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Rajasthan, central India.
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It's the middle of the morning,
the day is beginning to warm up,
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00:01:17,687 --> 00:01:20,884
and the animal community is in a relaxed mood.
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00:01:21,047 --> 00:01:25,438
The sambar deer are cooling themselves
in the shallows of the lake,
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looking for a bit of greenery to nibble
and tolerantly taking the egrets for a ride.
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00:01:33,567 --> 00:01:38,846
The egrets, too, are finding a little to eat -
an insect, perhaps, picked out of the deer's coat.
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Nature isn't always red in tooth and claw.
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Different kinds of animals are often regular
companions and get on well with one another.
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00:02:11,967 --> 00:02:17,041
In the trees, langur monkeys are finishing
their morning meal of leaves.
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They're fussy, untidy feeders,
and drop a lot of the leaves,
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00:02:27,527 --> 00:02:32,396
either by accident or because
they don't fancy those particular ones.
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And that suits the spotted deer.
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In the dry season, the ground is parched
and greenery worth eating very scarce.
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So even the smallest fragment of vegetation
fallen from above is worth having.
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The deer follow the monkeys from tree to tree,
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picking up leaves
that by themselves they couldn't reach.
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The monkeys also benefit
from the presence of the deer.
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They sometimes come down to forage
on the ground, and there they're vulnerable.
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The deer have a keener sense of smell, and may
detect dangers that the monkeys can't see.
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And if they do, they will stamp a warning.
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We ourselves have very few such relationships,
voluntarily, with other species of animals.
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00:03:56,527 --> 00:04:01,521
Except, of course, with those animals
that we have domesticated and enslaved.
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00:04:01,687 --> 00:04:05,885
But back in our evolutionary past,
we doubtless had many.
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00:04:06,047 --> 00:04:11,440
Today, maybe we think we're so powerful
or have become so detached from nature
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that we think we no longer need them.
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In the natural world,
those relationships are widespread.
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Sometimes they've been in existence for so long
that they have transformed the bodies of animals.
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Sometimes they are only just forming.
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This species of goby, for example,
that lives around coral reefs,
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has, probably quite recently,
struck up a relationship with a shrimp.
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The two regularly live together,
sharing the same hole.
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But the goby plays no part in making it.
It's dug entirely by the shrimp.
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The shrimp, in fact, seems to be a compulsive
excavator, never content with its home as it is,
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always carrying out improvements
and digging extensions.
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And the goby doesn't help.
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00:05:11,887 --> 00:05:14,959
In fact, if anything, it gets in the way.
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00:05:15,127 --> 00:05:21,123
But it's an essential companion for the shrimp,
for this species of shrimp is virtually blind.
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The goby, on the other hand, has excellent
eyesight, and is always on the alert.
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The shrimp, as it works,
keeps in touch - literally -
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by continually flicking one of its long antennae
over the fish to make sure it's still there.
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If the goby is out of the burrow, the shrimp
knows that it's safe to carry on working.
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00:05:53,127 --> 00:05:57,279
The goby is always on the lookout
for something to eat
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and may have to make little excursions
to get it.
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A tiny, edible morsel that floated by.
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00:06:17,127 --> 00:06:22,121
But even while it's feeding,
the shrimp's antenna is still in touch with it.
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Danger. And when the watchman
retreats to safety, so does the shrimp.
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The goby, having fed,
seems content to remain in the hole.
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Why expose yourself to danger unnecessarily?
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00:06:41,607 --> 00:06:46,601
But the shrimp is perpetually keen to work
and often appears to be hustling the goby,
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00:06:46,767 --> 00:06:49,759
as though to persuade it to go out again.
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00:06:52,847 --> 00:06:58,843
The shrimp collects its food from a little patch
of alga that grows beside the burrow entrance.
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It knows just where that is,
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so it can nip across quickly and snatch
a few clawfuls with the minimum of risk.
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All is well, as long as the shrimp
keeps in touch with the goby.
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But if it ventures away,
then there can be trouble.
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That was an anemone it blundered into,
and it beats a swift retreat.
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For a moment, it seems lost.
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Then the goby comes over
and contact is re-established.
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The partners are together again and all is well.
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00:08:11,367 --> 00:08:15,360
So, two very different animals
operate a partnership.
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The blind landlord provides the accommodation,
and the tenant provides a guidance service.
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Hermit crabs live in a different kind of home.
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00:08:28,007 --> 00:08:30,919
Instead of a hole, they use an empty shell.
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00:08:31,087 --> 00:08:34,796
But they, too, can find themselves with lodgers.
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This one's companion is a ragworm.
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00:09:06,447 --> 00:09:09,564
For the worm, this is a good place to be.
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It has a home where it's safe from predators,
curled up inside the shell alongside the crab.
