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Imagine a world
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00:00:39,624 --> 00:00:43,877
where temperatures rise
to 50 degrees Centigrade,
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00:00:48,216 --> 00:00:52,677
where there's no escape
from sun, wind and dust.
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00:00:58,643 --> 00:01:03,897
Imagine a world
with almost no food or water.
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00:01:12,782 --> 00:01:18,411
These are the conditions
in one-third of the lands of our planet.
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00:01:21,374 --> 00:01:22,624
To live here
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00:01:22,708 --> 00:01:27,504
demands the most extraordinary
survival strategies.
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00:01:50,987 --> 00:01:55,240
This is the oldest desert in the world.
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The Namib in southwest Africa.
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It's been dry for 55 million years.
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00:02:08,462 --> 00:02:12,757
Life here for a hunter
is as hard as it gets.
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00:02:23,811 --> 00:02:26,229
A pride of lions,
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00:02:26,314 --> 00:02:27,480
one of the very few
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00:02:27,565 --> 00:02:31,276
that endures
this desert's scorching temperatures
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00:02:31,360 --> 00:02:32,694
and lack of water.
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00:02:50,713 --> 00:02:54,632
Hunting here presents special problems.
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00:03:00,973 --> 00:03:02,932
A herd of oryx,
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the only prey within 30 kilometres.
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00:03:10,358 --> 00:03:14,402
Out here,
there is no cover for an ambush.
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00:03:14,487 --> 00:03:17,030
It will have to be a straight chase.
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00:03:55,820 --> 00:03:57,779
They have failed,
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00:03:57,863 --> 00:04:03,076
and each failed hunt
brings the lions closer to starvation.
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00:04:14,839 --> 00:04:16,840
To find enough to eat,
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00:04:16,924 --> 00:04:22,137
the pride continually searches
an area the size of Switzerland.
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00:04:31,480 --> 00:04:35,525
Three days and 150 kilometres later,
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00:04:35,609 --> 00:04:37,944
and still, no kill.
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00:04:40,322 --> 00:04:43,283
These are desperate times.
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00:04:46,912 --> 00:04:50,331
A dry riverbed
on the edge of their territory.
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00:04:53,586 --> 00:04:55,670
The only animals here are giraffe.
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00:04:57,006 --> 00:05:00,300
But these one-tonne giants
could kill a lion
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00:05:00,384 --> 00:05:02,552
with a single kick.
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00:05:15,900 --> 00:05:19,068
Lions seldom tackle
such formidable prey.
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00:05:22,490 --> 00:05:25,116
But this pride can't go on much longer
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without food.
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00:05:56,607 --> 00:05:58,816
The whole pride
must work together as a team,
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00:05:58,943 --> 00:06:00,985
if they're to succeed.
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00:06:30,349 --> 00:06:32,559
Two lionesses lead the chase.
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00:06:32,643 --> 00:06:36,479
Others race to cut off
possible escape routes.
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00:06:53,497 --> 00:06:58,501
The giraffe has the speed and stamina
to outrun the pride.
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00:06:59,670 --> 00:07:03,089
But it's being chased into a trap.
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00:07:05,175 --> 00:07:08,386
Up ahead, the lead female waits.
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00:07:19,398 --> 00:07:21,190
It's now up to her.
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00:07:41,045 --> 00:07:44,422
Most lion hunts end in failure.
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00:07:45,758 --> 00:07:51,054
But no lions fail more often
than those that live in the desert.
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00:07:54,391 --> 00:07:55,767
Once again,
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00:07:55,893 --> 00:07:59,062
the pride must continue their search.
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00:08:24,088 --> 00:08:28,591
It does sometimes rain in the desert.
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00:08:31,470 --> 00:08:33,429
Here in the American West,
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00:08:33,514 --> 00:08:37,517
storms can strike
with devastating force.
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00:08:42,981 --> 00:08:46,526
After 10 months of drought,
millions of tonnes of water
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00:08:46,610 --> 00:08:50,279
are dumped on the land in under an hour.
