, and submerges into the swamp, 155 00:17:02,978 --> 00:17:05,285 it locks the carbon away underground. 156 00:17:09,854 --> 00:17:11,465 For millions of years, 157 00:17:11,682 --> 00:17:14,903 these trees have been rotting down on top of each other. 158 00:17:16,818 --> 00:17:20,082 Eventually, this one period in Earth's history 159 00:17:20,300 --> 00:17:23,564 will create 90 per cent of all our coal. 160 00:17:25,870 --> 00:17:28,960 This also means carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere 161 00:17:29,135 --> 00:17:30,745 have been dropping 162 00:17:31,920 --> 00:17:35,054 and the whole planet has started to cool. 163 00:17:40,798 --> 00:17:42,539 Several ice sheets have begun to grow 164 00:17:42,757 --> 00:17:44,585 over the southern continents, 165 00:17:44,759 --> 00:17:47,066 and they are expanding towards the equator. 166 00:17:52,332 --> 00:17:55,726 With cooler seas, there is less evaporation, 167 00:17:55,944 --> 00:18:01,080 less water in the atmosphere, and, therefore, a drier climate. 168 00:18:05,562 --> 00:18:07,825 This means dry seasons are getting longer 169 00:18:08,261 --> 00:18:11,046 and droughts worse in the swamp forest. 170 00:18:14,615 --> 00:18:16,399 The consequences could be devastating 171 00:18:16,573 --> 00:18:17,879 for our caring mother. 172 00:18:19,881 --> 00:18:21,752 As the swamp drains, 173 00:18:21,926 --> 00:18:25,060 she tries everything to keep her babies from drying out. 174 00:18:28,063 --> 00:18:29,804 And she's not the only one. 175 00:18:32,981 --> 00:18:34,852 If this drought continues much longer, 176 00:18:35,070 --> 00:18:38,639 her baby-filled burrow will become a tomb. 177 00:18:42,643 --> 00:18:46,560 But a drier swamp is not a problem for all creatures here. 178 00:18:49,389 --> 00:18:52,435 Down under the ferns a Dendromaia shows 179 00:18:52,609 --> 00:18:56,831 how reptiles managed to escape being so dependent on water. 180 00:19:00,530 --> 00:19:02,924 They lay eggs with waterproof shells. 181 00:19:04,317 --> 00:19:06,014 So they can stay on land 182 00:19:06,188 --> 00:19:08,582 without the fear of their eggs drying out. 183 00:19:24,989 --> 00:19:29,429 As night falls moonlight picks out the glowing wing cases 184 00:19:29,516 --> 00:19:31,605 of a million insects. 185 00:19:33,476 --> 00:19:37,132 The deep forests belong to the creepy crawlies, 186 00:19:40,004 --> 00:19:42,703 and the biggest of these is perhaps 187 00:19:42,833 --> 00:19:47,055 the most bizarre creature in an already weird world. 188 00:19:54,758 --> 00:20:00,634 Arthropleura, a giant millipede, eight feet long. 189 00:20:03,114 --> 00:20:04,420 Using her antenna, 190 00:20:04,594 --> 00:20:07,380 she probes the forest floor for food... 191 00:20:10,948 --> 00:20:13,951 creeping closer and closer 192 00:20:14,169 --> 00:20:18,173 to our young mom's burrow full of babies. 193 00:20:39,542 --> 00:20:41,457 Deep in the swamp forest, 194 00:20:41,675 --> 00:20:45,809 a Diplocaulus mom has laid her eggs in a flooded burrow 195 00:20:46,027 --> 00:20:49,248 to protect them from the many predators outside. 196 00:20:50,684 --> 00:20:54,644 Unfortunately, tonight, the entrance has been discovered 197 00:20:54,818 --> 00:20:57,517 by an eight-foot-long Arthropleura, 198 00:20:57,734 --> 00:20:59,867 a monstrous millipede. 199 00:21:22,368 --> 00:21:24,108 But this eight-foot monster 200 00:21:24,239 --> 00:21:27,286 hasn't met our fiercely protective mother. 201 00:21:32,639 --> 00:21:35,729 In fact, she is no threat at all. 202 00:21:39,559 --> 00:21:41,474 She's a gentle giant. 203 00:21:54,791 --> 00:21:59,579 Soon, she finds the food she was looking for all along... 204 00:22:01,581 --> 00:22:03,800 something rich in nutrients. 205 00:22:07,195 --> 00:22:08,849 Eryops droppings. 206 00:22:20,600 --> 00:22:22,689 The drought is intensifying. 