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00:09:15,527 --> 00:09:21,045
And on its very doorstep, there's a regular
supply of food brought there by the crab.
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00:09:23,927 --> 00:09:28,717
Nonetheless, collecting a share of that food
seems a fairly risky business.
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00:09:28,887 --> 00:09:32,357
The crab's mandibles
could easily chop the worm's head off.
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00:09:32,527 --> 00:09:37,920
But the worm has had a lot of practice
at this sort of thing.
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00:09:39,327 --> 00:09:44,321
Whether the crab gets any benefit at all
from the arrangement is rather doubtful,
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00:09:44,487 --> 00:09:48,799
but there's not much it can do
to get rid of its lodger anyway.
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00:10:00,847 --> 00:10:03,236
A small octopus.
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Hermit crabs are one of its favourite foods.
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In the centre of those writhing arms
it has a powerful beak
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with which it can drag the crab from its shell.
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00:10:42,287 --> 00:10:46,883
And that's the end of both the hermit crab
and its lodger.
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00:10:55,567 --> 00:10:59,526
But this species of hermit crab
recruits a bodyguard.
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00:10:59,687 --> 00:11:05,876
Anemones have stings in their tentacles - stings
that are strong enough to repel an octopus.
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00:11:08,807 --> 00:11:11,526
Since the crab wanders about a great deal,
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its bodyguard, to be any good,
has to travel with it.
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00:11:23,727 --> 00:11:29,324
It's not easy to unstick an anemone from a rock,
but the crab knows the trick.
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00:11:29,487 --> 00:11:33,685
You have to tickle it
around the edge of its bottom.
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00:12:12,407 --> 00:12:17,197
You can tell that the anemone
isn't particularly alarmed by this procedure
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00:12:17,367 --> 00:12:22,361
because it hasn't closed up
and is still confidently waving its tentacles.
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00:12:43,807 --> 00:12:48,198
That makes three guardian anemones
on the crab's shell.
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00:12:48,367 --> 00:12:51,564
But is that enough to give it protection?
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00:13:19,327 --> 00:13:21,795
The octopus is not sure.
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No, it's not worth it.
91
00:13:54,687 --> 00:13:57,155
So the crab has its bodyguards,
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and its bodyguards, for wages,
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00:13:59,927 --> 00:14:05,524
are likely to get little bits and pieces
that float by when the crab chews up its meals.
94
00:14:09,807 --> 00:14:15,803
It's not always easy to decide
in these partnerships which is exploiting which.
95
00:14:15,967 --> 00:14:19,277
The balance of advantage is often very delicate.
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00:14:19,447 --> 00:14:22,644
Take, for example, these ants in Australia.
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00:14:22,807 --> 00:14:27,597
They are extremely ferocious
and normally they'll rip apart any caterpillar.
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00:14:27,767 --> 00:14:30,361
But see how they're treating this one.
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The caterpillar has on its back
a number of little nipples
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which apparently fascinate the ants.
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0ne near its back end,
when stimulated by an ant,
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produces a drop of liquid,
honeydew, which the ant drinks.
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00:15:06,207 --> 00:15:11,201
As the caterpillar grazes on leaves,
the ants keep continuous guard over it,
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threatening anything that comes near it,
so that even birds don't attack it.
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00:15:32,607 --> 00:15:38,079
The caterpillar has to make sure that the ants
don't forget what kind of caterpillar it is.
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00:15:38,247 --> 00:15:42,525
If they think it's any other kind,
they will tear it apart and eat it.
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00:15:42,687 --> 00:15:47,681
So the caterpillar every now and then
makes a characteristic buzzing vibration.
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00:15:47,847 --> 00:15:52,841
Not only that, but on either side
of the honeydew nipple there are two others.
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From these sprout little tentacles
which apparently release a pheromone,
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a kind of perfume
that keeps the ants happy and unaggressive.
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00:16:03,327 --> 00:16:09,084
Tree ants build nests almost as big as footballs
from the growing leaves of the tree.
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00:16:10,687 --> 00:16:15,158
They feed on any small creature
that happens to land in the tree.
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00:16:17,607 --> 00:16:22,806
This grasshopper stood little chance.
As soon as it landed, they set upon it.
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00:16:22,967 --> 00:16:28,360
Now they are butchering it and carrying it back,
piece by piece, to their nest.
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00:16:32,167 --> 00:16:36,957
As well as this nest,
the workers also construct small shelters.
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00:16:37,127 --> 00:16:41,518
First, a team bridges two leaves
and slowly pulls them together.
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0thers arrive carrying grubs,
which they gently squeeze,
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so that the grubs are stimulated
to produce a sticky silk.
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00:16:50,007 --> 00:16:55,400
By passing the grubs back and forth, they weave
a fabric that holds the two leaves together.
