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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:21,520 --> 00:00:23,318 In my long life, 2 00:00:23,319 --> 00:00:28,597 I've been lucky enough to travel to almost every part of the globe 3 00:00:28,598 --> 00:00:33,556 and gaze upon some of its most beautiful and dramatic sights. 4 00:00:33,557 --> 00:00:37,594 But I can assure you that nature in these islands, 5 00:00:37,595 --> 00:00:41,113 if you know where to look, can be just as dramatic 6 00:00:41,114 --> 00:00:45,073 and spectacular as anything that I've seen elsewhere. 7 00:00:55,870 --> 00:00:59,148 The British Isles are globally important for nature. 8 00:00:59,149 --> 00:01:01,747 SQUAWKING 9 00:01:01,748 --> 00:01:04,787 In this series, we'll show you why that is so... 10 00:01:06,587 --> 00:01:09,865 ..and celebrate the wonders of these islands 11 00:01:09,866 --> 00:01:11,944 that we call home. 12 00:01:11,945 --> 00:01:14,985 This is Wild Isles. 13 00:01:54,053 --> 00:01:55,653 Muckle Flugga. 14 00:01:56,772 --> 00:01:59,811 The very far north of the British Isles. 15 00:01:59,812 --> 00:02:02,050 SQUAWKING 16 00:02:02,051 --> 00:02:06,289 170 miles from mainland Scotland, 17 00:02:06,290 --> 00:02:09,968 at the northern tip of the Shetland Islands, 18 00:02:09,969 --> 00:02:14,007 it's home to some of our richest marine and birdlife. 19 00:02:24,604 --> 00:02:29,483 These rough waters are patrolled by our largest marine predator. 20 00:02:37,281 --> 00:02:40,360 Orca - killer whales. 21 00:02:48,317 --> 00:02:52,315 Three pods of them, having spent the winter fishing for herring 22 00:02:52,316 --> 00:02:58,235 off Iceland, regularly return to Shetland's waters each spring. 23 00:03:02,793 --> 00:03:05,752 They do so for one particular reason. 24 00:03:16,069 --> 00:03:20,948 Thousands of common and grey seals live here. 25 00:03:31,985 --> 00:03:35,383 The waters are full of food 26 00:03:35,384 --> 00:03:38,743 and there are plenty of gullies and channels that offer safety... 27 00:03:41,422 --> 00:03:43,342 ..most of the time. 28 00:03:48,700 --> 00:03:53,858 The orca that come here have a particular taste for seals. 29 00:04:04,735 --> 00:04:06,855 ORCAS WHISTLE 30 00:04:11,093 --> 00:04:14,972 And they have developed a unique way of catching them. 31 00:04:27,209 --> 00:04:31,168 Their strategy is one of surprise. 32 00:04:35,246 --> 00:04:39,044 They have discovered how to travel up channels in the kelp 33 00:04:39,045 --> 00:04:42,964 to reach the shallow water where seals often hide. 34 00:05:08,237 --> 00:05:10,996 No gully is left unchecked. 35 00:05:19,834 --> 00:05:23,671 The orca turn on their side, so that their dorsal fin 36 00:05:23,672 --> 00:05:26,672 doesn't break the surface and reveal their presence. 37 00:05:42,987 --> 00:05:44,465 A seal. 38 00:05:44,466 --> 00:05:46,505 It stays close to the rocks, 39 00:05:46,506 --> 00:05:49,585 where a large orca would find swimming difficult. 40 00:05:57,863 --> 00:06:01,182 It hides and waits for the danger to pass. 41 00:06:07,740 --> 00:06:10,498 The orca bide their time. 42 00:06:10,499 --> 00:06:14,378 Their best chance is to find a seal asleep in the water... 43 00:06:16,937 --> 00:06:18,497 ..like this one. 44 00:06:30,653 --> 00:06:34,692 It wakes up and flees, but there's a pup here, too. 45 00:06:51,767 --> 00:06:54,765 The orca takes its catch out into open water 46 00:06:54,766 --> 00:06:59,485 and there shows younger members of the pod how to drown it. 47 00:07:06,283 --> 00:07:08,922 The whole group now share the catch. 48 00:07:10,002 --> 00:07:11,921 Nothing will be wasted. 49 00:07:23,758 --> 00:07:27,196 Shetland is the only place in Britain and Ireland 50 00:07:27,197 --> 00:07:29,036 where orca breed. 51 00:07:30,116 --> 00:07:34,993 Just one of the many remarkable creatures that inhabit our seas, 52 00:07:34,994 --> 00:07:37,274 lands and skies. 53 00:07:48,151 --> 00:07:53,748 One reason why our natural world is so rich comes from its geology - 54 00:07:53,749 --> 00:07:57,548 amongst the most varied to be found anywhere on the planet... 55 00:07:59,427 --> 00:08:02,785 ..from the chalk cliffs and downs of southern England 56 00:08:02,786 --> 00:08:05,666 to the limestone pavements of Yorkshire... 57 00:08:07,465 --> 00:08:10,463 ..from the rugged whinstone cliffs of Durham 58 00:08:10,464 --> 00:08:13,422 to the volcanic basalt of the Giant's Causeway 59 00:08:13,423 --> 00:08:15,143 in Northern Ireland. 60 00:08:17,462 --> 00:08:20,740 Each kind of rock creates its own landscape 61 00:08:20,741 --> 00:08:24,740 with its own community of animals and plants. 62 00:08:29,978 --> 00:08:34,777 Another reason our nature is so diverse is our varied climate. 63 00:08:37,736 --> 00:08:41,855 In the north, it can be very cold indeed. 64 00:08:44,214 --> 00:08:48,492 A thousand metres up in Scotland's Cairngorm Mountains. 65 00:08:48,493 --> 00:08:50,892 Winter here can be truly arctic... 66 00:08:52,212 --> 00:08:56,651 ..with temperatures dropping to -27 degrees centigrade. 67 00:09:00,970 --> 00:09:03,648 These peaks in the Highlands are patrolled 68 00:09:03,649 --> 00:09:06,848 by one of our most spectacular birds of prey... 69 00:09:09,447 --> 00:09:10,887 ..the golden eagle. 