207 00:22:27,781 --> 00:22:30,436 The drier soil no longer holds enough water 208 00:22:30,653 --> 00:22:33,221 to sustain the giant scale trees. 209 00:22:38,748 --> 00:22:40,533 The swamp is no longer wet enough 210 00:22:40,707 --> 00:22:42,796 for the spores to germinate, 211 00:22:42,970 --> 00:22:45,189 and the trees cannot recover. 212 00:22:47,148 --> 00:22:51,544 The once endless groves are becoming patchy and sparse. 213 00:23:02,903 --> 00:23:04,600 Against all the odds, 214 00:23:04,731 --> 00:23:07,734 our Diplocaulus mom has managed to keep enough water 215 00:23:07,908 --> 00:23:10,737 in her burrow for her eggs to survive. 216 00:23:22,052 --> 00:23:25,186 And now, they're starting to hatch. 217 00:23:25,752 --> 00:23:28,102 A miracle of new life. 218 00:23:29,669 --> 00:23:31,366 But unlike their mother, 219 00:23:31,540 --> 00:23:33,847 they can only breathe underwater. 220 00:23:34,978 --> 00:23:37,372 For now, they have feathery gills 221 00:23:37,503 --> 00:23:39,679 that absorb all the oxygen they need. 222 00:23:41,550 --> 00:23:44,379 It will be eight weeks before their lungs develop 223 00:23:44,553 --> 00:23:46,425 and they can breathe on land. 224 00:23:49,166 --> 00:23:50,733 Despite all her hard work, 225 00:23:50,951 --> 00:23:53,432 their birthing pool is shrinking. 226 00:23:57,131 --> 00:23:59,655 Our mom is running out of time, 227 00:24:00,439 --> 00:24:04,921 and digging around on this bank just got riskier. 228 00:24:11,406 --> 00:24:15,062 Forced by the drought to hunt in these shallow waters... 229 00:24:16,193 --> 00:24:19,936 Orthacanthus, a freshwater shark. 230 00:24:24,158 --> 00:24:25,899 Aquatic animals here are now pushed 231 00:24:26,116 --> 00:24:28,467 into smaller and smaller pockets. 232 00:24:30,207 --> 00:24:33,994 Global cooling has brought the forests to a tipping point. 233 00:24:37,388 --> 00:24:41,044 These baby Eryops, abandoned by their parents, 234 00:24:41,218 --> 00:24:42,785 are now stuck. 235 00:24:45,048 --> 00:24:48,965 Thousands of them, with no space and no food. 236 00:24:54,188 --> 00:24:57,496 It's not long before they turn on each other. 237 00:25:17,341 --> 00:25:22,521 Just one tiny tragedy in a world that is falling apart. 238 00:25:28,788 --> 00:25:30,572 In her underground nursery, 239 00:25:30,790 --> 00:25:34,184 our Diplocaulus mom is also desperate. 240 00:25:43,890 --> 00:25:46,066 To save her remaining babies, 241 00:25:46,196 --> 00:25:49,722 she carries them in her mouth down to the stream. 242 00:26:31,067 --> 00:26:34,897 She has spent weeks fiercely defending these little ones. 243 00:26:35,724 --> 00:26:38,597 Now, there's nothing more she can do. 244 00:26:39,685 --> 00:26:41,295 They are on their own. 245 00:26:43,340 --> 00:26:46,779 But they're not the ones in danger. 246 00:27:05,536 --> 00:27:08,278 After an unnaturally long dry season, 247 00:27:08,452 --> 00:27:10,629 the swamp forest is suffering. 248 00:27:13,675 --> 00:27:16,939 Our Diplocaulus mom has had to abandon her burrow 249 00:27:17,113 --> 00:27:18,506 to save her babies. 250 00:27:20,464 --> 00:27:22,205 Holding them in her mouth, 251 00:27:22,379 --> 00:27:24,338 she has carried them down to the river. 252 00:27:26,340 --> 00:27:30,126 She has no idea she's being stalked. 253 00:28:10,079 --> 00:28:13,126 The starving shark has overreached. 254 00:28:19,175 --> 00:28:21,003 His last mistake. 255 00:28:30,926 --> 00:28:33,537 Our mom returns to her empty burrow. 256 00:28:34,756 --> 00:28:39,239 Her best hope now is to wait out the dry season underground. 257 00:29:00,739 --> 00:29:02,088 The swampland forests 258 00:29:02,305 --> 00:29:04,873 are the architects of their own destruction. 259 00:29:07,876 --> 00:29:11,488 By absorbing so much carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, 260 00:29:11,706 --> 00:29:14,970 they set in motion unstoppable global cooling. 