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They're making a shelter
for their precious caterpillar.
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00:17:00,407 --> 00:17:04,400
When it's complete,
they guide the caterpillar into it.
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0nce in its shed, it'll be safe for the night.
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00:17:14,887 --> 00:17:19,483
The ants look after it
like farmers looking after a dairy cow.
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00:17:19,647 --> 00:17:24,516
And their cow, in return,
provides them with nourishing food.
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00:17:34,887 --> 00:17:41,281
At this stage in their relationship, neither ant
nor caterpillar seems to have the advantage.
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00:17:41,447 --> 00:17:45,042
But this same species of ferocious stinging ant
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00:17:45,207 --> 00:17:49,405
has also got a partnership
with a different species of caterpillar,
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00:17:49,567 --> 00:17:52,001
and there the result seems to be very different.
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This one has a glossy, horny shield on its back,
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00:17:58,847 --> 00:18:03,921
and it, entirely of its own accord,
marches right into the ants' nest.
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00:18:06,207 --> 00:18:11,804
It is in no way deterred by the ants'
threatening postures and sprays of formic acid.
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No matter what the ants do, they can't stop it.
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Deeper and deeper it goes, through the corridors
of sewn leaves, right into the heart of the nest.
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It reaches the queen.
If she is killed, the whole colony will die.
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00:18:50,247 --> 00:18:54,206
But she is not what the intruder is looking for.
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00:18:54,367 --> 00:19:00,363
The soldiers attack valiantly. Their jaws make
little impression on the caterpillar's armour.
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Neither can they get underneath it
and reach the soft, vulnerable body.
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0n it goes, until at last
it reaches the nursery chambers
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where the developing grubs lie.
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Try as they might,
they can't lift up the shield sufficiently
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00:19:20,287 --> 00:19:23,085
to enable other defenders to get beneath.
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00:19:32,087 --> 00:19:37,286
With the intruder actually within the nursery,
the workers become totally confused.
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00:19:37,447 --> 00:19:41,406
Some try to carry off the grubs
to safety elsewhere.
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00:19:51,087 --> 00:19:53,681
But they can't do it quickly enough.
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The caterpillar snatches a grub,
pulls it under the shield,
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00:19:57,967 --> 00:20:02,597
and then, secure beneath its armour,
slowly eats it.
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00:20:16,247 --> 00:20:21,480
As the season progresses, several of these
armoured intruders make their way into the nest
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and there gorge themselves on ant grubs.
149
00:20:58,687 --> 00:21:05,320
After several weeks, the caterpillars have eaten
all the grubs they need to grow to full size.
150
00:21:05,487 --> 00:21:11,483
Now, in the heart of the nest, they're ready
to shed their armour and turn into butterflies.
151
00:21:11,647 --> 00:21:15,322
But how can a butterfly
get through the ranks of the ant soldiers?
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Now, surely, they'll have a chance
to get their revenge.
153
00:21:20,567 --> 00:21:24,765
Slowly, the insect hauls itself
out of its horny armour.
154
00:21:41,407 --> 00:21:45,764
But it's a strange sort of butterfly
that emerges.
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00:21:50,367 --> 00:21:55,964
It's covered in scales that are so slippery
that the ants can't get a proper grip on them.
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Those that do manage to bite
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00:22:06,047 --> 00:22:11,644
get their jaws covered with a sort of fluff
that they clearly find intensely irritating.
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00:22:15,887 --> 00:22:20,085
So, at last, the murderous lodger goes free.
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00:22:27,807 --> 00:22:33,200
Ants and caterpillars, like crabs and anemones,
are about the same size.
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00:22:33,367 --> 00:22:36,677
But if a lodger is very much smaller
than its landlord,
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00:22:36,847 --> 00:22:41,682
then it tends to live not so much with it as on it.
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00:22:41,847 --> 00:22:44,566
Those monkeys over there, for example.
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00:22:44,727 --> 00:22:47,525
They've got a number of tiny passengers.
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00:23:00,847 --> 00:23:04,726
Like most mammals with hairy coats,
they've got fleas.
165
00:23:04,887 --> 00:23:09,278
And when fleas bite and start sucking blood,
they itch.
166
00:23:13,767 --> 00:23:20,081
It may be necessary to get a friend to help
pick them out from parts that you can't reach.
167
00:23:24,647 --> 00:23:30,483
This, however, is not fur. This is the fabric
of a bird's nest, and fleas live here, too.
168
00:23:33,967 --> 00:23:39,758
A young starling within two days of hatching
is likely to have several dozen fleas.
169
00:23:42,247 --> 00:23:47,241
Fleas have six legs, just like any other
insects, but they've lost their wings.
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00:23:47,407 --> 00:23:52,640
Those would be an encumbrance to an animal
crawling around among fur and feathers.