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00:09:41,749 --> 00:09:43,332
Over millions of years,
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00:09:43,417 --> 00:09:46,919
sand and gravel
carried by the rampaging floods
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00:09:47,004 --> 00:09:50,506
have carved channels
through the solid rock.
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00:09:55,345 --> 00:09:59,432
Salt canyons, 50 metres deep.
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00:10:32,925 --> 00:10:35,968
In some places,
these canyons have widened
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00:10:36,053 --> 00:10:42,725
until the land between them is sculpted
into table lands and isolated pinnacles,
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00:10:42,810 --> 00:10:46,771
some of the most
dramatic landscapes on the planet.
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00:11:04,248 --> 00:11:06,249
The rain may be long gone,
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00:11:08,001 --> 00:11:09,710
but there is water here,
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00:11:11,797 --> 00:11:16,425
locked away within the tissues
of specialist desert plants.
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00:11:18,637 --> 00:11:22,348
Cacti are unique to American deserts.
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00:11:24,476 --> 00:11:29,105
They all hoard water,
storing it in swollen stems,
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00:11:29,189 --> 00:11:32,817
and protecting it
behind a barricade of spines.
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00:11:37,030 --> 00:11:40,950
They're so successful
that they dominate these deserts.
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00:11:43,453 --> 00:11:45,413
But this forest of spikes
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00:11:45,497 --> 00:11:48,791
can cause problems
for the animals that live here.
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00:11:56,884 --> 00:11:58,467
A Harris hawk.
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00:12:01,847 --> 00:12:06,350
It has developed special techniques
for hunting amongst the cacti.
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00:12:12,816 --> 00:12:14,650
Ground squirrels.
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00:12:14,735 --> 00:12:15,985
Prey.
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00:12:24,494 --> 00:12:28,331
At the first sign of danger,
they bolt for the safety of the thorns.
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00:12:38,717 --> 00:12:41,677
But the hawks have a tactic
to flush them out.
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00:12:45,265 --> 00:12:49,018
These are the only birds of prey
that hunt in packs.
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00:12:51,855 --> 00:12:53,105
Flying in formation,
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00:12:53,190 --> 00:12:56,359
they try to drive their quarry
into the open.
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00:13:07,955 --> 00:13:10,039
But this squirrel is staying put.
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00:13:17,214 --> 00:13:20,049
So now the hawks continue the hunt
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00:13:21,134 --> 00:13:22,593
on foot.
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00:13:30,727 --> 00:13:33,562
They're closing in from all sides.
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00:13:56,003 --> 00:13:59,505
Soon, all escape routes are cut off.
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00:14:03,969 --> 00:14:05,594
The squirrel is trapped.
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00:14:17,274 --> 00:14:20,735
The spines that cover
almost every plant in this desert
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00:14:20,819 --> 00:14:24,780
can provide protection and shelter
for many animals.
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00:14:32,956 --> 00:14:37,835
So, why should these spikes
be hung with corpses?
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00:14:44,968 --> 00:14:47,178
What kind of creature
could be responsible
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00:14:47,304 --> 00:14:49,722
for creating such a gruesome scene?
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00:14:59,691 --> 00:15:04,070
There's a mysterious killer
at work in this desert.
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00:15:11,203 --> 00:15:12,995
It's a butcher bird.
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00:15:14,998 --> 00:15:20,836
This little song bird uses the spines
as a butcher uses his hook,
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00:15:20,921 --> 00:15:23,798
to hold its prey as it dismembers it.
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00:15:34,434 --> 00:15:39,230
And with chicks to feed,
he also uses the spines as a larder.
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00:15:44,945 --> 00:15:47,863
He's been stocking it for weeks.
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00:15:51,076 --> 00:15:54,703
Hanging his prey out of the reach
of scavengers on the ground
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00:15:54,788 --> 00:15:58,999
ensures that his newly-hatched young
will never go hungry.
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00:16:00,085 --> 00:16:01,836
An ingenious solution
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00:16:01,920 --> 00:16:05,840
to making the good times
last in the desert,
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00:16:08,552 --> 00:16:10,052
if a little macabre.