261 00:29:15,754 --> 00:29:18,887 And a cooler world is a drier world. 262 00:29:25,633 --> 00:29:27,809 Inside her burrow, our Diplocaulus 263 00:29:27,896 --> 00:29:30,769 has made herself a mucus cocoon to hibernate. 264 00:29:33,075 --> 00:29:34,816 But her time has passed. 265 00:29:34,990 --> 00:29:37,688 She will raise no more babies in this forest. 266 00:29:38,733 --> 00:29:43,042 Outside, the age of plants is coming to an end. 267 00:29:48,308 --> 00:29:50,484 Millions of years pass. 268 00:29:51,528 --> 00:29:53,182 From the west to the east, 269 00:29:53,400 --> 00:29:57,665 nearly 90% of swamp forest trees are lost. 270 00:29:59,406 --> 00:30:00,668 And along with them, 271 00:30:00,886 --> 00:30:03,584 many of the strange and wonderful creatures 272 00:30:03,802 --> 00:30:05,499 that depended on them. 273 00:30:06,979 --> 00:30:11,897 Eventually, the earth warms and the ice starts to melt. 274 00:30:14,682 --> 00:30:17,990 But the land remains a drier place. 275 00:30:33,657 --> 00:30:35,746 Instead of scale trees, 276 00:30:35,921 --> 00:30:38,532 other trees now dominate the landscape. 277 00:30:41,056 --> 00:30:42,492 Conifers. 278 00:30:52,024 --> 00:30:53,895 Their crucial advantage 279 00:30:54,069 --> 00:30:57,203 is that instead of using spores to reproduce, 280 00:30:57,377 --> 00:30:58,857 they use seeds. 281 00:31:02,338 --> 00:31:06,560 These simple packets of food give seedlings a head start. 282 00:31:16,787 --> 00:31:18,746 The animals that live in and around 283 00:31:18,964 --> 00:31:21,880 these conifer forests have evolved... 284 00:31:25,231 --> 00:31:28,582 and become much, much bigger. 285 00:31:54,086 --> 00:31:57,045 This is a Dimetrodon. 286 00:32:01,571 --> 00:32:03,747 As long as a dump truck, 287 00:32:03,878 --> 00:32:07,099 she is the apex predator in these forests. 288 00:32:08,491 --> 00:32:10,929 And she smells something in the ground. 289 00:32:25,421 --> 00:32:26,901 An amphibian. 290 00:32:27,946 --> 00:32:29,469 Even in this new world, 291 00:32:29,686 --> 00:32:32,254 amphibians can survive drier periods 292 00:32:32,428 --> 00:32:34,256 by hibernating underground. 293 00:32:38,913 --> 00:32:42,003 Unless a giant reptile with a good sense of smell 294 00:32:42,090 --> 00:32:43,744 finds them first. 295 00:32:50,446 --> 00:32:55,277 A curious call reaches the Dimetrodon like a dinner bell. 296 00:33:11,772 --> 00:33:13,513 Cotylorhynchus. 297 00:33:15,732 --> 00:33:18,344 A cumbersome, plant-eating machine. 298 00:33:21,521 --> 00:33:24,002 His ancestors were carnivores, 299 00:33:24,176 --> 00:33:26,395 but his species has evolved to become one of 300 00:33:26,482 --> 00:33:28,876 the first large herbivores. 301 00:33:31,313 --> 00:33:33,228 In the time of the swamp forests, 302 00:33:33,402 --> 00:33:36,710 the only creatures that ate plants were insects. 303 00:33:38,277 --> 00:33:40,975 But plants aren't as nutritious as meat, 304 00:33:41,149 --> 00:33:45,849 so he needs a massive gut to break down his tough diet. 305 00:33:55,033 --> 00:33:57,992 Today, though, something is wrong. 306 00:34:01,778 --> 00:34:03,171 Dizziness. 307 00:34:04,912 --> 00:34:06,392 Drooling. 308 00:34:07,915 --> 00:34:09,569 Gas. 309 00:34:10,700 --> 00:34:13,486 All the signs of poisoning. 310 00:34:15,662 --> 00:34:18,230 The moment animals started eating plants, 311 00:34:18,404 --> 00:34:21,885 plants started producing toxins to put the herbivores off. 312 00:34:23,191 --> 00:34:27,413 And today, he swallowed the wrong kind of leaves. 313 00:34:29,980 --> 00:34:31,504 Another symptom? 314 00:34:33,114 --> 00:34:34,333 Collapse. 315 00:34:37,379 --> 00:34:39,425 He'll have to sleep it off. 316 00:34:40,817 --> 00:34:42,950 But this could be fatal. 317 00:34:44,560 --> 00:34:49,783 Nearby, hungry eyes are watching. 