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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:10,200 --> 00:00:14,999 In 2009, a new species of spider was identified. 2 00:00:19,119 --> 00:00:22,079 A spider with superpowers. 3 00:00:30,998 --> 00:00:32,957 It was named exactly 150 years 4 00:00:32,958 --> 00:00:36,916 after the publication of Darwin's On The Origin Of Species, 5 00:00:36,917 --> 00:00:43,036 in which he explained why life on Earth is so diverse and so complex. 6 00:00:49,036 --> 00:00:52,434 Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection 7 00:00:52,435 --> 00:00:56,514 was built on the work of naturalists who were discovering 8 00:00:56,515 --> 00:01:00,035 thousands of new species across the world. 9 00:01:04,274 --> 00:01:07,753 That process of finding species new to science and naming them 10 00:01:07,754 --> 00:01:09,273 continues to this day. 11 00:01:09,274 --> 00:01:12,833 And it's recognised in the name of this newly discovered arachnid. 12 00:01:15,113 --> 00:01:17,393 Darwin's bark spider. 13 00:01:22,192 --> 00:01:25,271 The spider occupies a unique niche. 14 00:01:25,272 --> 00:01:28,151 It can hunt where no other spider can. 15 00:01:31,431 --> 00:01:34,910 That spider creates the largest webs found anywhere on Earth. 16 00:01:34,911 --> 00:01:38,149 In order to do that, it has to produce the strongest silk 17 00:01:38,150 --> 00:01:43,709 of any spider. They can span over 25 metres across lakes and rivers. 18 00:01:43,710 --> 00:01:46,828 And actually, no-one knows how they get their webs 19 00:01:46,829 --> 00:01:48,669 across such a large distance. 20 00:01:55,988 --> 00:01:57,747 But Darwin's bark spider 21 00:01:57,748 --> 00:02:01,627 is one of thousands of unique species of animals and plants 22 00:02:01,628 --> 00:02:03,428 that you find in Madagascar. 23 00:02:07,667 --> 00:02:10,746 The rainforests here are one of the most bio-diverse places 24 00:02:10,747 --> 00:02:12,827 on the planet. 25 00:02:18,226 --> 00:02:20,905 And each year, more discoveries are made 26 00:02:20,906 --> 00:02:25,704 as researchers try to understand why this tiny corner of the universe 27 00:02:25,705 --> 00:02:28,504 is so prolific. 28 00:02:28,505 --> 00:02:31,224 All of these living things were found within a five-minute walk 29 00:02:31,225 --> 00:02:36,503 of this field station. And the diversity is remarkable. 30 00:02:36,504 --> 00:02:39,983 There's a chameleon there. These are orchids. 31 00:02:39,984 --> 00:02:42,622 This big green leaf is a traveller's palm. 32 00:02:42,623 --> 00:02:46,823 There are four species of mushroom on that branch alone. 33 00:02:53,782 --> 00:02:58,421 Across Madagascar, there are over 14,000 species of plants, 34 00:02:58,422 --> 00:03:02,620 there are hundreds of species of mammals, birds and reptiles 35 00:03:02,621 --> 00:03:06,581 and over 90% of them are unique to this island. 36 00:03:18,579 --> 00:03:22,138 How could it be that so many diverse living things, 37 00:03:22,139 --> 00:03:25,898 so beautifully adapted to their environment, could've emerged 38 00:03:25,899 --> 00:03:30,418 from a universe that's governed by a simple set of natural laws? 39 00:03:36,297 --> 00:03:38,896 The fact that we know the answer to that question 40 00:03:38,897 --> 00:03:42,456 is one of the greatest achievements in science. 41 00:03:42,457 --> 00:03:47,815 In this film, I want to explore how these endless forms, most beautiful, 42 00:03:47,816 --> 00:03:50,376 have emerged from a lifeless cosmos. 43 00:04:38,771 --> 00:04:43,329 Africa. A whole continent full of creatures utterly different 44 00:04:43,330 --> 00:04:45,210 from those in Madagascar. 45 00:04:50,809 --> 00:04:55,488 But the diversity of life doesn't stop at what you see. 46 00:04:55,489 --> 00:05:00,968 Because within each individual lies another world of complexity. 47 00:05:28,645 --> 00:05:32,564 This, believe it or not, is the top predator in Africa. 48 00:05:32,565 --> 00:05:34,483 Or she will be when she's older. 49 00:05:34,484 --> 00:05:36,964 She's only about eight weeks old now. 50 00:05:39,844 --> 00:05:42,722 Her body is built from a host of different molecules 51 00:05:42,723 --> 00:05:47,563 and by far the most diverse group are known as proteins. 52 00:05:48,603 --> 00:05:50,242 We can see the proteins here. 53 00:05:50,243 --> 00:05:55,001 Those claws, so vital for a lion's survival, 54 00:05:55,002 --> 00:05:57,681 are made of a protein called keratin. 55 00:05:57,682 --> 00:06:00,841 Her eyes, also absolutely vital for her survival, 56 00:06:00,842 --> 00:06:04,040 have a protein called opsin which is bound to a pigment 57 00:06:04,041 --> 00:06:08,600 to make structures called rhodopsins which allow her to see in colour 58 00:06:08,601 --> 00:06:12,480 and also to allow her to see very well at night when she's hunting. 59 00:06:15,640 --> 00:06:17,920 There are also proteins in her muscles... 60 00:06:19,120 --> 00:06:23,999 ..myosin and actin, which are the things that allow her to run away. 61 00:06:33,798 --> 00:06:37,557 The proteins in a lion come in countless different forms. 62 00:06:40,037 --> 00:06:43,836 But they all share something in common. 63 00:06:43,837 --> 00:06:45,917 A backbone of carbon. 64 00:06:48,236 --> 00:06:52,316 An atom that's able to form long, complex molecules. 65 00:06:56,595 --> 00:07:00,394 Of all the 92 elements, there really is only one 66 00:07:00,395 --> 00:07:06,033 which has that appetite for bonding its four electrons - 67 00:07:06,034 --> 00:07:08,353 to share them with other molecules. 68 00:07:08,354 --> 00:07:14,032 Carbon will share those electrons with nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, 69 00:07:14,033 --> 00:07:16,352 and critically, with other carbons, 70 00:07:16,353 --> 00:07:19,472 to build up these immensely complex chains, 71 00:07:19,473 --> 00:07:21,792 the amino acids and the proteins 72 00:07:21,793 --> 00:07:23,992 which are the building blocks of life. 73 00:07:26,032 --> 00:07:28,791 So to understand our planet's endless diversity, 74 00:07:28,792 --> 00:07:33,271 we must begin by considering this life-giving element. 75 00:07:34,311 --> 00:07:38,671 I've got a few scratches now because of you! Because of your proteins! 76 00:07:41,390 --> 00:07:45,989 After all, to build a lion, you must first build carbon. 77 00:07:45,990 --> 00:07:49,189 And that's a story that stretches back to a time 78 00:07:49,190 --> 00:07:52,589 long before there were even stars in the universe. 