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00:16:19,938 --> 00:16:22,273
Some deserts are so arid,
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00:16:22,357 --> 00:16:26,235
they appear totally devoid
of all vegetation.
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00:16:28,947 --> 00:16:30,865
Yet even these landscapes
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00:16:30,949 --> 00:16:32,324
can be transformed
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00:16:32,409 --> 00:16:33,868
in a matter of days.
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00:16:45,380 --> 00:16:49,800
The deserts of Peru
are amongst the driest in the world.
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00:16:49,885 --> 00:16:51,886
But just add a little water,
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00:16:51,970 --> 00:16:54,763
and plants
that have lain dormant for months
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00:16:54,848 --> 00:16:57,016
will burst into life.
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00:17:14,367 --> 00:17:17,203
And when a desert suddenly turns green,
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00:17:17,287 --> 00:17:19,622
even the most seemingly desolate
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can become a land of opportunity.
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00:17:35,889 --> 00:17:39,558
No creature exploits
the greening of a desert more quickly,
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00:17:39,643 --> 00:17:41,185
or more dramatically,
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00:17:41,269 --> 00:17:42,728
than a locust.
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00:17:51,863 --> 00:17:54,198
Madagascar's arid southwest
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has received
its highest rainfall in years.
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00:18:03,625 --> 00:18:06,293
Now, an army is on the march,
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00:18:06,378 --> 00:18:09,713
attracted by the smell
of newly-sprouting grass.
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00:18:22,143 --> 00:18:24,728
Locusts are normally solitary creatures,
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00:18:24,813 --> 00:18:27,356
but when food becomes
suddenly plentiful,
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00:18:27,440 --> 00:18:30,818
they come together
into an unstoppable force
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00:18:30,902 --> 00:18:33,237
that devours everything in its path.
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00:18:52,716 --> 00:18:57,594
But this devastation
is about to get a lot worse.
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00:19:09,649 --> 00:19:13,569
The locusts now transform
into winged adults.
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00:19:14,571 --> 00:19:16,613
And with conditions as good as this,
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00:19:16,698 --> 00:19:19,908
they do so three times
faster than normal.
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00:19:21,578 --> 00:19:24,455
Now, they are at their most voracious.
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00:19:26,082 --> 00:19:29,543
And with wings,
they can take to the skies.
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00:19:55,236 --> 00:20:00,157
Once airborne, the locusts can travel
over 100 kilometres a day
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00:20:00,241 --> 00:20:02,868
in their search for new feeding grounds.
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00:20:16,966 --> 00:20:21,804
A super-swarm of this scale
may only appear once in a decade.
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00:20:23,223 --> 00:20:27,142
This one extends
over 500 square kilometres
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00:20:27,227 --> 00:20:30,104
and contains
several billion individuals.
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00:20:32,399 --> 00:20:37,528
Between them, they will devour
40,000 tonnes of food in a day.
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00:21:13,523 --> 00:21:17,568
Nothing can strip a land
of its vegetation with such speed
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00:21:17,652 --> 00:21:21,613
and thoroughness as a plague of locusts.
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00:21:24,242 --> 00:21:28,287
When the food eventually runs out,
the whole army will die.
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00:21:29,539 --> 00:21:33,000
But not before it's devastated the land.
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00:21:47,765 --> 00:21:49,641
With no plants to bind them,
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00:21:49,726 --> 00:21:54,313
thin soils soon turn to dust
and blow away.
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00:22:01,237 --> 00:22:06,575
Now, these barren lands
are left to the mercy of the elements.
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00:22:23,593 --> 00:22:28,388
Scorched by the sun
and scoured by windblown sand,
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00:22:29,057 --> 00:22:34,520
desert rock is shaped into strange,
otherworldly landscapes.
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00:22:40,860 --> 00:22:45,072
These rocky deserts
may have a beguiling beauty,
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00:22:45,156 --> 00:22:49,785
but when they become this barren,
very little life can endure.