318 00:34:58,618 --> 00:35:00,141 It is 20 million years 319 00:35:00,315 --> 00:35:02,709 since the collapse of the swamp forests. 320 00:35:02,883 --> 00:35:05,451 Conifers now cover the land. 321 00:35:11,370 --> 00:35:15,025 Beneath their branches, reptiles have thrived, 322 00:35:15,243 --> 00:35:17,332 and some have grown enormous. 323 00:35:24,687 --> 00:35:28,474 This giant herbivore has eaten some poisonous plants 324 00:35:28,604 --> 00:35:30,432 and decided to sleep it off. 325 00:35:30,998 --> 00:35:33,261 But this has left him vulnerable, 326 00:35:33,435 --> 00:35:35,350 and he has attracted the attention 327 00:35:35,568 --> 00:35:37,918 of a predatory Dimetrodon. 328 00:36:21,788 --> 00:36:24,182 Luckily, he has friends. 329 00:36:30,100 --> 00:36:32,277 Big friends. 330 00:36:55,387 --> 00:36:59,129 The Cotylorhynchus is part of a herd, 331 00:36:59,260 --> 00:37:01,306 a new social grouping herbivores use 332 00:37:01,480 --> 00:37:03,046 to defend themselves. 333 00:37:08,704 --> 00:37:10,228 Some other time. 334 00:37:15,363 --> 00:37:17,017 The collapse of the swamp forests 335 00:37:17,235 --> 00:37:19,585 ushered in a new era on land. 336 00:37:22,109 --> 00:37:24,894 It is the dawn of the age of reptiles. 337 00:37:26,026 --> 00:37:29,290 And there are more and more large herbivores 338 00:37:29,464 --> 00:37:31,901 who are starting to break up the forests. 339 00:37:32,380 --> 00:37:35,253 And their dung helps fertilize the ground. 340 00:37:38,995 --> 00:37:41,041 For the first time, 341 00:37:41,215 --> 00:37:44,958 animals are beginning to shape their habitats 342 00:37:45,132 --> 00:37:47,047 on a massive scale. 343 00:37:50,920 --> 00:37:53,271 It's the way of the future. 344 00:38:10,984 --> 00:38:13,943 Today, rainforests once again 345 00:38:14,117 --> 00:38:16,294 dominate the Earth's tropical regions. 346 00:38:22,474 --> 00:38:24,302 They have evolved to be 347 00:38:24,476 --> 00:38:27,130 the most diverse environments on Earth. 348 00:38:29,785 --> 00:38:34,181 Home to half of all our plant and animal species. 349 00:38:36,183 --> 00:38:39,752 It's only recently they have come under threat from humans. 350 00:38:46,236 --> 00:38:48,630 The rate at which they are now shrinking 351 00:38:48,761 --> 00:38:51,677 is greater than any time in Earth's history. 352 00:39:02,209 --> 00:39:04,864 Could our impact cause a tipping point, 353 00:39:05,081 --> 00:39:07,257 like the ancient swamp forests, 354 00:39:07,388 --> 00:39:09,869 that brings about a complete collapse? 355 00:39:18,356 --> 00:39:22,534 Hope for the rainforests lies in their incredible biodiversity. 356 00:39:24,623 --> 00:39:28,366 No one part of the forest is quite like another. 357 00:39:31,020 --> 00:39:32,587 Along with this diversity 358 00:39:32,718 --> 00:39:35,851 comes a powerful ability to regenerate. 359 00:39:38,767 --> 00:39:43,468 Where humans abandon land, the forest recovers. 360 00:39:47,515 --> 00:39:50,170 Two-thirds of today's global rainforests 361 00:39:50,388 --> 00:39:52,346 are secondary regrowth. 362 00:39:53,695 --> 00:39:56,829 Bouncing back after human impact. 363 00:40:07,317 --> 00:40:09,189 Modern tropical rainforests 364 00:40:09,407 --> 00:40:12,410 have proven themselves to be remarkably resilient. 365 00:40:21,810 --> 00:40:25,727 Humans just need to give them space to recover. 366 00:40:29,339 --> 00:40:33,561 ♪ I see trees of green ♪ 367 00:40:33,779 --> 00:40:36,564 ♪ Red roses too ♪ 368 00:40:36,695 --> 00:40:41,961 ♪ I watch them bloom for me and you ♪ 369 00:40:42,135 --> 00:40:46,269 ♪ And I think to myself ♪ 370 00:40:46,444 --> 00:40:53,102 ♪ What a wonderful world ♪ 371 00:40:53,276 --> 00:40:58,456 ♪ Yes, I think to myself ♪ 372 00:40:58,586 --> 00:41:02,590 ♪ What a wonderful world ♪ 28758

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