171
00:23:52,807 --> 00:23:57,597
Instead, they have powerful hind legs
that enable them to jump onto their host.
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00:23:57,767 --> 00:24:02,557
Their jaws have become specialised for
sucking blood, and they feed on nothing else.
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They have to live on another animal,
and they contribute nothing to its welfare.
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00:24:07,487 --> 00:24:10,365
This is not a partnership. It's parasitism.
175
00:24:12,607 --> 00:24:16,395
Nor are fleas the only parasites in a bird's nest.
176
00:24:16,567 --> 00:24:19,161
Lice are there, eating feathers.
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00:24:19,327 --> 00:24:24,321
They, too, are insects, and any one bird
may have up to a dozen different kinds,
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00:24:24,487 --> 00:24:30,278
each living on and eating a different kind
of feather on the neck, the wings or the head.
179
00:24:34,527 --> 00:24:38,725
Insects seem to have
a particular flair for parasitism.
180
00:24:38,887 --> 00:24:43,483
Every one of their main families
has some members who've taken it up.
181
00:24:43,647 --> 00:24:47,640
But insects themselves can also be parasitised.
182
00:24:47,807 --> 00:24:53,518
This nest of bumble bees has been invaded
by mites, diminutive cousins of spiders.
183
00:24:55,327 --> 00:25:00,321
They're so tiny that several hundred of them
can sit on the leg of a bee.
184
00:25:02,007 --> 00:25:04,316
And they, too, itch.
185
00:25:11,767 --> 00:25:14,076
They get everywhere,
186
00:25:14,247 --> 00:25:19,560
and once they've found their way into a colony,
they spread to every member of it.
187
00:25:31,967 --> 00:25:35,357
Mites are just as specialised as feather lice.
188
00:25:35,527 --> 00:25:40,396
These bee mites live nowhere else
but on this particular species of bumble bee.
189
00:25:41,367 --> 00:25:47,522
And this flower, milkweed, is a staging post
for one of the most specialised mites of all.
190
00:25:50,767 --> 00:25:53,361
Moths come to feed on the milkweed at night,
191
00:25:53,527 --> 00:25:59,523
dipping their long, threadlike tongues deep
into the heart of the flowers to sip the nectar.
192
00:26:02,847 --> 00:26:06,442
But this moth is already infested with mites.
193
00:26:08,367 --> 00:26:11,643
Its ear, a tiny hole in the side of its head,
194
00:26:11,807 --> 00:26:15,595
has become the home
of a whole colony of them.
195
00:26:20,767 --> 00:26:24,760
And a new colonist awaits on the flower itself.
196
00:26:30,527 --> 00:26:34,964
While the moth drinks,
the mite crawls up its tongue.
197
00:27:14,567 --> 00:27:17,684
0nce on the moth's head,
it knows, mysteriously,
198
00:27:17,847 --> 00:27:23,046
just which direction it must take
through the jungle of fur to reach the ear.
199
00:27:23,207 --> 00:27:25,801
There is one great danger in all this.
200
00:27:25,967 --> 00:27:29,357
Blocking up an ear makes it useless to the moth.
201
00:27:29,527 --> 00:27:33,520
If the moth can't hear,
it can't avoid the bats that hunt it.
202
00:27:33,687 --> 00:27:37,680
That would be as disastrous
for the mites as for the moth.
203
00:27:37,847 --> 00:27:43,444
So the mites obligingly occupy only one ear
and always leave the other free.
204
00:27:44,167 --> 00:27:49,764
Here they live and breed, using one part
of the ear tube for stacking their droppings,
205
00:27:49,927 --> 00:27:54,717
another for laying their eggs,
and yet another for rearing their grubs.
206
00:27:54,887 --> 00:27:59,677
And how do their offspring find another
of these highly specialised homes?
207
00:27:59,847 --> 00:28:04,841
Why, of course, by clambering
down their host's tongue as it drinks
208
00:28:05,007 --> 00:28:10,400
and waiting on the flower for another moth
of the same species to turn up.
209
00:28:19,327 --> 00:28:22,205
But parasites are themselves preyed on.
210
00:28:22,367 --> 00:28:24,961
This mouse that lives in Central America
211
00:28:25,127 --> 00:28:30,121
regularly carries a dozen or so passengers
wriggling around in its fur.
212
00:28:38,527 --> 00:28:43,920
They're beetles, and they were once thought
to be parasites that sucked the mouse's blood,
213
00:28:44,087 --> 00:28:46,681
for they have large and powerful jaws.
214
00:28:46,847 --> 00:28:53,320
But, oddly, the mice that carry the most beetles
are not the most anaemic, as you might expect.
215
00:28:53,487 --> 00:28:57,480
0n the contrary,
they seem to be the most healthy.