70 00:09:22,723 --> 00:09:25,961 They were once widespread across Britain and Ireland, 71 00:09:25,962 --> 00:09:29,680 but today almost all of our 500 or so pairs 72 00:09:29,681 --> 00:09:31,881 nest here in Scotland. 73 00:09:35,200 --> 00:09:39,077 Now, however, after years of persecution, 74 00:09:39,078 --> 00:09:41,718 golden eagle numbers are on the rise. 75 00:09:50,195 --> 00:09:53,193 Within their territory, there is clear evidence 76 00:09:53,194 --> 00:09:56,633 of how precious our few remaining wild places are. 77 00:10:00,192 --> 00:10:03,950 There are now only remnants of the vast ancient forest 78 00:10:03,951 --> 00:10:06,351 that once covered most of the Highlands. 79 00:10:08,710 --> 00:10:12,908 The Caledonian Forest is the only native coniferous woodland 80 00:10:12,909 --> 00:10:14,388 left in Britain. 81 00:10:16,428 --> 00:10:20,626 It's less than 1% of its original extent. 82 00:10:26,945 --> 00:10:31,702 Only 13% of Britain as a whole is covered by trees. 83 00:10:31,703 --> 00:10:34,902 That's one of the lowest proportions in the whole of Europe. 84 00:10:36,702 --> 00:10:40,821 Our oak trees, however, are globally important. 85 00:10:42,140 --> 00:10:45,618 England alone has more ancient oaks 86 00:10:45,619 --> 00:10:47,778 than the whole of Europe put together. 87 00:10:47,779 --> 00:10:52,337 And over three-quarters of them are more than 500 years old. 88 00:11:03,534 --> 00:11:06,572 In the grounds of Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire 89 00:11:06,573 --> 00:11:09,612 stands the oldest oak tree in Britain. 90 00:11:10,652 --> 00:11:14,410 It's 1,046 years old 91 00:11:14,411 --> 00:11:18,090 and began its life before the Norman Conquest. 92 00:11:28,927 --> 00:11:33,484 Oak trees, throughout their long lives, provide food and shelter 93 00:11:33,485 --> 00:11:38,844 for over 2,300 different species of plants and animals. 94 00:11:49,681 --> 00:11:54,478 As the sun sets, the oak tree's night shift appears. 95 00:11:54,479 --> 00:11:56,319 OWL HOOTS 96 00:11:59,678 --> 00:12:04,236 Among them, one of the most charming animals in Britain... 97 00:12:09,355 --> 00:12:11,033 ..a dormouse. 98 00:12:11,034 --> 00:12:15,073 She assesses the light levels outside her nest. 99 00:12:16,873 --> 00:12:19,232 The full moon could be a problem. 100 00:12:21,911 --> 00:12:25,630 But after sleeping all day, she needs to get out and about. 101 00:12:33,668 --> 00:12:38,307 She has four growing babies who all depend on her for milk. 102 00:12:43,825 --> 00:12:46,503 But fortunately, higher up in the oak, 103 00:12:46,504 --> 00:12:51,303 there is a particularly energy-rich food waiting to be collected. 104 00:12:54,382 --> 00:12:58,581 For us, it would be like climbing to the top of a skyscraper. 105 00:13:12,137 --> 00:13:16,614 Left alone, the babies begin to explore the dangerous world 106 00:13:16,615 --> 00:13:19,095 beyond their nest-hole. 107 00:13:37,529 --> 00:13:41,568 Their mother is getting closer to what she's looking for. 108 00:13:48,886 --> 00:13:53,405 But tawny owls also nest in oak trees. 109 00:13:55,844 --> 00:13:57,564 She freezes... 110 00:13:59,123 --> 00:14:03,242 ..and can stay motionless for over an hour to avoid detection. 111 00:14:17,638 --> 00:14:21,797 At last, she decides it's safe to continue her climb. 112 00:14:27,875 --> 00:14:31,634 Now she can smell the plant that she's looking for... 113 00:14:34,233 --> 00:14:35,593 ..honeysuckle. 114 00:14:38,952 --> 00:14:41,270 This is worth the climb. 115 00:14:41,271 --> 00:14:44,230 The flowers are loaded with sugar-rich nectar. 116 00:14:52,348 --> 00:14:56,706 She bites off the petals to get to the sweet liquid at their base. 117 00:15:06,864 --> 00:15:10,023 Her young are getting impatient. 118 00:15:22,219 --> 00:15:24,099 One ventures out... 119 00:15:25,178 --> 00:15:27,258 ..and starts to explore. 120 00:15:33,616 --> 00:15:36,775 Mother decides that she's eaten enough. 121 00:15:46,052 --> 00:15:49,251 The baby dormice scuttle back home. 122 00:16:06,086 --> 00:16:08,006 Safe at last. 123 00:16:09,285 --> 00:16:10,685 But for how long? 124 00:16:15,044 --> 00:16:17,403 Dormice were once widespread... 125 00:16:18,483 --> 00:16:21,841 ..but now they are largely restricted to Wales 126 00:16:21,842 --> 00:16:23,761 and southern England. 127 00:16:31,839 --> 00:16:36,997 Spring brings with it one of the woodlands' greatest spectacles... 128 00:16:39,797 --> 00:16:41,236 ..bluebells. 129 00:16:43,835 --> 00:16:49,233 Within only a few days, the ground is flooded with colour. 130 00:16:49,234 --> 00:16:52,032 More than half the world's common bluebells 131 00:16:52,033 --> 00:16:54,512 flower in Britain and Ireland. 132 00:16:56,832 --> 00:17:01,069 The peak of their display coincides with an important event 133 00:17:01,070 --> 00:17:04,709 in the lives of one of the woodlands' bigger inhabitants. 134 00:17:12,067 --> 00:17:15,505 With a sense of smell that's much more acute than ours, 135 00:17:15,506 --> 00:17:19,665 a badger in East Sussex checks that the coast is clear. 