79 00:08:00,148 --> 00:08:02,227 13.5 billion years ago, 80 00:08:02,228 --> 00:08:05,867 just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang, 81 00:08:05,868 --> 00:08:09,267 the universe was a carbon-free zone. 82 00:08:11,587 --> 00:08:16,347 An infinite, sterile gloom of hydrogen and helium clouds. 83 00:08:17,906 --> 00:08:19,905 Until, one day, 84 00:08:19,906 --> 00:08:23,706 those vast clouds began to collapse under the force of gravity. 85 00:08:28,945 --> 00:08:33,145 Long before the solar system, Earth or life existed... 86 00:08:34,865 --> 00:08:36,504 ..the first stars were born. 87 00:08:55,382 --> 00:08:57,261 The birth of the first stars 88 00:08:57,262 --> 00:08:59,901 did much more than illuminate the universe, 89 00:08:59,902 --> 00:09:03,420 because that set in train a sequence of events 90 00:09:03,421 --> 00:09:07,781 which is necessary for the existence of life in the universe. 91 00:09:14,940 --> 00:09:18,660 And we can still see that process playing out in the universe today. 92 00:09:23,939 --> 00:09:27,938 This is the brand-new South African Large Telescope. 93 00:09:27,939 --> 00:09:31,098 Number three amps, gear right, gear box. 94 00:09:34,138 --> 00:09:37,017 Its mirror is 11 metres wide, 95 00:09:37,018 --> 00:09:39,576 making it the largest optical telescope 96 00:09:39,577 --> 00:09:41,457 in the southern hemisphere. 97 00:09:43,297 --> 00:09:46,896 And it recently helped to pin down what's happening in an object 98 00:09:46,897 --> 00:09:49,656 some 650 million light years from Earth. 99 00:09:56,776 --> 00:10:02,935 This beautiful, almost lifelike system is known simply as the Bird. 100 00:10:04,175 --> 00:10:06,174 It's the spectacular result 101 00:10:06,175 --> 00:10:09,534 of what we used to think was two galaxies colliding. 102 00:10:13,574 --> 00:10:16,452 It's events happening in the head of the Bird 103 00:10:16,453 --> 00:10:19,732 that are most interesting from a perspective of life in the universe. 104 00:10:19,733 --> 00:10:23,532 Because the head is formed by another galaxy, 105 00:10:23,533 --> 00:10:27,211 a third galaxy, an island of billions and billions of stars, 106 00:10:27,212 --> 00:10:31,451 colliding with two galaxies that form the wings and the body 107 00:10:31,452 --> 00:10:35,850 at a speed of around 250 miles a second. 108 00:10:35,851 --> 00:10:38,410 The turbulence, the disturbance, 109 00:10:38,411 --> 00:10:42,731 that that creates is causing many new stars to be formed. 110 00:10:48,810 --> 00:10:52,289 These stars begin their lives by burning hydrogen, 111 00:10:52,290 --> 00:10:54,289 to produce ever more helium. 112 00:10:56,329 --> 00:11:01,249 But as they age, as the hydrogen runs out, they turn to this helium. 113 00:11:03,448 --> 00:11:05,927 The temperature at their core rises 114 00:11:05,928 --> 00:11:09,687 increasing the chances of three helium nuclei 115 00:11:09,688 --> 00:11:13,647 fusing together to form a new element - carbon. 116 00:11:16,607 --> 00:11:18,726 That process has been going on 117 00:11:18,727 --> 00:11:22,125 for almost the entire history of the universe, 118 00:11:22,126 --> 00:11:26,245 back 13 billion years, and it's the formation of stars 119 00:11:26,246 --> 00:11:30,684 that is the vital first step in the formation of life, 120 00:11:30,685 --> 00:11:34,444 because stars produce the heavy elements in the universe 121 00:11:34,445 --> 00:11:36,205 including carbon. 122 00:11:43,324 --> 00:11:46,043 From the universe's earliest times, 123 00:11:46,044 --> 00:11:49,923 carbon has been created inside ageing stars. 124 00:11:55,043 --> 00:11:58,121 And over time, this carbon has built up, 125 00:11:58,122 --> 00:12:01,122 drifting through the cosmos as dust... 126 00:12:02,962 --> 00:12:05,520 ..until some of it was caught up 127 00:12:05,521 --> 00:12:07,921 in the formation of a planet called Earth. 128 00:12:14,401 --> 00:12:17,799 And it's here that we can see this ancient carbon 129 00:12:17,800 --> 00:12:19,640 brought vividly to life. 130 00:12:34,838 --> 00:12:36,877 Today, the universe is old enough 131 00:12:36,878 --> 00:12:39,437 that countless stars have lived and died. 132 00:12:39,438 --> 00:12:42,516 So, there's been plenty of time to synthesise 133 00:12:42,517 --> 00:12:46,277 the primordial hydrogen and helium into the heavy elements. 134 00:12:48,197 --> 00:12:53,875 The question now is, how does that carbon get into the web of life? 135 00:12:53,876 --> 00:12:58,435 Well, today, it enters via one ingredient 136 00:12:58,436 --> 00:13:01,875 and I'm going to measure it using this balloon. 137 00:13:08,875 --> 00:13:11,393 The ingredient is carbon dioxide, 138 00:13:11,394 --> 00:13:14,154 which plays a key role in photosynthesis. 139 00:13:17,154 --> 00:13:21,632 Each night the carbon dioxide concentration increases, 140 00:13:21,633 --> 00:13:24,993 filling the air around the leaves at the top of the trees. 141 00:13:28,552 --> 00:13:31,871 This balloon has a carbon dioxide monitor in it 142 00:13:31,872 --> 00:13:34,871 which is going to measure the change in the levels of CO2 143 00:13:34,872 --> 00:13:38,871 at the top of the forest canopy as night turns to day. 144 00:13:46,670 --> 00:13:51,510 As the sun rises, the trees begin to photosynthesise. 145 00:13:53,070 --> 00:13:56,108 At 6pm last night, just after sunset, 146 00:13:56,109 --> 00:14:00,589 the concentration was around 350 parts per million. 147 00:14:01,829 --> 00:14:04,387 Around 10pm, around four hours after sunset, 148 00:14:04,388 --> 00:14:09,028 the concentration had risen to about 400 parts per million. 149 00:14:10,228 --> 00:14:14,146 Now, at about midday, the concentration's back down 150 00:14:14,147 --> 00:14:18,546 to about 345 parts per million. 151 00:14:18,547 --> 00:14:23,345 So that's a variation over a period of about 18 hours of 10% 152 00:14:23,346 --> 00:14:26,945 in the concentration of carbon dioxide, 153 00:14:26,946 --> 00:14:30,465 just in that piece of atmosphere at the top of the forest canopy. 154 00:14:30,466 --> 00:14:34,385 What you are seeing there is photosynthesis in action. 155 00:14:39,545 --> 00:14:42,223 Every day, across the planet, 156 00:14:42,224 --> 00:14:47,063 photosynthesis uses sunlight to turn carbon dioxide and water 157 00:14:47,064 --> 00:14:48,864 into simple sugars. 158 00:14:53,023 --> 00:14:55,782 The overwhelming majority of the carbon 159 00:14:55,783 --> 00:14:59,581 is locked up inside long chains of sugar molecules 160 00:14:59,582 --> 00:15:01,862 called cellulose and lignin. 161 00:15:06,502 --> 00:15:11,100 Lignin is the stuff that gives wood its strength. 