216
00:28:57,647 --> 00:29:03,836
It turns out that the mouse's most serious
parasites are here in the lining of the nest.
217
00:29:04,007 --> 00:29:07,204
Fleas and ticks that D0 suck its blood.
218
00:29:14,287 --> 00:29:20,476
Each mouse has several holes in the forest,
and all are likely to be infested with these fleas.
219
00:29:22,007 --> 00:29:24,202
When a mouse settles down to rest in one,
220
00:29:24,367 --> 00:29:28,883
the beetles drop off and go hunting
for the fleas in the nest lining.
221
00:29:29,047 --> 00:29:33,438
So the beetles, far from injuring the mouse,
actually aid it.
222
00:29:43,207 --> 00:29:45,402
Got one.
223
00:29:51,607 --> 00:29:54,075
As far as a beetle is concerned,
224
00:29:54,247 --> 00:29:59,844
the mouse is a convenient transport system
for getting from one hunting ground to another.
225
00:30:00,007 --> 00:30:05,525
The mouse that carries the most beetle
passengers has the most flea-free life.
226
00:30:06,927 --> 00:30:10,203
These birds, too, are hunters of parasites.
227
00:30:10,367 --> 00:30:14,155
They're finches that live in the Galapagos Islands.
228
00:30:14,327 --> 00:30:18,115
And the creatures they help - the giant tortoises.
229
00:30:25,447 --> 00:30:29,759
You can hardly scratch yourself
if you have legs like these.
230
00:30:31,887 --> 00:30:34,799
Yet tortoises, like so many other animals,
231
00:30:34,967 --> 00:30:39,199
are pestered by skin parasites, especially ticks.
232
00:30:40,007 --> 00:30:45,604
The finches eat mainly seeds,
but ticks apparently make a welcome change.
233
00:30:51,087 --> 00:30:56,081
When there's a tortoise nearby
and the finches want a meal with a difference,
234
00:30:56,247 --> 00:31:01,082
they signal to the tortoise
by jumping up and down in front of it.
235
00:31:02,287 --> 00:31:06,883
The tortoise reacts to the finches' advances
in a remarkable way.
236
00:31:07,047 --> 00:31:13,805
It stiffens its legs, so that its body is lifted
clear of the ground, and cranes up its neck.
237
00:31:17,087 --> 00:31:20,875
The invitation is an unmistakeable one.
238
00:31:26,287 --> 00:31:29,404
There's no way that the tortoise
could pick off parasites
239
00:31:29,567 --> 00:31:34,436
from the places that these attendants
manage to reach.
240
00:31:51,447 --> 00:31:54,041
A few minutes' servicing by the finches
241
00:31:54,207 --> 00:31:58,200
is quite enough to clear the tortoise
of most of its pests.
242
00:31:58,367 --> 00:32:00,835
Another satisfied customer.
243
00:32:04,127 --> 00:32:08,598
Fish have the same sort of problem,
and the same sort of solution.
244
00:32:08,767 --> 00:32:15,286
The huge manta ray is troubled by sea lice
and barnacles that burrow into its skin.
245
00:32:18,967 --> 00:32:24,360
But it has other company, an attendant fleet
of small fish that travel with it.
246
00:32:24,527 --> 00:32:31,126
When the opportunity arises, they swim over
their host's body, even inside its gaping mouth,
247
00:32:31,287 --> 00:32:33,801
picking off the passengers.
248
00:32:51,447 --> 00:32:57,636
Like giant tortoises, fish with skin problems
patronise regular cleaning establishments.
249
00:33:00,767 --> 00:33:05,158
This grouper hangs in the water
at this special place on the reef,
250
00:33:05,327 --> 00:33:10,640
and small wrasse that have been waiting
amongst the coral start fussing around it,
251
00:33:10,807 --> 00:33:14,356
even daring to swim inside the huge jaws.
252
00:33:23,447 --> 00:33:26,439
It's not only fish that work as cleaners.
253
00:33:26,607 --> 00:33:30,202
This moray eel is being tended by a shrimp.
254
00:33:32,887 --> 00:33:35,276
0pen wide, please.
255
00:33:51,647 --> 00:33:54,844
Amazingly, the cleaners are never harmed...
256
00:33:56,767 --> 00:33:59,156
..even though they tickle.
257
00:34:08,207 --> 00:34:13,201
These shrimps are really quite large,
big enough to make a reasonable meal,
258
00:34:13,367 --> 00:34:16,040
but they're never injured, either.
259
00:34:23,807 --> 00:34:28,597
Regular customers come back
to these cleaning stations every few days.
260
00:34:28,767 --> 00:34:33,557
Although the staff of wrasse and shrimps
can deal with as many as 50 an hour,
261
00:34:33,727 --> 00:34:38,118
there are often queues of itchy fish
waiting their turn.