136 00:17:25,023 --> 00:17:27,582 Once they're sure that it's safe, 137 00:17:27,583 --> 00:17:32,221 the adults allow their cubs above ground for the very first time. 138 00:17:37,540 --> 00:17:39,738 Badger clans are tightly knit - 139 00:17:39,739 --> 00:17:42,857 and these young cubs are linked by scent, 140 00:17:42,858 --> 00:17:47,377 not just to their mother but to the whole extended family. 141 00:17:54,815 --> 00:17:58,973 Britain is home to over a quarter of Europe's badgers 142 00:17:58,974 --> 00:18:02,172 and their digging and foraging has been a major factor 143 00:18:02,173 --> 00:18:04,212 in shaping the forest floor. 144 00:18:11,570 --> 00:18:16,288 Woodlands are complex communities containing great numbers of species 145 00:18:16,289 --> 00:18:19,488 of plants and mammals, birds and insects. 146 00:18:20,567 --> 00:18:24,206 But over the decades, they've been greatly diminished. 147 00:18:26,286 --> 00:18:32,204 In just the last 20 years, 60% of our flying insects have vanished. 148 00:18:34,283 --> 00:18:37,761 Insects play a crucial role in pollinating 149 00:18:37,762 --> 00:18:40,441 both our wild flowers and our crops 150 00:18:40,442 --> 00:18:44,440 and they do so in a variety of remarkable ways. 151 00:18:46,000 --> 00:18:49,038 The flowers of red valerian, for instance, 152 00:18:49,039 --> 00:18:53,557 store their nectar at the base of their elongated blooms, 153 00:18:53,558 --> 00:18:58,476 so only a pollinator with very special mouthparts can drink it. 154 00:19:02,555 --> 00:19:06,674 The hummingbird hawk-moth has just the right equipment for the job... 155 00:19:07,794 --> 00:19:10,473 ..a long tubular proboscis. 156 00:19:15,831 --> 00:19:20,549 These summer visitors can beat their wings 85 times a second 157 00:19:20,550 --> 00:19:24,469 and need lots of nectar to fuel the effort of doing so. 158 00:19:34,266 --> 00:19:39,024 Other flowers, like bittersweet, offer a different reward - 159 00:19:39,025 --> 00:19:42,263 not nectar but pollen, which is produced 160 00:19:42,264 --> 00:19:45,183 within its tightly-sealed yellow anthers. 161 00:19:49,262 --> 00:19:52,140 And one insect knows how to reach it - 162 00:19:52,141 --> 00:19:53,700 a bumblebee. 163 00:19:54,900 --> 00:19:56,740 BUZZING 164 00:19:58,179 --> 00:20:01,938 This female has developed a very clever way to get at the pollen. 165 00:20:03,018 --> 00:20:06,496 She vibrates her body at exactly the right frequency 166 00:20:06,497 --> 00:20:08,656 to make the pollen pour out. 167 00:20:09,696 --> 00:20:11,455 BUZZING 168 00:20:19,493 --> 00:20:21,931 The pollen will feed her young, 169 00:20:21,932 --> 00:20:26,770 but some will rub off when she visits other flowers on her way home 170 00:20:26,771 --> 00:20:28,690 and so fertilise them... 171 00:20:32,169 --> 00:20:35,448 ..a win for both flower and bee. 172 00:20:40,247 --> 00:20:44,245 Perhaps the most complicated pollination technique of all 173 00:20:44,246 --> 00:20:48,924 is that used by a common woodland plant known as lords-and-ladies. 174 00:20:51,004 --> 00:20:54,163 It produces a very odd-looking flower... 175 00:20:55,762 --> 00:20:59,361 ..with a large purple spike called a spadix. 176 00:21:01,761 --> 00:21:05,239 In the late afternoon, the spadix heats up 177 00:21:05,240 --> 00:21:08,518 until it becomes 20 degrees centigrade hotter 178 00:21:08,519 --> 00:21:13,677 than its surroundings and releases a foul-smelling scent. 179 00:21:15,237 --> 00:21:18,395 Tiny owl midge-flies, looking for rotting matter 180 00:21:18,396 --> 00:21:23,914 on which to lay their eggs, find the stink irresistibly attractive. 181 00:21:27,753 --> 00:21:31,711 But the inner side of the hooded leaf that surrounds the spadix 182 00:21:31,712 --> 00:21:33,990 is very slippery. 183 00:21:33,991 --> 00:21:36,911 The flies tumble down into a dungeon... 184 00:21:40,270 --> 00:21:43,429 ..the bulbous chamber at the base of the plant. 185 00:21:47,228 --> 00:21:49,266 The female parts that need pollinating 186 00:21:49,267 --> 00:21:52,505 are at the bottom of this chamber. 187 00:21:52,506 --> 00:21:56,425 Above them, the male parts that produce the pollen. 188 00:21:57,744 --> 00:22:03,223 And at the very top, spikey, slippery, downward-pointing hairs. 189 00:22:05,502 --> 00:22:10,900 These act like the bars of a prison, trapping the owl-flies below... 190 00:22:10,901 --> 00:22:12,459 BUZZING 191 00:22:12,460 --> 00:22:14,899 ..and holding them there overnight. 192 00:22:20,858 --> 00:22:26,215 Trapped, the flies get glued to the flower's sticky female parts, 193 00:22:26,216 --> 00:22:28,814 transferring any pollen they may have brought 194 00:22:28,815 --> 00:22:30,895 from other lords-and-ladies. 195 00:22:32,254 --> 00:22:35,772 The flies then eat the now-dried sweet secretion 196 00:22:35,773 --> 00:22:38,212 and then try to leave, 197 00:22:38,213 --> 00:22:41,412 but the flower will not release them just yet. 198 00:22:43,731 --> 00:22:47,929 The male flowers above are now ripe and their pollen bursts out, 199 00:22:47,930 --> 00:22:49,809 showering the flies below. 