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00:22:56,334 --> 00:22:57,584
For many animals,
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00:22:57,669 --> 00:23:00,587
the only way to survive
the most hostile times
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00:23:00,672 --> 00:23:02,214
is to keep moving.
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00:23:10,056 --> 00:23:11,473
In the Kalahari,
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00:23:11,558 --> 00:23:14,476
brief rains have given way
to the dry season.
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00:23:15,687 --> 00:23:19,648
Food and water
are becoming increasingly scarce.
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00:23:21,025 --> 00:23:24,319
For these zebra, it's time to leave.
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00:23:37,000 --> 00:23:40,711
They are setting off
on the longest over-land migration
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00:23:40,795 --> 00:23:42,713
made by any mammal in Africa,
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00:23:42,797 --> 00:23:47,551
marching towards the scent
of distant rains.
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00:23:50,847 --> 00:23:52,723
As drought intensifies,
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00:23:52,807 --> 00:23:56,810
desert-living elephants
must also undertake long journeys
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00:23:56,894 --> 00:23:58,687
in search of water.
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00:24:20,752 --> 00:24:25,255
The older females can remember where,
even in times of extreme drought,
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00:24:25,340 --> 00:24:27,633
there may still be water,
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00:24:28,676 --> 00:24:30,552
and sometimes lead the herd
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00:24:30,637 --> 00:24:34,056
to a waterhole they may not
have visited for decades.
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00:25:05,254 --> 00:25:08,924
These zebra are almost
at the end of their journey.
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00:25:16,391 --> 00:25:19,101
This is what they've been heading for.
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00:25:23,064 --> 00:25:24,773
A rare waterhole.
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00:25:35,493 --> 00:25:38,912
In deserts,
most waterholes are short-lived.
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00:25:38,996 --> 00:25:40,831
They appear after rains,
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00:25:40,915 --> 00:25:43,959
but then vanish
almost as quickly as they came.
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00:25:51,092 --> 00:25:54,261
Animals have come here
from many kilometres around.
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00:25:59,517 --> 00:26:03,937
Yet, this can be a dangerous place
in which to linger.
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00:26:12,780 --> 00:26:16,408
A hundred kilometres away,
in the heart of the desert,
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sandgrouse chicks are hatching.
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00:26:19,537 --> 00:26:21,788
It's safer for them to be here.
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00:26:26,794 --> 00:26:30,714
But being so distant
from water is a gamble.
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00:26:34,051 --> 00:26:36,762
With only their mother
to shield them from the sun,
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00:26:36,846 --> 00:26:38,638
if they get nothing to drink,
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00:26:38,723 --> 00:26:41,224
they will be dead within hours.
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00:26:49,776 --> 00:26:52,319
Their only hope is their father.
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00:26:55,823 --> 00:26:59,701
Every morning,
he makes the 200-kilometre round trip
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00:26:59,786 --> 00:27:01,536
to get water for the family.
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00:27:05,917 --> 00:27:09,544
Grouse from all over the desert
visit this oasis,
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00:27:09,629 --> 00:27:11,630
arriving together in large flocks.
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00:27:13,007 --> 00:27:14,382
And that is important.
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00:27:18,471 --> 00:27:20,555
There's safety in numbers.
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00:27:36,155 --> 00:27:38,740
The male snatches a drink,
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00:27:38,825 --> 00:27:41,868
but he also needs to collect
water for his chicks.
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00:27:43,454 --> 00:27:45,914
Using specially-adapted breast feathers,
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00:27:45,998 --> 00:27:48,333
he can soak up water like a sponge.
188
00:27:49,877 --> 00:27:51,795
But it takes time,
189
00:27:51,879 --> 00:27:53,505
and he is in danger.
190
00:28:01,264 --> 00:28:02,639
Goshawk.
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00:28:19,782 --> 00:28:22,492
Sandgrouse here are their main prey.
192
00:28:28,624 --> 00:28:30,375
Again and again,
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00:28:30,459 --> 00:28:33,253
the male sandgrouse risk their lives
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00:28:33,337 --> 00:28:35,797
in order to collect water
for their chicks.