262
00:34:43,567 --> 00:34:47,765
Some fish, however,
have their own personal valets.
263
00:34:50,887 --> 00:34:57,360
Suckerfish, or remoras, have a fin on their back
that has been modified into a sucker so powerful
264
00:34:57,527 --> 00:35:02,237
that it's almost impossible to pull off a remora
if it wants to stay on.
265
00:35:02,407 --> 00:35:05,001
They travel with their host wherever it goes
266
00:35:05,167 --> 00:35:10,958
and slip around its body, picking off parasites,
whenever there's an opportunity to do so.
267
00:35:28,447 --> 00:35:32,440
Giraffe, like many other
big game animals in Africa,
268
00:35:32,607 --> 00:35:35,440
also have their own personal staff.
269
00:35:42,487 --> 00:35:48,483
0xpeckers live almost permanently on
their hosts' bodies, scuttling about all over it.
270
00:35:57,167 --> 00:36:01,877
0n this spacious, patterned stage,
they act out almost all their lives.
271
00:36:02,047 --> 00:36:07,405
Here they argue and court.
Here, too, they feed their newly fledged young.
272
00:36:07,567 --> 00:36:11,560
They can't, it's true, nest here -
they do that in holes in trees -
273
00:36:11,727 --> 00:36:15,720
but they do line those holes
with hair from their host's body,
274
00:36:15,887 --> 00:36:18,879
so that, presumably, they'll still feel at home.
275
00:36:23,607 --> 00:36:29,921
Their claws are so long that they can cling in
almost any position and move in any direction.
276
00:36:30,087 --> 00:36:35,480
Their beak is flattened, so that it slips easily
between the long hairs of the giraffe's coat
277
00:36:35,647 --> 00:36:38,878
as they scissor through it searching for ticks.
278
00:36:42,047 --> 00:36:44,436
And they get everywhere,
279
00:36:44,607 --> 00:36:46,996
on young and on old.
280
00:36:52,887 --> 00:36:56,880
Even when the animal moves off,
they will hang on
281
00:36:57,047 --> 00:37:01,245
with the skill and unconcern
of accomplished jockeys.
282
00:37:08,607 --> 00:37:14,603
But oxpeckers are a mixed blessing. The ticks
they eat are full of the giraffe's blood.
283
00:37:14,767 --> 00:37:19,363
But sometimes they take that blood
directly from an open wound.
284
00:37:19,527 --> 00:37:24,521
And by doing that, they're not improving
their host's health, but damaging it,
285
00:37:24,687 --> 00:37:29,477
keeping the wound open
long after it would otherwise have healed.
286
00:37:30,767 --> 00:37:33,156
Even so, without them,
287
00:37:33,327 --> 00:37:38,321
giraffes would be more seriously troubled
by their skin parasites than they are.
288
00:37:44,327 --> 00:37:49,720
We ourselves, of course, can also get infested
with ticks and fleas if we're not careful.
289
00:37:49,887 --> 00:37:53,675
They're everywhere, particularly in the rainforest.
290
00:38:00,127 --> 00:38:05,520
0ne has a reasonable chance of getting rid
of animals that settle on your outside.
291
00:38:05,687 --> 00:38:08,679
I can flick off these ticks.
292
00:38:09,767 --> 00:38:15,842
If you can't do it for yourself, maybe you can
get an oxpecker or a cleaner fish to do it for you.
293
00:38:16,007 --> 00:38:21,718
But if the parasite settles not on the outside
of your body, but manages to get inside it,
294
00:38:21,887 --> 00:38:23,878
that's a very different matter.
295
00:38:28,087 --> 00:38:32,080
The corridors and chambers
of an animal's digestive system
296
00:38:32,247 --> 00:38:36,240
offer great advantages
to any creature that can dwell in them.
297
00:38:36,407 --> 00:38:39,001
Inside here they are secure from enemies
298
00:38:39,167 --> 00:38:42,045
and washed continuously by a nutritious soup
299
00:38:42,207 --> 00:38:47,804
that their host has already chewed, mashed
and partially digested for itself.
300
00:38:47,967 --> 00:38:53,758
All they have to do is to absorb it through
their skin. They don't even need a mouth.
301
00:38:55,887 --> 00:38:59,675
The animals that are best suited
to this interior life
302
00:38:59,847 --> 00:39:05,365
are those long, spineless, legless creatures
we call collectively worms.
303
00:39:05,527 --> 00:39:09,520
Flat, ribbon-shaped tapeworms
hang onto the walls of the gut
304
00:39:09,687 --> 00:39:12,884
with a crown of hooks that encircle their head.
305
00:39:18,327 --> 00:39:23,117
In the long corridors of the intestines,
roundworms proliferate.