162 00:15:11,101 --> 00:15:14,540 So, in this form, remember, that is most of it, 163 00:15:14,541 --> 00:15:17,780 it is very difficult indeed for animals to access. 164 00:15:22,460 --> 00:15:26,338 For the energy and nutrients locked away in these long carbon chains 165 00:15:26,339 --> 00:15:30,219 to move through the food web, they must be broken down. 166 00:15:35,538 --> 00:15:40,098 The best place to see that process in action is out on the open plain. 167 00:15:42,258 --> 00:15:46,417 It's one vast larder for all manner of organisms. 168 00:15:52,137 --> 00:15:55,575 By far the most effective harvester of carbon 169 00:15:55,576 --> 00:16:00,336 is actually one of the smallest creatures on the savanna. 170 00:16:05,135 --> 00:16:08,774 Termites are social insects, working together to form 171 00:16:08,775 --> 00:16:12,733 a characteristic sight, seen all over the bush. 172 00:16:12,734 --> 00:16:16,813 That's a termite mound. Actually, it's the tip of the iceberg. 173 00:16:16,814 --> 00:16:21,612 The termite city extends way beyond that underground. 174 00:16:21,613 --> 00:16:24,452 And its function is fascinating. 175 00:16:24,453 --> 00:16:27,252 It's essentially an air-conditioning system. 176 00:16:27,253 --> 00:16:31,851 What it does is maintain specific conditions inside the mound - 177 00:16:31,852 --> 00:16:34,532 the conditions of the rainforest. 178 00:16:36,812 --> 00:16:40,930 When the termites first colonised the savanna 30 million years ago, 179 00:16:40,931 --> 00:16:44,450 they brought the rainforest with them 180 00:16:44,451 --> 00:16:48,049 to support a form of life that was already wonderfully adapted 181 00:16:48,050 --> 00:16:50,729 to living off dead wood. 182 00:16:50,730 --> 00:16:53,609 This is what these termite mounds are all about. 183 00:16:53,610 --> 00:16:58,728 Can you see those structures, those white honeycomb-like structures? 184 00:16:58,729 --> 00:17:01,488 Those are called fungal combs. 185 00:17:01,489 --> 00:17:04,688 They're wood pulp and possibly bits of dead grass 186 00:17:04,689 --> 00:17:08,447 that the termites bring in and build into that structure. 187 00:17:08,448 --> 00:17:11,687 And the reason the conditions have to be the same as the rainforest 188 00:17:11,688 --> 00:17:18,686 is because they grow a particular genus of fungus called termitomyces 189 00:17:18,687 --> 00:17:21,007 around those honeycombs. 190 00:17:25,126 --> 00:17:28,845 The job of that fungus is to break down the lignin 191 00:17:28,846 --> 00:17:30,645 and cellulose inside the wood 192 00:17:30,646 --> 00:17:33,524 and convert it into a form that the termites can eat, 193 00:17:33,525 --> 00:17:37,724 which you can see there, the little white nodules, 194 00:17:37,725 --> 00:17:41,085 just present on the honeycomb structure. 195 00:17:44,364 --> 00:17:49,123 The termites lack the enzymes to break down the wood efficiently, 196 00:17:49,124 --> 00:17:54,203 so they have become farmers, tending to one giant social stomach. 197 00:17:56,523 --> 00:18:00,881 There's a very intense relationship between the termites and the fungus. 198 00:18:00,882 --> 00:18:05,561 You don't find that fungus anywhere else in the world 199 00:18:05,562 --> 00:18:09,562 as far as we know, other than inside termite mounds. 200 00:18:11,521 --> 00:18:18,000 It's thought that up to 90% of the carbon locked up in lignin 201 00:18:18,001 --> 00:18:22,359 in this part of Africa is released back into the food chain again, 202 00:18:22,360 --> 00:18:25,079 solely by those termites 203 00:18:25,080 --> 00:18:26,400 and that fungus. 204 00:18:48,277 --> 00:18:51,276 So the termites deal with most of the lignin, 205 00:18:51,277 --> 00:18:55,876 but that still leaves a vast store of carbon in the form of cellulose. 206 00:18:57,156 --> 00:19:02,195 Across Africa, herds of mammals graze on grasses and leaves, 207 00:19:02,196 --> 00:19:04,955 turning the cellulose into meat. 208 00:19:09,035 --> 00:19:11,795 Many are a type of mammal known as a ruminant... 209 00:19:12,795 --> 00:19:17,473 ..the largest of which is one of the easiest animals to spot on safari. 210 00:19:17,474 --> 00:19:19,314 There's a giraffe there as well. 211 00:19:48,551 --> 00:19:54,069 Giraffes live off a diet similar to termites. They eat cellulose. 212 00:19:54,070 --> 00:19:57,309 Primarily the tops of the acacia trees 213 00:19:57,310 --> 00:20:00,788 that you see scattering the African savanna. 214 00:20:00,789 --> 00:20:02,708 And they face that same problem, 215 00:20:02,709 --> 00:20:05,988 they've got to break those difficult carbon bonds down 216 00:20:05,989 --> 00:20:08,467 and they've come up with a very similar solution 217 00:20:08,468 --> 00:20:12,467 which is to cultivate bacteria and fungi. 218 00:20:12,468 --> 00:20:17,466 But they do it inside their stomachs and ruminants like giraffes 219 00:20:17,467 --> 00:20:21,106 have had to build a very complex system in order to do that. 220 00:20:21,107 --> 00:20:22,986 They've got four stomachs, 221 00:20:22,987 --> 00:20:26,785 one of them contains their culture of bacteria and fungi, 222 00:20:26,786 --> 00:20:31,106 and they allow them to digest that difficult cellulose. 223 00:20:35,266 --> 00:20:37,264 Even with all this hardware, 224 00:20:37,265 --> 00:20:40,945 ruminants must feed for over two thirds of the day. 225 00:20:44,704 --> 00:20:49,663 But there are other creatures here that have found a short cut, 226 00:20:49,664 --> 00:20:53,183 after all, if plant fibres are hard to digest, 227 00:20:53,184 --> 00:20:57,063 why not let someone else do the work and simply steal a meal? 228 00:21:04,502 --> 00:21:06,901 It's coming for us. 229 00:21:06,902 --> 00:21:08,582 Oh, my God... 230 00:21:16,261 --> 00:21:18,261 ENGINE STARTS 231 00:21:21,260 --> 00:21:23,819 Look what we've just found. 232 00:21:23,820 --> 00:21:26,619 We were out looking for giraffe this morning, 233 00:21:26,620 --> 00:21:29,179 and we found about ten of them over there, 234 00:21:29,180 --> 00:21:32,539 but in looking for the giraffe, we've just found a leopard. 235 00:21:34,339 --> 00:21:36,898 This is one of the top predators out here. 236 00:21:36,899 --> 00:21:41,457 He's got very little to fear apart from other leopards and maybe lions. 237 00:21:41,458 --> 00:21:44,978 He's having a good look, he certainly doesn't care about us. 238 00:21:49,817 --> 00:21:52,536 He's around two years old and at the moment, 239 00:21:52,537 --> 00:21:56,976 he doesn't have his own territory, he's too young for that. 240 00:21:56,977 --> 00:21:59,656 So he's lying low. 241 00:22:04,696 --> 00:22:09,174 He'll have to make about two kills a week, to stay in good condition. 