195
00:28:57,069 --> 00:29:02,198
This is why sandgrouse
nest so far from waterholes.
196
00:29:26,432 --> 00:29:27,724
At last,
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00:29:28,017 --> 00:29:30,143
he's soaked up as much as he can.
198
00:29:31,938 --> 00:29:34,731
Carrying a quarter
of his bodyweight in water,
199
00:29:34,815 --> 00:29:38,652
he can now set off
on the long journey home.
200
00:30:06,305 --> 00:30:09,349
He's back, and just in time.
201
00:30:10,601 --> 00:30:14,062
He can give the chicks
their first-ever drink.
202
00:30:21,654 --> 00:30:24,906
But he will have to undertake
this perilous journey
203
00:30:24,991 --> 00:30:27,742
every day for the next two months,
204
00:30:27,827 --> 00:30:28,910
until his chicks
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00:30:28,995 --> 00:30:32,956
can finally make the flight
to the waterhole for themselves.
206
00:30:45,511 --> 00:30:48,555
It's July in the deserts of Nevada
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00:30:48,639 --> 00:30:50,515
in the western United States.
208
00:30:52,309 --> 00:30:54,102
The hottest time of the year.
209
00:31:08,743 --> 00:31:11,619
Bands of wild horses, mustang,
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00:31:11,704 --> 00:31:16,124
are converging on one of the last
remaining waterholes around.
211
00:31:21,756 --> 00:31:26,051
Now, water not only offers them
the chance to drink.
212
00:31:26,135 --> 00:31:28,303
It can also bring power.
213
00:31:31,640 --> 00:31:34,809
If a stallion can control
access to water,
214
00:31:34,894 --> 00:31:38,605
he will have secured mating rights
to the entire herd.
215
00:31:39,857 --> 00:31:42,984
So stallions
try to dominate these pools,
216
00:31:43,069 --> 00:31:45,862
fighting off rivals
who venture too close.
217
00:31:59,460 --> 00:32:00,877
A stranger.
218
00:32:02,671 --> 00:32:06,007
He's travelled 15 kilometres to be here
219
00:32:06,092 --> 00:32:09,969
because the pools where he's come from
have already dried up.
220
00:32:12,932 --> 00:32:15,100
With him come his females.
221
00:32:17,728 --> 00:32:19,562
If he can't provide them with water,
222
00:32:19,647 --> 00:32:22,107
they will leave him
for the white stallion
223
00:32:22,191 --> 00:32:25,068
who already dominates this pool.
224
00:32:35,913 --> 00:32:38,206
So he will have to fight.
225
00:33:41,187 --> 00:33:43,146
There is everything to lose.
226
00:33:44,607 --> 00:33:50,028
A broken leg or a shattered jaw
would mean a slow and painful death.
227
00:34:11,342 --> 00:34:13,301
A missed kick,
228
00:34:13,385 --> 00:34:14,677
and it's all over.
229
00:34:17,139 --> 00:34:19,807
The new arrival has won.
230
00:34:21,602 --> 00:34:25,396
And his prize
is more than just a chance to drink.
231
00:34:26,065 --> 00:34:29,317
He has provided for his herd,
and in the process,
232
00:34:29,401 --> 00:34:31,319
stolen his rival's females.
233
00:34:33,697 --> 00:34:36,532
The white stallion's rule is over.
234
00:34:44,291 --> 00:34:49,045
Desert life is not only shaped
by the scarcity of water,
235
00:34:49,129 --> 00:34:52,131
but also by the relentless power
236
00:34:53,008 --> 00:34:54,592
of the sun.
237
00:35:00,766 --> 00:35:06,104
The highest temperatures on Earth
have all been recorded in its deserts.
238
00:35:18,075 --> 00:35:19,617
Changes in the climate
239
00:35:19,702 --> 00:35:23,955
mean temperatures here
are rising more than the global average.
240
00:35:24,039 --> 00:35:25,873
And as deserts heat up,
241
00:35:25,958 --> 00:35:27,959
they are also expanding.