200 00:22:56,687 --> 00:22:59,127 The prison bars now wilt... 201 00:23:01,086 --> 00:23:03,405 ..and the flies are free to go. 202 00:23:04,485 --> 00:23:07,883 For this extraordinary pollination to be successful, 203 00:23:07,884 --> 00:23:11,482 a fly must escape this prison twice - 204 00:23:11,483 --> 00:23:14,841 first to be loaded with pollen 205 00:23:14,842 --> 00:23:18,080 and then, once again, to deliver the pollen 206 00:23:18,081 --> 00:23:20,640 to another lords-and-ladies flower. 207 00:23:29,198 --> 00:23:33,876 Nowhere here is richer in wild flowers and insect pollinators 208 00:23:33,877 --> 00:23:36,396 than our traditional hay meadows. 209 00:23:37,436 --> 00:23:40,394 Sadly, in the last 60 years, 210 00:23:40,395 --> 00:23:43,674 we've lost 97% of this precious habitat. 211 00:23:46,713 --> 00:23:49,471 But with nature-friendly farming, 212 00:23:49,472 --> 00:23:54,111 meadows can be restored to provide a haven for wildlife. 213 00:23:56,430 --> 00:23:58,869 It's all about the timing. 214 00:24:02,548 --> 00:24:05,586 Delaying mowing until mid-July 215 00:24:05,587 --> 00:24:09,225 allows birds and insects to complete their breeding 216 00:24:09,226 --> 00:24:11,386 and flowers to set their seed. 217 00:24:16,264 --> 00:24:18,463 It also creates opportunities 218 00:24:18,464 --> 00:24:20,703 for those that are ready to exploit them. 219 00:24:29,141 --> 00:24:31,419 The local foxes here in Gloucestershire 220 00:24:31,420 --> 00:24:33,619 know these fields very well. 221 00:24:36,938 --> 00:24:40,416 Every year, they follow the farmers from field to field 222 00:24:40,417 --> 00:24:42,377 as they make hay. 223 00:24:44,536 --> 00:24:47,375 And sometimes the cubs come with them. 224 00:24:52,294 --> 00:24:54,892 These cubs are only three months old 225 00:24:54,893 --> 00:24:57,612 and mostly interested in play. 226 00:25:00,412 --> 00:25:02,171 GROWLING 227 00:25:06,090 --> 00:25:10,609 Summer chafers emerging from the grass are worth eating. 228 00:25:13,408 --> 00:25:15,367 If you can catch them! 229 00:25:18,686 --> 00:25:22,085 But the cubs need to be taught how to hunt properly. 230 00:25:28,164 --> 00:25:31,642 By September, they will be on their own, 231 00:25:31,642 --> 00:25:34,362 so their mother shows them how. 232 00:25:44,919 --> 00:25:49,076 Her acute sense of hearing enables her to detect 233 00:25:49,077 --> 00:25:51,837 even the slightest rustle in the grass. 234 00:26:02,394 --> 00:26:04,312 By moving her head, 235 00:26:04,313 --> 00:26:07,832 she can pin-point exactly where the noise is coming from. 236 00:26:10,631 --> 00:26:13,350 And then, silently, she leaps. 237 00:26:15,390 --> 00:26:17,269 SQUEALING 238 00:26:30,146 --> 00:26:33,864 At least the cubs will have something to eat this evening. 239 00:26:44,661 --> 00:26:47,819 Britain and Ireland's position on the globe 240 00:26:47,820 --> 00:26:52,059 gives us a special importance for wildlife internationally. 241 00:26:53,419 --> 00:26:56,497 We are in just the right place to welcome migrants 242 00:26:56,498 --> 00:27:00,337 from the south in summer and from the north in winter. 243 00:27:05,135 --> 00:27:10,173 Each autumn, around 30,000 barnacle geese arrive 244 00:27:10,174 --> 00:27:12,612 on the Hebridean island of Islay. 245 00:27:12,613 --> 00:27:14,333 SQUAWKING 246 00:27:18,052 --> 00:27:22,330 They have all come from Greenland, where they spent the summer. 247 00:27:28,409 --> 00:27:32,247 Some years, half the world population arrive here, 248 00:27:32,248 --> 00:27:34,807 all attracted by the same food... 249 00:27:40,365 --> 00:27:41,805 ..grass. 250 00:27:45,364 --> 00:27:47,522 They feed in groups. 251 00:27:47,523 --> 00:27:51,562 That way, there will always be some eyes keeping watch. 252 00:27:53,002 --> 00:27:54,801 SQUAWKING 253 00:27:59,320 --> 00:28:03,479 White-tailed eagles - our biggest bird of prey. 254 00:28:06,318 --> 00:28:08,796 Once extinct in Britain, 255 00:28:08,797 --> 00:28:13,036 today, up to a dozen now spend winter on Islay. 256 00:28:18,074 --> 00:28:20,073 But they've been spotted. 257 00:28:20,074 --> 00:28:21,953 SQUAWKING 258 00:28:33,110 --> 00:28:37,269 The eagles must select a particular bird as a target. 259 00:28:40,388 --> 00:28:44,187 They're testing the geese, trying to identify a weak one. 260 00:28:46,106 --> 00:28:49,064 After a journey of almost 2,000 miles, 261 00:28:49,065 --> 00:28:52,024 some will be particularly exhausted. 262 00:28:57,383 --> 00:28:59,942 But the eagles haven't chosen one yet. 263 00:29:05,860 --> 00:29:10,099 At low tide, out on the estuary, the geese come down. 264 00:29:15,098 --> 00:29:18,937 Even here, the eagles don't let them rest for long. 265 00:29:23,935 --> 00:29:27,294 A young, inexperienced eagle tries his luck... 266 00:29:31,053 --> 00:29:32,773 SQUAWKING 267 00:29:36,412 --> 00:29:38,371 ..driving them on again. 268 00:29:43,370 --> 00:29:46,289 The youngster keeps the flock on the move. 269 00:29:50,847 --> 00:29:54,526 One exhausted goose, however, gets left behind. 270 00:30:04,204 --> 00:30:06,283 Another young eagle swoops in. 271 00:30:11,361 --> 00:30:14,760 In the confusion, the goose manages to fly off. 272 00:30:22,078 --> 00:30:25,277 But neither of the eagles is going to give up now. 273 00:30:37,194 --> 00:30:39,273 GOOSE SQUAWKS 274 00:30:44,552 --> 00:30:46,790 As the goose turns, 275 00:30:46,791 --> 00:30:49,470 it loses one of its pursuers. 