242 00:22:09,175 --> 00:22:14,334 So, maybe he'll catch an impala every three to four days, 243 00:22:14,335 --> 00:22:16,574 and he's obviously doing that. 244 00:22:18,854 --> 00:22:21,174 Because, look at him! 245 00:22:24,414 --> 00:22:27,332 He's looking for protein. He likes your boom. > 246 00:22:27,333 --> 00:22:30,333 And I'm a little bit worried, cos I'm protein! 247 00:22:31,973 --> 00:22:34,092 Oh, wow. He's after your boom, George. > 248 00:22:36,372 --> 00:22:38,331 He's coming really close to us 249 00:22:38,332 --> 00:22:41,331 because he's after the sound man's boom pole. 250 00:22:41,332 --> 00:22:43,610 Which is... oh! 251 00:22:43,611 --> 00:22:46,730 That's incredible. RUMBLING MICROPHONE DISTORTION 252 00:22:46,731 --> 00:22:48,170 I just... 253 00:22:48,171 --> 00:22:50,491 HE LAUGHS He's taken it... 254 00:23:06,609 --> 00:23:10,209 From its origin in the death of stars... 255 00:23:16,288 --> 00:23:19,048 ..its capture by plants... 256 00:23:24,767 --> 00:23:27,567 ..through insects, mammals and on. 257 00:23:35,366 --> 00:23:39,685 The carbon cycle is the real circle of life. 258 00:23:45,565 --> 00:23:49,123 Out there tonight, the relentless recycling of carbon 259 00:23:49,124 --> 00:23:51,364 through the food chain will continue. 260 00:23:52,924 --> 00:23:56,842 As night falls, you can almost sense it - the change in the sounds 261 00:23:56,843 --> 00:23:58,883 and the atmosphere. 262 00:24:02,483 --> 00:24:06,641 Some will die, so that others can live, 263 00:24:06,642 --> 00:24:09,281 as carbon leaps from branch to branch 264 00:24:09,282 --> 00:24:11,482 across the great tree of life. 265 00:24:13,322 --> 00:24:19,680 And guiding it along its way is just one very special form of chemistry. 266 00:24:19,681 --> 00:24:22,480 Every living thing is just a temporary home 267 00:24:22,481 --> 00:24:26,159 for carbon atoms that existed long before there was life on Earth 268 00:24:26,160 --> 00:24:30,560 and will exist long after Africa and Earth are gone. 269 00:24:36,279 --> 00:24:38,438 But, the pattern of life, 270 00:24:38,439 --> 00:24:43,397 the information needed to build a zebra, or a tree, 271 00:24:43,398 --> 00:24:47,197 or a human being or a lion persists. 272 00:24:47,198 --> 00:24:51,676 It's passed on from generation to generation, in a molecule. 273 00:24:51,677 --> 00:24:55,877 A helical molecule with a backbone of carbon called DNA. 274 00:25:16,195 --> 00:25:18,754 "Atmosphere" by Joy Division 275 00:25:22,714 --> 00:25:26,353 There was a time when Earth appeared empty. 276 00:25:39,512 --> 00:25:43,591 Yet despite appearances, 3.8 billion years ago 277 00:25:43,592 --> 00:25:48,070 life was already under way, in the form of tiny living specks 278 00:25:48,071 --> 00:25:51,311 that probably all shared the same biochemistry. 279 00:25:52,311 --> 00:25:55,709 We know that every living thing on the planet today - 280 00:25:55,710 --> 00:25:59,509 so every piece of food you eat, every animal you've seen, 281 00:25:59,510 --> 00:26:02,149 everyone you've ever known or will know, 282 00:26:02,150 --> 00:26:06,628 in fact every living thing that WILL ever exist on this planet - 283 00:26:06,629 --> 00:26:09,069 was descended from that one speck. 284 00:26:17,868 --> 00:26:22,386 We call it the last universal common ancestor, or LUCA. 285 00:26:22,387 --> 00:26:26,506 So, just as the universe had its origin at the Big Bang, 286 00:26:26,507 --> 00:26:30,906 all life on this planet had its origin in that one moment. 287 00:26:36,466 --> 00:26:39,585 Less than a billion years after its formation, 288 00:26:39,586 --> 00:26:41,705 there was already life on Earth. 289 00:26:47,185 --> 00:26:50,223 It's possible that some of it used biochemistry 290 00:26:50,224 --> 00:26:53,783 utterly different from the life we see today. 291 00:26:53,784 --> 00:26:57,464 If so, it has long been extinct. 292 00:26:59,943 --> 00:27:04,582 It's also possible that the first life may not have been cellular - 293 00:27:04,583 --> 00:27:09,741 just living chemistry in the porous rocks of some ancient ocean. 294 00:27:09,742 --> 00:27:14,301 We're not sure, but what's certain is that one day, 295 00:27:14,302 --> 00:27:19,701 a population of organisms showed up with biochemistry that we WOULD recognise. 296 00:27:21,501 --> 00:27:24,260 This was LUCA. 297 00:27:24,261 --> 00:27:28,459 The first expression of a form of life that would in time 298 00:27:28,460 --> 00:27:33,260 throw up a group of humans who left their mark in this part of Africa. 299 00:27:37,619 --> 00:27:40,498 Now, we don't know what LUCA looked like, 300 00:27:40,499 --> 00:27:44,537 we don't know precisely where it lived or how it lived. 301 00:27:44,538 --> 00:27:46,377 But we do know this. 302 00:27:46,378 --> 00:27:51,337 If you start to trace my ancestral line back to my parents, 303 00:27:51,338 --> 00:27:54,776 to their parents, to their parents, to their parents, 304 00:27:54,777 --> 00:27:58,176 all the way back through geological timescales 305 00:27:58,177 --> 00:28:02,495 over hundreds of thousands of millions and billions of years, 306 00:28:02,496 --> 00:28:08,656 there will be an unbroken line from me all the way back to LUCA. 307 00:28:12,615 --> 00:28:16,134 We know that, because every living thing on the planet today 308 00:28:16,135 --> 00:28:18,854 shares the same biochemistry. 309 00:28:18,855 --> 00:28:24,893 We all have DNA. It's made of the same bases, A, C, T and G. 310 00:28:24,894 --> 00:28:27,213 They code for the same amino acids. 311 00:28:27,214 --> 00:28:31,172 Those amino acids build the same proteins, which do very 312 00:28:31,173 --> 00:28:37,093 similar jobs, whether you're a plant, a bacterium, or a bipedal hominid, like me. 313 00:28:42,332 --> 00:28:45,972 So all life uses the same fundamental biology... 314 00:28:47,971 --> 00:28:51,650 ..those four bases, A, C, T and G, 315 00:28:51,651 --> 00:28:54,290 which code for just 20 amino acids, 316 00:28:54,291 --> 00:28:59,530 which in turn build each and every one of life's proteins. 317 00:29:03,090 --> 00:29:07,168 Be you bacteria, plant, bug or beast, 318 00:29:07,169 --> 00:29:10,449 your design comes from your DNA. 319 00:29:12,169 --> 00:29:19,488 So it's this molecule that must hold the key to understanding why life today is so diverse. 320 00:29:22,048 --> 00:29:24,486 We now know that the answer to the question, 321 00:29:24,487 --> 00:29:28,526 "Why is life on Earth so varied?" is actually the answer to 322 00:29:28,527 --> 00:29:32,686 the question, "Why is the DNA molecule itself so varied?" 