242
00:35:30,129 --> 00:35:31,170
Every year,
243
00:35:31,255 --> 00:35:35,216
a further 130,000 square kilometres
of grass and farmland
244
00:35:35,301 --> 00:35:39,929
are turning into barren stretches
of dust and rock.
245
00:35:45,311 --> 00:35:46,561
In the heat of the day,
246
00:35:46,645 --> 00:35:50,398
surface temperatures
can reach a scorching 70 degrees,
247
00:35:50,858 --> 00:35:53,651
far too hot to handle for most.
248
00:35:56,113 --> 00:36:00,033
But not for this shovel-snouted lizard.
249
00:36:04,413 --> 00:36:06,956
Raising its feet off the ground in turn
250
00:36:10,627 --> 00:36:13,171
enables each to briefly cool.
251
00:36:19,511 --> 00:36:22,472
But even this dancing desert specialist
252
00:36:22,556 --> 00:36:24,640
can't stand the heat for long.
253
00:36:33,859 --> 00:36:36,736
One option is to find shade.
254
00:36:41,241 --> 00:36:45,745
Dune grass, the only vegetation here,
provides virtually none.
255
00:36:46,997 --> 00:36:49,624
But just beneath
the surface of the sand,
256
00:36:49,708 --> 00:36:51,959
it is several degrees cooler.
257
00:37:00,177 --> 00:37:05,390
Avoiding the extreme heat
imposes a rhythm on desert life.
258
00:37:08,102 --> 00:37:12,105
And many animals here
choose the simplest option of all,
259
00:37:15,067 --> 00:37:16,818
staying hidden all day
260
00:37:16,902 --> 00:37:19,946
and only venturing out
in the cool of the night.
261
00:37:29,123 --> 00:37:31,124
As darkness falls,
262
00:37:31,208 --> 00:37:34,377
animals appear from seemingly nowhere.
263
00:37:41,552 --> 00:37:44,178
And among them, inevitably,
264
00:37:45,514 --> 00:37:46,806
are hunters.
265
00:38:02,322 --> 00:38:05,616
One of the most voracious
nocturnal predators
266
00:38:05,701 --> 00:38:09,036
is also one of the hardest to see.
267
00:38:11,874 --> 00:38:13,666
This mysterious creature
268
00:38:13,750 --> 00:38:17,044
hardly ever appears
on the surface of the dunes.
269
00:38:23,886 --> 00:38:27,847
But there are signs on the sand
that can give it away.
270
00:38:42,112 --> 00:38:43,362
It lives only here,
271
00:38:43,447 --> 00:38:46,949
where the sand grains
are so perfectly dry and polished
272
00:38:47,034 --> 00:38:49,577
that they flow almost like water.
273
00:38:52,956 --> 00:38:55,583
It's no bigger than a Ping-Pong ball.
274
00:39:00,214 --> 00:39:01,589
A golden mole.
275
00:39:02,841 --> 00:39:04,467
It's totally blind,
276
00:39:05,511 --> 00:39:08,387
but there's nothing
to see underground anyway.
277
00:39:14,895 --> 00:39:17,772
Instead, it has superb hearing.
278
00:39:20,317 --> 00:39:23,152
Its entire head acts as an amplifier
279
00:39:23,237 --> 00:39:25,947
that picks up vibrations
through the sand.
280
00:39:26,031 --> 00:39:29,367
So, to locate prey
on the surface of the dune,
281
00:39:29,451 --> 00:39:34,080
it has, paradoxically,
to thrust its face into the dune.
282
00:39:42,965 --> 00:39:44,715
Termites.
283
00:39:45,175 --> 00:39:47,510
Not easy to catch when you're blind.
284
00:39:51,723 --> 00:39:54,684
Far better to go into stealth mode.
285
00:39:56,436 --> 00:39:57,770
Once below the sand,
286
00:39:57,854 --> 00:40:00,606
it can detect the slightest movement,
287
00:40:04,319 --> 00:40:07,822
allowing it to strike
with pinpoint accuracy.