306
00:39:23,287 --> 00:39:26,324
Every backboned animal
that has been thoroughly examined,
307
00:39:26,487 --> 00:39:30,196
whether fish or amphibian,
reptile, bird or mammal,
308
00:39:30,367 --> 00:39:34,121
has proved to be the host of a roundworm.
309
00:39:34,287 --> 00:39:38,883
These living in a gut
merely rob the host of some of its food.
310
00:39:39,047 --> 00:39:44,246
But they may spread to cause
severe damage to the liver and the lungs.
311
00:39:44,407 --> 00:39:48,195
0ther roundworms, too, cause serious problems.
312
00:39:49,607 --> 00:39:55,921
There are some as thin as threads of cotton
that collect in the valves of the heart,
313
00:39:56,087 --> 00:39:59,682
blocking them so seriously that their host dies.
314
00:40:03,647 --> 00:40:08,038
The young of such threadworms,
swimming around in the bloodstream,
315
00:40:08,207 --> 00:40:12,200
depend on biting insects
to transfer them to another host.
316
00:40:12,367 --> 00:40:15,439
During the day, they swim in blood vessels.
317
00:40:15,607 --> 00:40:21,204
At night, when mosquitoes are biting, they move
up into the capillaries just beneath the skin,
318
00:40:21,367 --> 00:40:26,361
so that when a mosquito does start
to suck their host's blood, they are taken up.
319
00:40:26,527 --> 00:40:29,325
They continue to grow inside the mosquito.
320
00:40:29,487 --> 00:40:36,279
When, in due course, it bites some other animal,
they're transferred into a new host, a new home.
321
00:40:37,287 --> 00:40:41,485
0thers, smaller still,
that wriggle among the blood corpuscles,
322
00:40:41,647 --> 00:40:45,845
belong to the most ancient of all animal groups,
the protozoans.
323
00:40:46,007 --> 00:40:48,805
They first got inside animals so long ago
324
00:40:48,967 --> 00:40:52,243
that most of their hosts
have developed an immunity to them.
325
00:40:52,407 --> 00:40:56,559
But human beings, those most recent
of mammals, have not yet done so.
326
00:40:56,727 --> 00:41:01,084
In them, they cause sleeping sickness
and death.
327
00:41:01,247 --> 00:41:07,038
The problem that faces all internal parasites
is how to get their offspring into another host.
328
00:41:07,207 --> 00:41:11,997
Tiny ones, like the protozoans,
may be transferred by biting insects.
329
00:41:12,167 --> 00:41:16,524
Bigger ones, like this roundworm,
have to use other methods.
330
00:41:16,687 --> 00:41:22,080
The first stage, getting their eggs
to the outside world, is easy.
331
00:41:27,447 --> 00:41:32,840
This roundworm, full of eggs,
simply sheds them into its host's gut
332
00:41:33,007 --> 00:41:35,726
so that they fall out with its droppings.
333
00:41:37,207 --> 00:41:42,076
0nce in the soil, they may lie dormant
for some considerable time.
334
00:41:42,247 --> 00:41:48,243
But eventually, when conditions are suitable,
the temperature just right and moisture around,
335
00:41:48,407 --> 00:41:50,716
they begin to hatch.
336
00:42:09,047 --> 00:42:12,039
The tiny worms crawl up leaves of grass,
337
00:42:12,207 --> 00:42:16,598
and there await the moment
when a hungry mouth will crop the grass
338
00:42:16,767 --> 00:42:19,759
and they will get carried into another stomach.
339
00:42:19,927 --> 00:42:22,919
Such transfers are not always straightforward.
340
00:42:23,087 --> 00:42:28,639
Sometimes the complexities of the route
they follow are almost beyond imagining.
341
00:42:30,007 --> 00:42:32,601
Denmark. A morning in summer.
342
00:42:35,367 --> 00:42:40,361
There has been a shower of rain,
and the meadows and woodlands are drenched.
343
00:42:49,447 --> 00:42:54,475
Snails are slowly crawling around
through the wet leaves, grazing.
344
00:42:54,647 --> 00:43:00,040
They're feeding on algae and rotting
vegetable matter of one kind and another.
345
00:43:00,207 --> 00:43:03,005
Early morning is the best time for them.
346
00:43:03,167 --> 00:43:06,079
The sun is not yet hot enough to dry them out
347
00:43:06,247 --> 00:43:11,446
and they can explore parts of the vegetation
they can't reach at other times.
348
00:43:29,287 --> 00:43:32,802
But this one is different from the others.
349
00:43:35,567 --> 00:43:39,526
Its left tentacle is swollen and pulsating.
350
00:43:39,687 --> 00:43:42,076
It has a parasite.
351
00:43:44,807 --> 00:43:50,200
A few months ago, the snail took in,
along with its normal food, some bird droppings.