323 00:29:32,687 --> 00:29:38,125 What are the natural processes that cause the structure of DNA to change? 324 00:29:38,126 --> 00:29:42,644 Well, part of the answer actually doesn't lie on Earth at all. 325 00:29:42,645 --> 00:29:45,564 It lies up there amongst the stars. 326 00:29:45,565 --> 00:29:48,724 And I can show you what I mean, using this, 327 00:29:48,725 --> 00:29:54,283 which is a cloud chamber, a piece of apparatus that has a unique place 328 00:29:54,284 --> 00:29:56,883 in the history of physics. 329 00:29:56,884 --> 00:30:01,602 I'm going to cool it down using dry ice, frozen carbon dioxide, 330 00:30:01,603 --> 00:30:04,723 just below -70 degrees Celsius. 331 00:30:09,842 --> 00:30:12,241 I'll put the top on. 332 00:30:12,242 --> 00:30:14,682 HIGH-PITCHED SQUEAKING Hear that? 333 00:30:15,682 --> 00:30:21,401 That's the metal at the bottom of the tank cooling down very rapidly to -70. 334 00:30:23,401 --> 00:30:27,759 The cloud chamber works by having a super-saturated 335 00:30:27,760 --> 00:30:31,119 vapour of alcohol inside the chamber. 336 00:30:31,120 --> 00:30:32,840 Plenty on there... 337 00:30:33,840 --> 00:30:37,038 Now, I want to get that alcohol, I want to boil it off, 338 00:30:37,039 --> 00:30:39,118 to get the vapour into the chamber. 339 00:30:39,119 --> 00:30:41,438 So I'm going to put a hot water bottle on top. 340 00:30:41,439 --> 00:30:45,678 This is the first genuine particle physics detector. 341 00:30:45,679 --> 00:30:49,677 It's the piece of apparatus that first saw antimatter. 342 00:30:49,678 --> 00:30:54,797 And it really does consist only of a fish tank, some alcohol, 343 00:30:54,798 --> 00:30:57,037 a bit of paper, and a hot water bottle. 344 00:31:19,035 --> 00:31:21,714 There, look at that. Do you see that? 345 00:31:21,715 --> 00:31:24,114 Cloud vapour trail. 346 00:31:26,074 --> 00:31:28,153 That's a cosmic ray. 347 00:31:28,154 --> 00:31:33,592 That was initiated by a particle, probably a proton, 348 00:31:33,593 --> 00:31:35,593 that hit the Earth's atmosphere. 349 00:31:38,833 --> 00:31:43,111 It almost certainly originated outside our solar system 350 00:31:43,112 --> 00:31:46,711 and was accelerated by the magnetic fields of our galaxy. 351 00:31:46,712 --> 00:31:50,791 It may even have begun its life BEYOND our galaxy. 352 00:32:05,550 --> 00:32:10,868 Now, imagine if one of those hits the DNA of a living thing. 353 00:32:10,869 --> 00:32:14,388 What that will do is cause a mutation. 354 00:32:14,389 --> 00:32:18,107 That mutation may be detrimental, or, 355 00:32:18,108 --> 00:32:21,308 very, very occasionally it might be beneficial. 356 00:32:25,668 --> 00:32:31,186 And I think it's quite wonderful to imagine that maybe 357 00:32:31,187 --> 00:32:35,465 one of the key mutations that was selected for over the millennia 358 00:32:35,466 --> 00:32:38,065 that led to some trait in ME 359 00:32:38,066 --> 00:32:42,025 was caused by some particle that began its life perhaps 360 00:32:42,026 --> 00:32:47,544 in a massive supernova explosion, perhaps outside our galaxy 361 00:32:47,545 --> 00:32:49,864 and went and hit the DNA of something 362 00:32:49,865 --> 00:32:53,863 and caused some kind of beneficial mutation. 363 00:32:53,864 --> 00:32:56,184 We don't know, but you can dream, can't you? 364 00:33:04,063 --> 00:33:08,303 Mutations are an inevitable part of living on a planet like Earth. 365 00:33:11,463 --> 00:33:14,901 They're the first hint at how DNA and the genes 366 00:33:14,902 --> 00:33:17,541 that code for every living thing 367 00:33:17,542 --> 00:33:20,781 change from generation to generation. 368 00:33:37,620 --> 00:33:39,458 Mutations are the spring 369 00:33:39,459 --> 00:33:42,779 from which innovation in the living world flows. 370 00:33:46,459 --> 00:33:51,937 But cosmic rays are not the only way in which DNA can be altered. 371 00:33:51,938 --> 00:33:55,217 There's natural background radiation from the rocks, 372 00:33:55,218 --> 00:33:58,696 there's the action of chemicals and free radicals. 373 00:33:58,697 --> 00:34:01,856 There can be errors when the code is copied. 374 00:34:01,857 --> 00:34:06,176 And then all those changes can be shuffled by sex, and indeed 375 00:34:06,177 --> 00:34:11,015 whole pieces of the code can be transferred from species to species. 376 00:34:11,016 --> 00:34:16,374 So, bit by bit, in tiny steps from generation to generation, 377 00:34:16,375 --> 00:34:19,895 the code is constantly randomly changing. 378 00:34:22,815 --> 00:34:28,173 Now, whilst there's no doubt that random mutation does alter DNA, 379 00:34:28,174 --> 00:34:32,733 evolution is anything but random. It can't be, 380 00:34:32,734 --> 00:34:37,132 because the chances of something with DNA as complex as this 381 00:34:37,133 --> 00:34:40,533 appearing by luck alone are vanishingly small. 382 00:34:41,613 --> 00:34:45,011 Imagine you just changed one position in the code at random, 383 00:34:45,012 --> 00:34:46,851 a random mutation. 384 00:34:46,852 --> 00:34:49,331 There are four letters, A, T, C and G, 385 00:34:49,332 --> 00:34:51,810 so there are four possible combinations. 386 00:34:51,811 --> 00:34:54,530 If there are two places in the code, 387 00:34:54,531 --> 00:34:58,770 there are four combinations for each one. So that makes 16. 388 00:34:58,771 --> 00:35:02,569 If there are three, then there are 64 possibilities. 389 00:35:02,570 --> 00:35:06,529 By the time you get to a code with 150 letters in it, 390 00:35:06,530 --> 00:35:10,248 then there are more possible combinations in the code 391 00:35:10,249 --> 00:35:13,169 than there are atoms in the observable universe. 392 00:35:16,409 --> 00:35:19,407 Now, a hippo has a code 393 00:35:19,408 --> 00:35:23,407 with around three billion different letters. 394 00:35:23,408 --> 00:35:28,526 So the number of combinations of those letters, the chances of 395 00:35:28,527 --> 00:35:33,886 producing that code at random, are absolutely, infinitesimally small. 396 00:35:33,887 --> 00:35:35,687 It's impossible. 397 00:35:40,086 --> 00:35:44,166 So there must be a non-random element to evolution... 398 00:35:45,166 --> 00:35:48,844 ..a natural process, which greatly restricts this 399 00:35:48,845 --> 00:35:52,285 universe of possibilities, and shapes the outcome. 400 00:35:53,445 --> 00:35:55,884 We call it natural selection. 401 00:35:57,004 --> 00:36:01,123 And to see it in action, let's return to where we began 402 00:36:01,124 --> 00:36:03,684 on the island of Madagascar. 