288
00:40:17,499 --> 00:40:19,959
Well, most of the time.
289
00:40:32,764 --> 00:40:36,976
It can travel two-thirds of a mile
a night in search of its dinner.
290
00:40:39,646 --> 00:40:44,191
And right now,
it has just detected its main course.
291
00:40:45,694 --> 00:40:50,072
Little wonder it's sometimes called
"the shark of the dunes".
292
00:40:58,498 --> 00:41:01,542
Food can be so scarce in the desert
293
00:41:01,627 --> 00:41:05,671
that even at night,
animals can't afford to be choosy
294
00:41:05,756 --> 00:41:07,131
about what they eat.
295
00:41:13,513 --> 00:41:15,598
Israel's Negev Desert.
296
00:41:25,567 --> 00:41:28,402
Otonycteris, the desert long-eared bat,
297
00:41:29,196 --> 00:41:30,404
is on the hunt.
298
00:41:34,826 --> 00:41:37,495
Most bats
catch flying insects on the wing.
299
00:41:38,372 --> 00:41:40,539
But there are so few of these
in the desert
300
00:41:40,624 --> 00:41:43,250
that this bat
must do things differently.
301
00:41:47,506 --> 00:41:49,882
It has to hunt on the ground.
302
00:41:57,432 --> 00:42:00,017
But what really sets it apart
303
00:42:00,102 --> 00:42:01,727
is what it's hunting.
304
00:42:09,736 --> 00:42:11,612
A deathstalker scorpion.
305
00:42:13,448 --> 00:42:17,993
The venom of this species
is potent enough to kill a human.
306
00:42:19,746 --> 00:42:25,000
Tackling it seems madness
for a bat weighing just 15 grams.
307
00:42:28,839 --> 00:42:29,922
In the pitch black,
308
00:42:30,006 --> 00:42:33,384
both predator and prey
are effectively blind.
309
00:42:34,219 --> 00:42:36,637
But the scorpion has one advantage,
310
00:42:36,722 --> 00:42:41,434
he can sense the approach of the bat
through vibrations in the sand.
311
00:42:45,147 --> 00:42:49,442
Otonycteris must rely
entirely on its hearing.
312
00:42:50,694 --> 00:42:54,321
If the scorpion doesn't move,
it won't know it's there.
313
00:43:09,629 --> 00:43:11,046
The battle is on.
314
00:43:13,925 --> 00:43:18,012
Armed with crushing pincers
and a sting loaded with venom,
315
00:43:18,096 --> 00:43:20,765
this scorpion is a dangerous opponent.
316
00:43:34,529 --> 00:43:36,822
A direct strike on the head.
317
00:43:39,701 --> 00:43:40,993
Is it all over?
318
00:43:45,081 --> 00:43:47,041
Not for this bat.
319
00:44:02,808 --> 00:44:07,144
Otonycteris clearly has some immunity
to the venom,
320
00:44:07,229 --> 00:44:11,857
but repeated stings
must still be extraordinarily painful.
321
00:44:19,741 --> 00:44:21,742
And if the bat is not to go hungry,
322
00:44:21,827 --> 00:44:25,788
it must catch another three scorpions
before sunrise.
323
00:44:55,110 --> 00:44:58,654
Desert animals
have developed remarkable strategies
324
00:44:58,738 --> 00:45:01,282
to make the most
of the rare opportunities
325
00:45:01,366 --> 00:45:02,867
that come their way.
326
00:45:04,661 --> 00:45:08,414
Although some deserts
may not see rain for several years,
327
00:45:08,498 --> 00:45:12,501
most will hold a little water
in one form or another.
328
00:45:13,336 --> 00:45:17,298
The trick
is simply knowing how to reach it.
329
00:45:25,682 --> 00:45:29,018
Dawn in the dunes of the Namib,
330
00:45:29,102 --> 00:45:32,146
and something magical is happening.
331
00:45:50,957 --> 00:45:54,418
Moist air
lying over the neighbouring Atlantic
332
00:45:54,502 --> 00:45:57,171
is cooled and blown inland,
333
00:45:57,255 --> 00:46:01,425
forming fog banks
that shroud the desert in mist.