276 00:30:50,790 --> 00:30:53,909 Now it's just a one-on-one. 277 00:31:20,941 --> 00:31:25,380 The goose is so heavy, the young eagle has to struggle to hold on. 278 00:31:45,334 --> 00:31:49,972 This young bird and all the other white-tailed eagles here on Islay 279 00:31:49,973 --> 00:31:52,771 have only learnt how to hunt barnacle geese 280 00:31:52,772 --> 00:31:54,572 in the last ten years. 281 00:32:05,768 --> 00:32:08,047 Across Britain and Ireland, 282 00:32:08,048 --> 00:32:12,966 our mild climate attracts more than half a million geese each winter... 283 00:32:14,046 --> 00:32:18,964 ..making us a vital refuge for these long-distance travellers. 284 00:32:30,041 --> 00:32:36,119 Here in Britain, we have one of the rarest habitats on Earth - 285 00:32:36,120 --> 00:32:37,999 chalk streams. 286 00:32:40,798 --> 00:32:44,716 There are only about 200 chalk streams in the world 287 00:32:44,717 --> 00:32:48,956 and 85% of them flow through southern England. 288 00:32:52,635 --> 00:32:56,273 Their waters, rising through chalk and flowing over it, 289 00:32:56,274 --> 00:32:58,953 are rich in minerals and oxygen. 290 00:33:01,552 --> 00:33:05,310 This creates the right conditions for water-crowfoot 291 00:33:05,311 --> 00:33:09,470 that each summer produces floating carpets of white flowers. 292 00:33:16,548 --> 00:33:21,305 Above them fly banded demoiselle damselflies - 293 00:33:21,306 --> 00:33:23,946 slimmer relatives of dragonflies. 294 00:33:26,145 --> 00:33:30,103 These, with dark patches on their wings, are the males, 295 00:33:30,104 --> 00:33:32,463 and they are an iridescent blue. 296 00:33:40,901 --> 00:33:45,498 The more metallic-green ones with plain, unmarked wings 297 00:33:45,499 --> 00:33:47,219 are the females. 298 00:33:51,778 --> 00:33:55,176 To attract a female, a male must secure a patch 299 00:33:55,177 --> 00:33:58,856 of healthy floating leaves on which she can lay her eggs. 300 00:34:02,175 --> 00:34:06,973 The male declares his ownership of a patch by flaunting his wings... 301 00:34:09,373 --> 00:34:12,452 ..before returning to a nearby perch. 302 00:34:17,770 --> 00:34:21,648 But other males want both his territory and the female, 303 00:34:21,649 --> 00:34:23,848 and they are willing to fight. 304 00:34:38,524 --> 00:34:39,924 He's outnumbered. 305 00:34:47,761 --> 00:34:51,039 In the chaos, he returns to his perch, 306 00:34:51,040 --> 00:34:53,280 watched closely by the female. 307 00:34:54,759 --> 00:34:59,118 This time, he invites her down to view his patch of leaves... 308 00:35:00,958 --> 00:35:03,276 ..and settles on the water surface, 309 00:35:03,277 --> 00:35:07,475 showing her that the oxygen-rich waters are flowing well, 310 00:35:07,476 --> 00:35:09,915 which will be vital for her eggs. 311 00:35:12,714 --> 00:35:14,394 She's impressed. 312 00:35:16,753 --> 00:35:20,192 Mating, however, is a complicated business. 313 00:35:21,272 --> 00:35:24,510 First, he grasps her firmly by the neck 314 00:35:24,511 --> 00:35:27,750 and carefully removes any rival's sperm. 315 00:35:31,509 --> 00:35:35,706 Then he collects his own sperm from an opening near his head 316 00:35:35,707 --> 00:35:37,907 and transfers it to her. 317 00:35:49,264 --> 00:35:55,142 Once mated, the female flies to his patch of leaves to lay her eggs. 318 00:36:01,380 --> 00:36:05,579 And the male joins her to guard her from his rivals. 319 00:36:09,498 --> 00:36:14,015 They barge in and try and pull the couple apart, 320 00:36:14,016 --> 00:36:18,175 for it's still not too late for them to mate with this female themselves. 321 00:36:26,933 --> 00:36:29,172 But she has an escape route... 322 00:36:30,212 --> 00:36:31,891 ..under the water. 323 00:36:33,491 --> 00:36:37,009 A silver layer of bubbles allows her to breathe 324 00:36:37,010 --> 00:36:38,969 while she's beneath the surface. 325 00:36:43,008 --> 00:36:46,926 She cuts into the plant stems with her sharp ovipositor 326 00:36:46,927 --> 00:36:49,805 and starts to inject her eggs, 327 00:36:49,806 --> 00:36:53,165 producing more than 400 in under an hour. 328 00:37:02,042 --> 00:37:03,882 Mission accomplished. 329 00:37:13,559 --> 00:37:17,077 To breed in this way, the damsels require clean, 330 00:37:17,078 --> 00:37:19,158 free-flowing fresh water... 331 00:37:22,237 --> 00:37:25,676 ..as do other animals that live in chalk streams... 332 00:37:27,235 --> 00:37:30,234 ..our native brown trout and minnows. 333 00:37:32,714 --> 00:37:37,952 These small fish are preyed upon by one of our loveliest birds. 334 00:37:40,711 --> 00:37:42,430 We often hear them... 335 00:37:42,431 --> 00:37:44,589 BIRDS CHIRP 336 00:37:44,590 --> 00:37:49,509 ..but usually get only a glimpse, a flash of electric blue. 337 00:37:50,628 --> 00:37:54,627 Kingfishers speed along rivers at 30mph. 338 00:37:57,466 --> 00:38:00,185 Each claims a particular stretch of river 339 00:38:00,186 --> 00:38:02,385 which can be over two miles long. 340 00:38:07,743 --> 00:38:11,341 Fishing territories are vigorously defended 341 00:38:11,342 --> 00:38:14,581 and a male will only share one with his partner. 