403 00:36:33,280 --> 00:36:36,519 Around 65 million years ago, a group of seafarers were nearing 404 00:36:36,520 --> 00:36:39,720 the end of a long journey across the Indian Ocean. 405 00:36:40,760 --> 00:36:45,638 These were accidental travellers, a group of creatures from Africa, 406 00:36:45,639 --> 00:36:49,959 trapped on a natural raft and carried by the ocean currents. 407 00:36:58,398 --> 00:37:01,557 The land they found was virgin green territory. 408 00:37:02,877 --> 00:37:07,756 Plants, insects, reptiles and birds had established themselves, 409 00:37:07,757 --> 00:37:10,436 but there were none of their own kind. 410 00:37:13,436 --> 00:37:16,555 They were caught up in a saga that tells of the great 411 00:37:16,556 --> 00:37:19,435 shifting of Earth's continental plates. 412 00:37:25,195 --> 00:37:29,113 It's impossible to understand the diversity of life on Earth today 413 00:37:29,114 --> 00:37:33,153 without understanding the shifting geography of our planet. 414 00:37:33,154 --> 00:37:36,912 Here's a map of Earth's southern hemisphere as it was 415 00:37:36,913 --> 00:37:39,112 150 million years ago, and you see 416 00:37:39,113 --> 00:37:43,152 it's dominated by a single landmass called Gondwana. 417 00:37:43,153 --> 00:37:46,031 And then, 90 million years ago, 418 00:37:46,032 --> 00:37:49,911 Gondwana had begun to break up, to separate, 419 00:37:49,912 --> 00:37:54,470 into something that looks quite recognisably like Africa, 420 00:37:54,471 --> 00:37:58,470 and these two islands, Madagascar and India. 421 00:37:58,471 --> 00:38:00,990 Now, subsequently India has drifted northwards 422 00:38:00,991 --> 00:38:04,269 and bumped into Eurasia, raising the Himalayas. 423 00:38:04,270 --> 00:38:08,709 But, crucially, Madagascar has remained isolated. 424 00:38:08,710 --> 00:38:14,029 It's been an island surrounded by ocean for almost 90 million years. 425 00:38:22,388 --> 00:38:28,147 So, when those seafarers arrived on their raft of trees and twigs and leaves, 426 00:38:28,148 --> 00:38:32,226 they had a blank canvas - two, three, 427 00:38:32,227 --> 00:38:34,906 maybe even a single pregnant individual 428 00:38:34,907 --> 00:38:38,746 had a whole island to roam across. 429 00:38:38,747 --> 00:38:43,505 And over 65 million years, they have blossomed into hundreds and 430 00:38:43,506 --> 00:38:48,026 thousands of individuals, and become Madagascar's most iconic animals. 431 00:39:30,261 --> 00:39:33,981 Finding the descendants of those ancient mariners is not easy. 432 00:39:35,140 --> 00:39:38,099 But local guide Joseph has been tracking them for years. 433 00:39:38,100 --> 00:39:40,140 And he's going to help me find them. 434 00:40:00,138 --> 00:40:02,496 There at the top of the tree is an indri, 435 00:40:02,497 --> 00:40:04,897 which is the largest lemur in Madagascar. 436 00:40:08,097 --> 00:40:12,496 He's just sat there watching us quietly at the moment. 437 00:40:16,936 --> 00:40:19,615 This lemur here is a very special lemur. 438 00:40:19,616 --> 00:40:22,615 He has a name, he's called David. 439 00:40:23,975 --> 00:40:26,935 After Sir David Attenborough. 440 00:40:35,174 --> 00:40:37,933 LEMUR SCREECHES 441 00:40:44,133 --> 00:40:46,053 LEMUR SCREECHES 442 00:40:56,171 --> 00:40:58,370 Now, we can only do this because 443 00:40:58,371 --> 00:41:01,851 Joseph has spent a lot of time with these lemurs. 444 00:41:03,171 --> 00:41:08,850 So they trust him. And therefore, it seems, they trust me. 445 00:41:22,649 --> 00:41:25,128 Its enormous hands! 446 00:41:27,328 --> 00:41:33,366 The reason, it's thought, that we find lemurs here in Madagascar and Madagascar alone 447 00:41:33,367 --> 00:41:38,286 is because there are no simians, there are no chimpanzees, 448 00:41:38,287 --> 00:41:41,685 none of my ancestral family, 449 00:41:41,686 --> 00:41:45,405 dating back tens of millions of years, to out-compete them. 450 00:41:45,406 --> 00:41:51,244 So what's thought to have happened is that around 65 million years ago 451 00:41:51,245 --> 00:41:55,764 one of the lemur's ancestors 452 00:41:55,765 --> 00:42:01,043 managed to sail across the Mozambique Channel, and landed here. 453 00:42:01,044 --> 00:42:03,683 There were none of those competitors here, 454 00:42:03,684 --> 00:42:06,604 and so the lemurs have flourished ever since. 455 00:42:08,084 --> 00:42:12,042 There are now over 90 species of lemur, or subspecies, 456 00:42:12,043 --> 00:42:13,842 in Madagascar, 457 00:42:13,843 --> 00:42:18,322 and no species of my lineage, the simians. 458 00:42:25,482 --> 00:42:27,561 LEMUR SCREECHES 459 00:42:32,601 --> 00:42:36,799 Over a vast sweep of time, the lemurs have diversified 460 00:42:36,800 --> 00:42:39,880 to fill all manner of different habitats. 461 00:42:42,200 --> 00:42:45,240 From the arid, spiny forests of the south... 462 00:42:46,479 --> 00:42:49,038 ..to the rocky canyons in the north, 463 00:42:49,039 --> 00:42:51,798 there is something about this island 464 00:42:51,799 --> 00:42:56,878 that is allowing the lemur's DNA to change in the most amazing ways. 465 00:43:15,956 --> 00:43:18,875 We're on the hunt for an aye-aye, 466 00:43:18,876 --> 00:43:22,034 the most closely related of all the surviving lemurs 467 00:43:22,035 --> 00:43:23,555 to their common ancestor. 468 00:43:38,834 --> 00:43:41,193 Oh, yes... 469 00:43:42,873 --> 00:43:44,793 Oh, yeah. 470 00:43:50,712 --> 00:43:54,151 Just shone the light up, and we saw these absolutely... 471 00:43:54,152 --> 00:43:58,310 Two bright red eyes, shining out. 472 00:43:58,311 --> 00:44:01,351 She's very high up at the moment. 473 00:44:04,191 --> 00:44:07,350 Don't want to lose sight of her in this forest, 474 00:44:07,351 --> 00:44:08,990 which is very dark and dense. 475 00:44:11,910 --> 00:44:15,350 The team have located a female aye-aye, and her son. 476 00:44:17,109 --> 00:44:20,548 They want to attach radio collars to track their movements, 477 00:44:20,549 --> 00:44:24,589 and better understand how far they range through these forests. 478 00:44:25,748 --> 00:44:31,787 But first, they must sedate them with a dart. 479 00:44:31,788 --> 00:44:35,346 He's waiting for it to come down low enough to get that clean shot - 480 00:44:35,347 --> 00:44:40,747 I mean, how you get a clean shot in this I have no idea. 481 00:44:46,266 --> 00:44:50,185 After two hours of traipsing through the treacherous forest, 482 00:44:50,186 --> 00:44:52,826 the aye-ayes remain at large. 483 00:45:04,384 --> 00:45:06,864 INDISTINCT CHATTER 484 00:45:17,943 --> 00:45:21,781 Well, here is the aye-aye that was tranquillised last night. 