334
00:46:08,767 --> 00:46:10,559
This precious moisture
335
00:46:10,644 --> 00:46:15,022
lies tantalisingly out of reach
at the top of the dunes,
336
00:46:15,106 --> 00:46:16,982
and it won't last long.
337
00:46:17,651 --> 00:46:21,904
It will be burnt off by the sun
just hours after it rises.
338
00:46:38,046 --> 00:46:41,423
Darkling beetles
race to the top of the dunes
339
00:46:41,508 --> 00:46:44,176
to reach the fog before it vanishes.
340
00:46:53,937 --> 00:46:58,148
Some of the Namib's dunes
are 300 metres high,
341
00:46:58,233 --> 00:46:59,733
the tallest in the world.
342
00:47:01,653 --> 00:47:04,029
For a beetle no larger than a thumbnail,
343
00:47:04,114 --> 00:47:07,282
this is the equivalent
of us climbing a dune
344
00:47:07,367 --> 00:47:08,993
twice the height of Everest.
345
00:47:13,915 --> 00:47:16,000
But even more impressive
346
00:47:16,084 --> 00:47:17,710
is what it does next.
347
00:47:22,966 --> 00:47:26,343
Standing perfectly still,
facing into the wind,
348
00:47:26,428 --> 00:47:28,846
the beetle does a headstand.
349
00:47:32,392 --> 00:47:35,185
Fog begins to condense on its body.
350
00:47:38,773 --> 00:47:41,275
Microscopic bumps on its wing cases
351
00:47:41,359 --> 00:47:45,154
direct the water to grooves
that channel it towards the mouth.
352
00:47:51,077 --> 00:47:53,537
Before returning down the slip face,
353
00:47:53,621 --> 00:47:56,248
it will drink 40% of its body weight.
354
00:48:01,838 --> 00:48:03,005
This little beetle
355
00:48:03,089 --> 00:48:06,592
has learned how to conjure water
out of the air
356
00:48:07,343 --> 00:48:10,054
in one of the driest places on Earth.
357
00:48:14,059 --> 00:48:17,394
And it's not alone
on the top of the dunes.
358
00:48:24,152 --> 00:48:26,987
Web-footed geckos use a similar trick.
359
00:48:37,582 --> 00:48:41,627
Surely, few animals
go to greater lengths to get a drink.
360
00:49:00,855 --> 00:49:05,067
Unfortunately, Namaqua chameleons
know that on foggy mornings,
361
00:49:05,151 --> 00:49:10,030
the beetles coming down the dunes
are juicier than those going up.
362
00:49:22,293 --> 00:49:23,919
The diversity of life
363
00:49:24,003 --> 00:49:27,339
that thrives in a world
almost totally devoid of water
364
00:49:27,423 --> 00:49:29,675
is truly remarkable.
365
00:49:32,303 --> 00:49:33,762
Success in the desert
366
00:49:33,847 --> 00:49:38,058
depends on an extraordinary variety
of survival strategies
367
00:49:38,143 --> 00:49:40,811
that have evolved
over millions of years.
368
00:49:43,064 --> 00:49:45,524
But our planet is changing.
369
00:49:48,653 --> 00:49:52,823
The world's deserts
are growing bigger, hotter and drier,
370
00:49:52,907 --> 00:49:55,868
and they're doing so
faster than ever before.
371
00:49:57,495 --> 00:50:00,914
How life will cope here in the future
372
00:50:00,999 --> 00:50:03,000
remains to be seen.
373
00:50:12,093 --> 00:50:15,387
Next time,
we journey to the world's Great Plains.
374
00:50:16,514 --> 00:50:19,558
Where spectacular gatherings of wildlife
375
00:50:19,642 --> 00:50:21,852
cope with extreme change.
376
00:50:25,023 --> 00:50:27,191
And surprising creatures survive
377
00:50:27,275 --> 00:50:29,109
in unexpected ways.
29454
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