342 00:38:40,454 --> 00:38:42,452 Just to stay alive, 343 00:38:42,453 --> 00:38:46,612 this female must eat over half her body weight each day. 344 00:38:53,610 --> 00:38:56,928 If they have chicks, a pair of kingfishers 345 00:38:56,929 --> 00:39:00,408 must catch a further 70 fish every day. 346 00:39:16,204 --> 00:39:22,161 The coastline of Britain and Ireland is over 22,000 miles long 347 00:39:22,162 --> 00:39:26,121 and our seas are amongst the richest in Europe. 348 00:39:30,200 --> 00:39:34,197 Because of this, our sea bird colonies are among the biggest 349 00:39:34,198 --> 00:39:38,156 and most spectacular to be found anywhere on the planet. 350 00:39:38,157 --> 00:39:40,117 SQUAWKING 351 00:39:49,194 --> 00:39:52,432 Bass Rock in Scotland's Firth of Forth 352 00:39:52,433 --> 00:39:55,352 is the largest gannet colony in the world... 353 00:39:57,672 --> 00:40:02,350 ..with 75,000 pairs returning here each year. 354 00:40:05,949 --> 00:40:09,507 Our waters, in fact, support nearly 70% 355 00:40:09,508 --> 00:40:12,827 of the northern gannet's global population. 356 00:40:14,667 --> 00:40:19,944 At the height of summer, the whole of Bass Rock is jam-packed, 357 00:40:19,945 --> 00:40:23,104 with two nests to every square metre. 358 00:40:24,664 --> 00:40:29,102 Male and female spend the winter apart, far out at sea. 359 00:40:30,182 --> 00:40:33,260 But in spring, they return to their breeding grounds, 360 00:40:33,261 --> 00:40:36,139 and each couple re-establish their partnership 361 00:40:36,140 --> 00:40:39,419 with a delicate courtship display. 362 00:40:39,420 --> 00:40:41,339 SQUAWKING 363 00:40:51,176 --> 00:40:54,974 It takes over three months to rear a chick 364 00:40:54,975 --> 00:40:58,613 and, during that time, both parents will make hundreds of trips 365 00:40:58,614 --> 00:41:00,293 to collect food. 366 00:41:01,373 --> 00:41:06,572 On average, each feeding trip is over 140 miles long... 367 00:41:08,891 --> 00:41:13,650 ..but, on occasion, they may travel as far as 600 miles. 368 00:41:34,564 --> 00:41:38,161 The gannet's immense journeys are only possible 369 00:41:38,162 --> 00:41:41,082 because they bring their catch home in their stomachs. 370 00:41:46,880 --> 00:41:50,479 Mackerel and herring are the gannet's favourite food... 371 00:41:52,158 --> 00:41:57,077 ..though the size of a portion can be a bit of a problem for some. 372 00:42:07,874 --> 00:42:13,032 Another much smaller fish is also very important to our sea birds. 373 00:42:14,592 --> 00:42:18,390 Sand eels are only 30cm long, 374 00:42:18,391 --> 00:42:21,070 but they occur in vast shoals. 375 00:42:22,310 --> 00:42:24,948 They're a critical link in the food chains 376 00:42:24,949 --> 00:42:27,908 of a whole range of different sea birds. 377 00:42:31,627 --> 00:42:36,824 Lesser sand eels are the favourite prey of puffins. 378 00:42:36,825 --> 00:42:39,624 Almost half a million of these lovable birds 379 00:42:39,625 --> 00:42:43,982 come to our coast each summer, mostly to islands such as these - 380 00:42:43,983 --> 00:42:46,062 the Farnes off Northumberland. 381 00:42:46,063 --> 00:42:47,782 SQUAWKING 382 00:42:51,061 --> 00:42:53,061 PUFFINS GROWL 383 00:43:03,138 --> 00:43:09,135 Puffins mate for life and pairs use the same burrow every year. 384 00:43:09,136 --> 00:43:13,775 Here, they raise a single chick called a puffling. 385 00:43:17,134 --> 00:43:20,732 Unlike gannets, the journeys they make for food 386 00:43:20,733 --> 00:43:22,412 are usually shorter. 387 00:43:25,052 --> 00:43:27,130 Their broad bills enable them to carry 388 00:43:27,131 --> 00:43:30,849 remarkably large numbers of sand eels. 389 00:43:30,850 --> 00:43:33,769 But their catch is always temptingly visible. 390 00:43:44,126 --> 00:43:47,045 Herring gulls are twice the size of a puffin. 391 00:44:05,600 --> 00:44:09,078 But the greatest threat to puffins on this island 392 00:44:09,079 --> 00:44:11,917 comes from a smaller gull... 393 00:44:11,918 --> 00:44:13,757 SQUAWKING 394 00:44:22,075 --> 00:44:24,034 ..the black-headed gull. 395 00:44:40,110 --> 00:44:43,908 They are not strong enough to grab a puffin in the air. 396 00:44:43,909 --> 00:44:46,107 They have to use another technique. 397 00:44:46,108 --> 00:44:48,306 GULL SQUAWKS 398 00:44:48,307 --> 00:44:52,026 They try to snatch the sand eels right out of the puffin's beak. 399 00:45:10,901 --> 00:45:12,620 This puffin escapes. 400 00:45:14,100 --> 00:45:18,018 But the problem is that this burrow is not his. 401 00:45:18,019 --> 00:45:20,578 And the gulls seem to know that. 402 00:45:26,216 --> 00:45:28,656 He can't stay down there for long. 403 00:45:29,735 --> 00:45:31,655 PUFFIN GROWLS 404 00:45:42,812 --> 00:45:46,050 This little puffin is determined that these sand eels 405 00:45:46,051 --> 00:45:48,730 are for his chick and nobody else. 406 00:46:31,877 --> 00:46:33,277 Made it! 407 00:46:48,393 --> 00:46:51,311 Here off the coast of Pembrokeshire, 408 00:46:51,312 --> 00:46:54,551 puffin numbers have been steadily increasing. 409 00:46:55,631 --> 00:47:00,709 Today, nearly 40,000 return to this tiny island every summer. 410 00:47:01,749 --> 00:47:04,827 But Skomer is an exception. 411 00:47:04,828 --> 00:47:09,146 Most of our puffin colonies are in decline. 