485 00:45:21,782 --> 00:45:25,181 They finally got her about half an hour after we left. 486 00:45:25,182 --> 00:45:27,581 I think it was probably because we were disturbing her. 487 00:45:27,582 --> 00:45:29,900 Apparently as soon as we'd gone, she came down the tree 488 00:45:29,901 --> 00:45:31,820 and she was tranquillised. 489 00:45:31,821 --> 00:45:35,540 And as you can see she's pretty well sedated now, 490 00:45:35,541 --> 00:45:37,500 which is fortunate for me 491 00:45:37,501 --> 00:45:42,939 because she has certain adaptations that I wouldn't like to be deployed. 492 00:45:42,940 --> 00:45:45,539 You can see there her teeth. 493 00:45:45,540 --> 00:45:49,618 Her teeth are very unusual for a primate - 494 00:45:49,619 --> 00:45:52,858 in fact, unique, because they carry on growing, 495 00:45:52,859 --> 00:45:55,298 so she's much more like a rodent in that respect. 496 00:45:55,299 --> 00:45:58,297 And that's so she can gnaw into wood. 497 00:45:58,298 --> 00:46:02,497 You see, aye-ayes have filled a unique niche on Madagascar. 498 00:46:02,498 --> 00:46:05,936 It's a niche that's filled by woodpeckers in many other areas of the world. 499 00:46:05,937 --> 00:46:10,616 What she does is she feeds on grubs and bugs inside trees, 500 00:46:10,617 --> 00:46:14,697 and to do that, she has several unique adaptations of which her teeth are one. 501 00:46:15,856 --> 00:46:21,975 The most startling is this central finger here. It's bizarre. 502 00:46:21,976 --> 00:46:26,014 It's got a ball and socket joint, for a start, 503 00:46:26,015 --> 00:46:28,774 so it has complete 360-degree movement. 504 00:46:28,775 --> 00:46:32,534 It feels to me almost as if it's broken, but it isn't, 505 00:46:32,535 --> 00:46:35,333 it's just, you can move it around in any direction. 506 00:46:35,334 --> 00:46:39,893 And she uses that finger initially to tap on the trunk of the tree, 507 00:46:39,894 --> 00:46:45,332 and then, listening to the echo from that tapping, with these huge ears 508 00:46:45,333 --> 00:46:48,132 she can detect where the grubs are. 509 00:46:48,133 --> 00:46:52,411 And then, she gnaws through the wood with those rodent-like teeth, 510 00:46:52,412 --> 00:46:56,291 and then uses this finger again to reach inside the hole 511 00:46:56,292 --> 00:46:58,611 and get the bugs out. 512 00:46:58,612 --> 00:47:01,410 So the question is, why? 513 00:47:01,411 --> 00:47:08,890 How could an animal be so precisely adapted to a particular lifestyle? 514 00:47:08,891 --> 00:47:11,169 She's waking up now! 515 00:47:11,170 --> 00:47:14,849 And the answer is natural selection. 516 00:47:14,850 --> 00:47:18,209 See, what must have happened is way back, 517 00:47:18,210 --> 00:47:21,048 when the ancestors of the lemurs - the Lemuriformes - 518 00:47:21,049 --> 00:47:23,248 arrived in Madagascar, 519 00:47:23,249 --> 00:47:25,848 there must have been a mutation that 520 00:47:25,849 --> 00:47:30,607 lengthened the middle finger ever so slightly of one of those lemurs. 521 00:47:30,608 --> 00:47:33,247 And that must have given it an advantage. 522 00:47:33,248 --> 00:47:34,847 That must have allowed it perhaps 523 00:47:34,848 --> 00:47:37,166 to reach into little holes and search for grubs. 524 00:47:37,167 --> 00:47:40,366 There's some reason why that lengthened middle finger 525 00:47:40,367 --> 00:47:44,806 meant that that gene was more likely to be passed to the next generation 526 00:47:44,807 --> 00:47:47,565 and then down to the next generation. 527 00:47:47,566 --> 00:47:50,765 So that landscape of possibilities is narrowed, 528 00:47:50,766 --> 00:47:54,165 it's narrowed because that gene persists. 529 00:47:54,166 --> 00:47:58,204 And it's persisted now for at least 40 million years, 530 00:47:58,205 --> 00:48:03,404 because this species has been on one branch of the tree of life now 531 00:48:03,405 --> 00:48:06,283 for over 40 million years. 532 00:48:06,284 --> 00:48:08,803 And so, over those years that middle finger 533 00:48:08,804 --> 00:48:10,844 has got more and more specialised. 534 00:48:12,484 --> 00:48:17,282 Natural selection has allowed the aye-aye's wonderfully mutated finger 535 00:48:17,283 --> 00:48:19,483 to spread through the population. 536 00:48:22,003 --> 00:48:24,722 And this same law applies to all life. 537 00:48:27,082 --> 00:48:30,481 If you have a mutation that helps you in the struggle to survive, 538 00:48:30,482 --> 00:48:33,880 you are more likely to leave more offspring. 539 00:48:33,881 --> 00:48:39,201 And in the next generation, that mutation is more likely to survive. 540 00:48:42,800 --> 00:48:47,439 So this animal is a beautiful example, probably one 541 00:48:47,440 --> 00:48:52,878 of the best in the world, of how the sieve of natural selection produces 542 00:48:52,879 --> 00:48:57,639 animals that are perfectly adapted to live in their environment. 543 00:49:21,236 --> 00:49:25,995 Now, there are many reasons to study the aye-aye. But here's a good one. 544 00:49:25,996 --> 00:49:29,154 In the 1970s, it was thought the aye-aye was extinct. 545 00:49:29,155 --> 00:49:33,354 Now, we know there are several thousand in the forests of Madagascar - 546 00:49:33,355 --> 00:49:37,593 5,000, 6,000, 7,000, certainly less than 10,000 - 547 00:49:37,594 --> 00:49:41,594 but over the last 50 years, 50% of this forest has vanished. 548 00:49:55,832 --> 00:50:01,311 This is an animal that's been around as a species for over 40 million years. 549 00:50:01,312 --> 00:50:05,350 So it's important to know how these animals are doing, 550 00:50:05,351 --> 00:50:08,911 and how they're surviving in this diminishing habitat. 551 00:50:24,869 --> 00:50:28,868 Whilst natural selection explains why the aye-aye evolved, 552 00:50:28,869 --> 00:50:35,987 it alone can't explain how a small group of individuals, over 60 million years ago, 553 00:50:35,988 --> 00:50:40,027 gave rise to over 90 different species of lemur today. 554 00:50:44,147 --> 00:50:47,467 But there is another form of life that can offer us a clue. 555 00:50:50,106 --> 00:50:53,905 Up here in the high forest canopy, we're in a very different 556 00:50:53,906 --> 00:50:58,144 environment to the one down there on the forest floor. 557 00:50:58,145 --> 00:51:01,984 It's a more arid environment, it's almost like a desert. 558 00:51:01,985 --> 00:51:05,304 It's exposed to the sun, water is harder to come by. 559 00:51:05,305 --> 00:51:09,663 And so, this is a sea of different niches, 560 00:51:09,664 --> 00:51:13,423 that are able to be occupied and exploited by animals 561 00:51:13,424 --> 00:51:16,822 that are different to the ones you'll find down there on the floor. 