352
00:43:50,367 --> 00:43:55,361
Within them were the tiny eggs of a fluke
that was living within the bird's gut.
353
00:43:55,527 --> 00:44:01,318
Those hatched and the parasite developed,
taking over much of the snail's body.
354
00:44:01,487 --> 00:44:03,478
As the sun shines brighter,
355
00:44:03,647 --> 00:44:09,836
the parasite extends a striped, muscular bag
packed with larvae into the snail's tentacle.
356
00:44:10,007 --> 00:44:14,000
If it has the choice,
it nearly always picks the left one.
357
00:44:14,167 --> 00:44:20,356
Birds rarely eat whole snails. They're far too big,
and few can extract them from their shells.
358
00:44:20,527 --> 00:44:26,318
Nonetheless, the larvae must reach
the body of another bird to develop further.
359
00:44:26,487 --> 00:44:31,720
For some reason, the presence of the parasite
changes the snail's behaviour.
360
00:44:31,887 --> 00:44:35,880
As the day wears on,
it does not, like uninfected snails,
361
00:44:36,047 --> 00:44:40,325
crawl back into the cool undergrowth
out of harm's way.
362
00:44:40,487 --> 00:44:43,285
Instead, it remains exposed, out in the open.
363
00:44:43,447 --> 00:44:45,756
Dangerously so.
364
00:44:50,647 --> 00:44:53,639
Now there is a parasite in each tentacle.
365
00:45:04,287 --> 00:45:09,759
Perhaps they look like caterpillars
or tasty worms. Maybe they just look odd.
366
00:45:09,927 --> 00:45:13,715
But certainly the flycatcher finds them interesting.
367
00:45:32,007 --> 00:45:36,205
The connection has been made,
the circle is complete.
368
00:45:36,367 --> 00:45:38,961
Another bird has become infected.
369
00:45:41,247 --> 00:45:46,446
Inside the bird, the striped bag
releases its multitudes of larvae.
370
00:45:46,607 --> 00:45:51,078
They soon move through the bird's body
and take up residence in its gut,
371
00:45:51,247 --> 00:45:54,239
and the whole cycle starts all over again.
372
00:45:58,687 --> 00:46:04,284
Flukes are related to the flatworms that live
independent lives in ponds and swamps.
373
00:46:04,447 --> 00:46:09,043
But they've found their greatest success
as internal parasites.
374
00:46:09,207 --> 00:46:15,521
Some reside in the liver. 0ther kinds anchor
themselves in the bladder, the lungs or the gut.
375
00:46:15,687 --> 00:46:18,997
Most are capable of causing serious disease.
376
00:46:20,047 --> 00:46:24,723
All internal parasites, however,
do not necessarily injure their hosts.
377
00:46:24,887 --> 00:46:27,685
Some, indeed, actually help them.
378
00:46:27,847 --> 00:46:32,637
These microscopic organisms,
undoubtedly alive and arguably animals
379
00:46:32,807 --> 00:46:37,801
since they don't have chlorophyll, like plants,
with which to manufacture their food,
380
00:46:37,967 --> 00:46:40,765
live in the stomachs of most large animals.
381
00:46:40,927 --> 00:46:46,320
They are able, chemically, to break down
the cellulose which forms most plant tissues,
382
00:46:46,487 --> 00:46:51,686
something the digestive juices
of most large, plant-eating animals can't do.
383
00:46:53,007 --> 00:46:58,001
Their free-living ancestors swam in ponds,
as some of their relatives still do today.
384
00:46:58,167 --> 00:47:03,161
These are members of the family
that have simply found a warmer, darker pond,
385
00:47:03,327 --> 00:47:08,321
and one that is extraordinarily rich
in edible material - a stomach.
386
00:47:13,647 --> 00:47:16,639
So a buffalo, like most wild animals,
387
00:47:16,807 --> 00:47:20,402
is not, as it might appear, a single individual.
388
00:47:21,327 --> 00:47:23,636
It's a walking zoo.
389
00:47:23,807 --> 00:47:26,799
Its oxpecker companions are obvious enough,
390
00:47:26,967 --> 00:47:31,358
but if we looked closer
we would find ticks boring into its skin,
391
00:47:31,527 --> 00:47:35,918
in its mouth, leeches that it picked up
when it drank from the river.
392
00:47:36,087 --> 00:47:41,480
Tapeworms are trailing through its guts,
flukes are moored in the veins of its liver,
393
00:47:41,647 --> 00:47:46,675
and protozoans are swimming in its blood
and swilling around in its stomach.
394
00:47:46,847 --> 00:47:52,240
It's a whole community of different animals
that have been committed by evolution,
395
00:47:52,407 --> 00:47:56,480
for better or for worse,
in sickness and in health,
396
00:47:56,647 --> 00:47:58,956
to live together.
40242
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