412 00:47:09,147 --> 00:47:12,785 Over-fishing and climate change mean the sand eels 413 00:47:12,786 --> 00:47:16,064 they depend on are increasingly hard to find. 414 00:47:16,065 --> 00:47:20,262 It's a clear example of just how fragile and fragmented 415 00:47:20,263 --> 00:47:22,542 our nature is. 416 00:47:22,543 --> 00:47:25,461 Though rich in places, Britain as a whole 417 00:47:25,462 --> 00:47:29,221 is one of the most nature depleted countries in the world. 418 00:47:30,300 --> 00:47:33,738 Never has there been a more important time 419 00:47:33,739 --> 00:47:37,537 to invest in our own wildlife, 420 00:47:37,538 --> 00:47:40,776 to try and set an example for the rest of the world 421 00:47:40,777 --> 00:47:46,256 and restore our once wild isles for future generation. 422 00:48:00,892 --> 00:48:03,330 To film orca hunting seals, 423 00:48:03,331 --> 00:48:06,849 the Wild Isles team travelled to Shetland. 424 00:48:06,850 --> 00:48:10,449 The plan was to find and follow one particular pod... 425 00:48:11,768 --> 00:48:15,887 ..a family of eight individuals known as the 27s. 426 00:48:17,767 --> 00:48:21,085 As Shetland's biggest pod, they were the team's best chance 427 00:48:21,086 --> 00:48:22,685 to film a hunt. 428 00:48:27,044 --> 00:48:31,723 They had a fast boat, modified to carry a stabilised camera system... 429 00:48:33,202 --> 00:48:36,681 ..and drones to give them a far-reaching eye in the sky. 430 00:48:39,041 --> 00:48:42,919 But finding the pod in this vast territory was not going to be easy. 431 00:48:43,999 --> 00:48:46,958 So the crew enlisted local knowledge. 432 00:48:48,518 --> 00:48:52,396 I just messaged my wife and asked her the, erm... 433 00:48:52,397 --> 00:48:55,075 How big is Shetland's coastline? 434 00:48:55,076 --> 00:48:58,834 And she wrote back to me and said it's 2,700km. 435 00:48:58,835 --> 00:49:01,993 And we're looking for basically a pod of eight animals 436 00:49:01,994 --> 00:49:05,352 in 2,700km of coast. 437 00:49:05,353 --> 00:49:07,271 It suddenly dawned on me... 438 00:49:07,272 --> 00:49:10,192 ..the enormity of what we're trying to do. 439 00:49:12,991 --> 00:49:15,789 Richard has vital extra help, 440 00:49:15,790 --> 00:49:19,028 a WhatsApp group of 250 islanders 441 00:49:19,029 --> 00:49:22,428 who regularly update each other on their sightings. 442 00:49:23,748 --> 00:49:27,026 Without all these eyes looking and picking up 443 00:49:27,027 --> 00:49:31,424 and posting on social media, I think it would be very difficult 444 00:49:31,425 --> 00:49:33,185 to follow these killer whales. 445 00:49:35,384 --> 00:49:39,503 Orca can travel 100 miles a day in their search for food. 446 00:49:40,743 --> 00:49:44,901 They can appear anywhere on Shetland's coast at any time. 447 00:49:46,501 --> 00:49:50,739 So the strategy was to spend as much time at sea as possible 448 00:49:50,740 --> 00:49:54,458 to be able to react quickly to any sightings. 449 00:49:54,459 --> 00:49:57,897 Three weeks, they haven't been anywhere... 450 00:49:57,898 --> 00:50:01,416 ..seen anywhere in Shetland, this pod. 451 00:50:01,417 --> 00:50:03,775 It's quite difficult to film a killer whale sequence 452 00:50:03,776 --> 00:50:05,415 without killer whales. 453 00:50:05,416 --> 00:50:07,814 There's literally nothing more we can do 454 00:50:07,815 --> 00:50:11,413 than go out, search every day, hope that the phone rings 455 00:50:11,414 --> 00:50:15,372 and someone else has seen it or we find them. 456 00:50:15,373 --> 00:50:17,571 And the challenge was made even greater 457 00:50:17,572 --> 00:50:22,410 when thick fog made navigating the islands near impossible. 458 00:50:22,411 --> 00:50:25,009 Well, the weather changes pretty quickly up here. 459 00:50:25,010 --> 00:50:30,687 We were in glorious, becalmed, blue sky, flat water conditions 460 00:50:30,688 --> 00:50:32,647 about two hours ago. 461 00:50:32,648 --> 00:50:37,645 We've just started our journey back and we've come into this bank of fog 462 00:50:37,646 --> 00:50:40,005 and it's completely surrounded the boat. 463 00:50:40,006 --> 00:50:42,365 There are no reference points out here now. 464 00:50:43,405 --> 00:50:45,243 Time was running out. 465 00:50:45,244 --> 00:50:48,202 With just a few days left, Richard finally got a call 466 00:50:48,203 --> 00:50:51,281 from one of the islanders. 467 00:50:51,282 --> 00:50:53,321 Right. Cheers, cheers. 468 00:50:53,322 --> 00:50:55,000 What's just happened? 469 00:50:55,001 --> 00:50:57,679 They've got two bulls coming down Bluemull Sound, 470 00:50:57,680 --> 00:50:59,640 heading south towards Fetlar. 471 00:51:00,720 --> 00:51:03,399 The team raced to catch up with the orca. 472 00:51:04,678 --> 00:51:06,877 Oh, they're there! To the right, to the right. 473 00:51:06,878 --> 00:51:09,476 They've gone under us. They're right behind you. 474 00:51:09,477 --> 00:51:13,275 Oh, one's in front. They've split. One either side of the boat. 475 00:51:13,276 --> 00:51:17,194 They got in position ahead of the bulls and waited for them to pass. 476 00:51:17,195 --> 00:51:21,233 Look at the size of that dorsal fin! 477 00:51:21,234 --> 00:51:23,992 Sadly, the excitement was short lived. 