562 00:51:16,823 --> 00:51:22,543 So, in a very real sense, this is an island, an island to be colonised. 563 00:51:23,783 --> 00:51:27,782 And sure enough, there are settlers to be found, even here. 564 00:51:29,182 --> 00:51:33,221 You see that thing that looks like a muddy ball there, on the branch? 565 00:51:33,222 --> 00:51:35,620 Well, that's an ants' nest, 566 00:51:35,621 --> 00:51:37,940 it's home to a species of Crematogaster ants 567 00:51:37,941 --> 00:51:41,620 that are unique not only to Madagascar, 568 00:51:41,621 --> 00:51:43,739 but to the forest canopy. 569 00:51:43,740 --> 00:51:46,899 You see, what makes those ants unique is that they can 570 00:51:46,900 --> 00:51:48,619 build their own nests. 571 00:51:48,620 --> 00:51:51,979 There are very few species of ants that can do that. 572 00:51:51,980 --> 00:51:55,658 So that is an island, that is a niche, 573 00:51:55,659 --> 00:51:59,298 and it's allowed that species of ant to develop 574 00:51:59,299 --> 00:52:03,457 because they're isolated from the rest of the ecosystem. 575 00:52:03,458 --> 00:52:06,777 And astonishingly, within this niche, 576 00:52:06,778 --> 00:52:10,337 another form of life new to science has been discovered... 577 00:52:12,577 --> 00:52:17,137 ..a beetle that manages to survive here unharmed by the ants. 578 00:52:18,497 --> 00:52:22,255 How it does it is a mystery. 579 00:52:22,256 --> 00:52:25,695 But what IS known is that this particular species has only 580 00:52:25,696 --> 00:52:29,095 ever been found inside these nests. 581 00:52:30,215 --> 00:52:34,974 So, that really is its own mini-ecosystem, 582 00:52:34,975 --> 00:52:38,494 with species living in it that are unique to that island. 583 00:52:50,573 --> 00:52:54,052 We live on an ever-shifting, dynamic world 584 00:52:54,053 --> 00:52:57,212 that creates islands in abundance. 585 00:53:06,091 --> 00:53:10,410 Earth's mountain ranges, river valleys and canyons 586 00:53:10,411 --> 00:53:12,771 all create islands for life. 587 00:53:18,210 --> 00:53:20,329 And it's these islands 588 00:53:20,330 --> 00:53:24,569 that those ancestors of the lemurs found when they arrived in Madagascar. 589 00:53:31,529 --> 00:53:35,407 Empty niches, where populations became isolated, 590 00:53:35,408 --> 00:53:38,807 and over great swathes of time 591 00:53:38,808 --> 00:53:42,367 involved into such wonderfully diverse forms. 592 00:54:03,605 --> 00:54:08,723 150 years on from the Origin Of Species, the subtlety 593 00:54:08,724 --> 00:54:13,124 and beauty of Darwin's insight is still revealing itself to us. 594 00:54:16,604 --> 00:54:20,562 It describes how our beautiful, complex tree of life 595 00:54:20,563 --> 00:54:24,283 has grown from a once desolate universe. 596 00:54:26,323 --> 00:54:28,081 The chemistry of carbon 597 00:54:28,082 --> 00:54:31,401 allows for the existence of a molecule that is able to replicate 598 00:54:31,402 --> 00:54:36,080 itself, and pass information on from generation to generation. 599 00:54:36,081 --> 00:54:39,760 There can be random changes in the structure of that molecule - 600 00:54:39,761 --> 00:54:43,800 mutations - and they are tested by their interaction with 601 00:54:43,801 --> 00:54:46,479 the environment and with living things. 602 00:54:46,480 --> 00:54:49,079 The ones that pass that test survive, 603 00:54:49,080 --> 00:54:51,440 and the ones that fail that test are lost. 604 00:54:56,199 --> 00:55:00,638 The separation and isolation of living things onto islands - 605 00:55:00,639 --> 00:55:03,917 which may be physical, like Madagascar, 606 00:55:03,918 --> 00:55:07,277 or just the single branch of a single tree - 607 00:55:07,278 --> 00:55:11,437 results in speciation, the explosion of living forms 608 00:55:11,438 --> 00:55:15,676 highly specialised to occupy niches within niches. 609 00:55:15,677 --> 00:55:20,636 And this is the explanation for the diversity of life on Earth. 610 00:55:20,637 --> 00:55:24,755 "There is grandeur in this view of life," as Darwin wrote, 611 00:55:24,756 --> 00:55:29,596 and understanding how it happened surely only adds to the wonder. 612 00:55:38,475 --> 00:55:43,193 As precise as Einstein's theories of relativity, and as profound 613 00:55:43,194 --> 00:55:46,473 as thermodynamics, 614 00:55:46,474 --> 00:55:49,873 Darwin has given us another universal law. 615 00:55:53,513 --> 00:55:56,473 Evolution by natural selection. 616 00:56:06,312 --> 00:56:09,950 And if evolution is the law on this island, 617 00:56:09,951 --> 00:56:13,071 then it will apply throughout the cosmos. 618 00:56:16,590 --> 00:56:18,990 Which begs a big question. 619 00:56:22,790 --> 00:56:27,789 Could there be other "trees of life most beautiful" amongst the stars? 620 00:56:36,388 --> 00:56:39,987 In 2011, we discovered a rocky planet 621 00:56:39,988 --> 00:56:41,907 orbiting around a distant star, 622 00:56:41,908 --> 00:56:46,666 with daytime temperatures not too dissimilar to those found on Earth. 623 00:56:46,667 --> 00:56:49,186 Now, there must be millions 624 00:56:49,187 --> 00:56:52,945 if not billions of such planets out there in the universe, 625 00:56:52,946 --> 00:56:56,585 and it's inconceivable to me that none of them 626 00:56:56,586 --> 00:57:02,224 will have trees of life as complex or even more complex than our own. 627 00:57:02,225 --> 00:57:06,704 But that doesn't devalue the existence of OUR tree, 628 00:57:06,705 --> 00:57:09,104 because our tree is unique. 629 00:57:09,105 --> 00:57:11,423 It consists of thousands of branches, 630 00:57:11,424 --> 00:57:14,183 all interdependent on thousands of others, 631 00:57:14,184 --> 00:57:19,303 and the precise structure depends on chance events, like the passage 632 00:57:19,304 --> 00:57:22,983 of the lemurs across the ocean 65 million years ago. 633 00:57:30,982 --> 00:57:32,821 So when you go outside tomorrow, 634 00:57:32,822 --> 00:57:36,301 just take a look at a little piece of your world. 635 00:57:36,302 --> 00:57:39,540 A corner of your garden, or a park, 636 00:57:39,541 --> 00:57:43,980 or even the grass that's growing in a crack in the pavement. 637 00:57:43,981 --> 00:57:47,939 Because there will be life there, and it will be unique. 638 00:57:47,940 --> 00:57:51,819 There will be nowhere like that anywhere else in the universe. 639 00:57:51,820 --> 00:57:55,699 And that makes our tree, from the sturdiest branch to the most 640 00:57:55,700 --> 00:57:59,259 fragile twig, indescribably valuable. 56305

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