478 00:51:23,993 --> 00:51:26,991 It's not the 27s, which is the family group 479 00:51:26,992 --> 00:51:31,590 we were hoping to catch up with, but it is killer whales. 480 00:51:31,591 --> 00:51:35,429 After a month of effort, they had run out of time that year. 481 00:51:39,228 --> 00:51:43,827 And the following year saw a new team, a new boat and a new plan. 482 00:51:45,467 --> 00:51:49,625 Basing themselves on land, the team could be more reactive. 483 00:51:51,185 --> 00:51:54,943 When the orca do turn up, we need to drop everything 484 00:51:54,944 --> 00:51:57,902 and go and try and find them, 485 00:51:57,903 --> 00:52:01,901 and the quickest way to do that on this island 486 00:52:01,902 --> 00:52:05,820 is to tow the boat to where we think they're about to be 487 00:52:05,821 --> 00:52:07,859 based on the last sightings. 488 00:52:07,860 --> 00:52:10,898 That means that we have to know our slipways, 489 00:52:10,899 --> 00:52:14,618 but quite a few of them are covered in this green slimy weed. 490 00:52:16,298 --> 00:52:20,017 For the crew, this meant regular cleaning duty. 491 00:52:23,496 --> 00:52:28,374 With the slipways weed-free, they could test the new camera set-up. 492 00:52:29,454 --> 00:52:32,292 This time, they mounted the camera on a jib 493 00:52:32,293 --> 00:52:35,012 to move it more quickly into position. 494 00:52:36,092 --> 00:52:39,730 After two weeks with no sightings, it felt like a replay 495 00:52:39,731 --> 00:52:41,969 of last year's bad luck. 496 00:52:41,970 --> 00:52:46,129 But, once again, the network of islanders came to the rescue. 497 00:52:47,449 --> 00:52:49,767 Second-hand information, but some orca were seen 498 00:52:49,768 --> 00:52:52,446 about 10km from here at 8:00pm last night. 499 00:52:52,447 --> 00:52:56,445 We just got the text this morning at 7:00am. 500 00:52:56,446 --> 00:52:58,964 Tipped off that a pod of orcas was close, 501 00:52:58,965 --> 00:53:01,723 the team could quickly catch up with them. 502 00:53:01,724 --> 00:53:03,364 But it wasn't the 27s. 503 00:53:04,564 --> 00:53:07,722 It's the 19 pod with an individual in it called Mousa, 504 00:53:07,723 --> 00:53:09,641 which is quite a well-known individual. 505 00:53:09,642 --> 00:53:11,920 But she was last seen on Friday 506 00:53:11,921 --> 00:53:14,960 with the 27 pod in Orkney. 507 00:53:14,961 --> 00:53:18,359 So we're now on Sunday and she's here, 508 00:53:18,360 --> 00:53:21,798 so does that mean the 27 pod is here? 509 00:53:21,799 --> 00:53:25,318 The team stuck around, hoping the pods were travelling together. 510 00:53:26,397 --> 00:53:29,435 There they are! There they are, there they are, in the bay. 511 00:53:29,436 --> 00:53:32,874 In the bay here. Yeah, the other side of the skerries. 512 00:53:32,875 --> 00:53:35,154 Can we just spin round, please? 513 00:53:35,155 --> 00:53:37,393 It's took patience and determination, 514 00:53:37,394 --> 00:53:39,313 but after two years of effort, 515 00:53:39,314 --> 00:53:42,873 the crew finally caught up with the 27 pod. 516 00:53:44,272 --> 00:53:47,790 We are here right now on the 27s, which is our best pod, 517 00:53:47,791 --> 00:53:50,869 because one of the guys working on the ferry saw them, 518 00:53:50,870 --> 00:53:52,269 posted it on WhatsApp. 519 00:53:52,270 --> 00:53:55,429 We were five minutes away and we were straight onto it. 520 00:53:57,668 --> 00:54:00,147 The pod soon lived up to their promise 521 00:54:00,148 --> 00:54:02,587 and began to hunt along the coast. 522 00:54:04,706 --> 00:54:08,824 Using the drone, the team could follow as the pod spread out, 523 00:54:08,825 --> 00:54:11,144 searching every inch of the shoreline. 524 00:54:13,184 --> 00:54:15,822 From the boat, the stabilised camera rig 525 00:54:15,823 --> 00:54:18,342 allowed them to film the action close-up. 526 00:54:26,620 --> 00:54:29,139 That was carnage. All so fast. 527 00:54:30,299 --> 00:54:32,377 It just goes crazy. 528 00:54:32,378 --> 00:54:36,136 Yeah, a really crazy hunt. Just... 529 00:54:36,137 --> 00:54:38,256 ..bonkers. Just, like, chaos. 530 00:54:39,656 --> 00:54:43,574 After two years of filming and thanks to the network of islanders 531 00:54:43,575 --> 00:54:47,173 and Richard's expertise, the team were finally able 532 00:54:47,174 --> 00:54:50,093 to capture this extraordinary hunting behaviour. 533 00:54:56,411 --> 00:55:01,489 Three months after returning from Shetland, there was some sad news. 534 00:55:01,490 --> 00:55:07,448 A young male orca from the 27 pod was found dead, washed up onshore. 535 00:55:08,648 --> 00:55:11,846 A postmortem revealed he had drowned 536 00:55:11,847 --> 00:55:14,486 after becoming entangled in fishing gear. 537 00:55:15,566 --> 00:55:19,325 Each year, dozens of whales and dolphins die in this way. 538 00:55:21,164 --> 00:55:24,602 But since filming, three new calves have been spotted, 539 00:55:24,603 --> 00:55:28,242 the youngest belonging to the 27s. 540 00:55:31,401 --> 00:55:35,159 We must do everything we can to ensure that our waters 541 00:55:35,160 --> 00:55:39,559 are safe and welcoming for these rare and special visitors. 44636

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