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One quarter of all the land on Earth
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00:00:39,373 --> 00:00:43,126
is covered by a single,
remarkable type of plant.
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00:00:49,800 --> 00:00:54,304
Almost indestructible,
it can grow half a metre a day...
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00:01:01,020 --> 00:01:04,481
...and be tall enough to hide a giant.
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00:01:08,986 --> 00:01:11,404
That plant is grass,
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00:01:11,489 --> 00:01:14,908
and the world it creates
is truly unique.
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00:01:29,048 --> 00:01:32,926
The grass in northern India
is the tallest on the planet,
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00:01:33,094 --> 00:01:37,347
home to some of the most
impressive creatures to tread the Earth.
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00:01:52,947 --> 00:01:55,156
These are the good times,
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00:01:55,241 --> 00:01:59,035
but in just a few months,
all this fresh growth will be gone,
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00:01:59,620 --> 00:02:02,872
and the animals
will be forced to move on.
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00:02:05,710 --> 00:02:10,463
That is the way things are
on grasslands across the planet.
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00:02:14,302 --> 00:02:18,722
A cycle of abundance,
destruction and rebirth
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00:02:19,056 --> 00:02:21,474
that affects every creature
that lives here.
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00:02:37,074 --> 00:02:41,828
The largest grassland on Earth,
the vast Eurasian Steppe,
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00:02:42,288 --> 00:02:46,374
stretches one third of the way
around our planet.
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00:02:50,338 --> 00:02:55,759
Spring rain has brought fresh grass,
and with it, new life.
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00:03:00,097 --> 00:03:04,934
A relic from the Ice Age,
a baby Saiga antelope,
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00:03:05,269 --> 00:03:07,103
just three hours old.
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00:03:10,441 --> 00:03:12,776
His only company, his twin.
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00:03:14,153 --> 00:03:18,948
Until they can stand, their mother
has left them hidden in the grass.
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00:03:26,999 --> 00:03:31,127
They should be safe,
as long as they remain quiet.
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00:03:36,300 --> 00:03:39,302
For these calves,
the clock is already ticking.
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00:03:40,971 --> 00:03:45,809
Their herd will soon be moving on,
seeking the freshest new grass.
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00:04:03,828 --> 00:04:08,540
Their lanky legs are a sure sign that
they're built for a life on the move.
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00:04:33,941 --> 00:04:36,985
Saiga always give birth to twins,
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00:04:37,069 --> 00:04:40,738
so their numbers grow rapidly
just when grass is plentiful.
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00:04:44,285 --> 00:04:47,787
Their bizarrely shaped nose
can detect fresh growth
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00:04:48,122 --> 00:04:50,206
from hundreds of kilometres away.
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00:05:02,428 --> 00:05:05,805
The young twins will now
begin the nomadic life
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00:05:06,056 --> 00:05:10,268
they share with most animals
on the world's open plains.
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00:05:32,333 --> 00:05:38,171
Grasslands occur where rain is
too sporadic for forests to exist.
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00:05:48,766 --> 00:05:52,268
The rain that a grassland
needs to survive for a year
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00:05:52,603 --> 00:05:54,771
might arrive all at once.
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00:06:16,210 --> 00:06:21,422
Storms like these can release
30 centimetres of rain in 24 hours.
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00:06:32,643 --> 00:06:35,395
Not much fun if you're out in it.
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00:06:47,658 --> 00:06:51,035
Eventually the earth
can't soak up any more,
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00:06:54,039 --> 00:06:57,667
and the grassland undergoes
a radical change.
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00:07:04,758 --> 00:07:09,429
Many plants would drown here,
but grasses thrive.
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00:07:12,683 --> 00:07:13,850
They grow so fast,
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00:07:13,934 --> 00:07:17,437
their leaves quickly rise above
the water and into the sunlight.
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00:07:22,276 --> 00:07:24,110
Here in southern Africa,
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00:07:24,194 --> 00:07:28,948
water transforms one of the most
remarkable grasslands on Earth,
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00:07:31,619 --> 00:07:32,702
the Okavango.
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00:07:36,582 --> 00:07:41,085
Every year, 8,000 square kilometres
of grassland are flooded.
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00:07:49,386 --> 00:07:53,556
For one pride of lions,
this poses a major problem.
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00:07:55,976 --> 00:07:58,478
There may be plenty of prey around,
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00:07:58,562 --> 00:08:01,397
but lions struggle
to run it down in water.
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00:08:08,739 --> 00:08:13,785
The pride has three-month-old cubs.
They've never seen water before.
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00:08:17,915 --> 00:08:20,083
If their mothers
don't make a kill soon,
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00:08:20,751 --> 00:08:23,336
the cubs might not survive the week.
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00:08:33,138 --> 00:08:38,976
But fuelled by the flood, the eruption
of grass attracts new possible prey.
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00:08:42,314 --> 00:08:45,483
Buffalo arrive in herds 2,000 strong.
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00:08:53,283 --> 00:08:56,327
Powerful, aggressive and united,
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00:08:56,787 --> 00:08:59,789
they're the most dangerous animal
a lion can face.
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00:09:38,704 --> 00:09:40,997
The biggest bulls don't run.
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00:09:43,417 --> 00:09:46,836
They're simply too huge
to be scared of lions.
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00:09:49,423 --> 00:09:54,510
At 900 kilos, he weighs more
than all five lionesses combined.
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00:09:59,183 --> 00:10:01,684
The pride do have numbers on their side,
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00:10:03,395 --> 00:10:06,355
but one sweep of his horns
could be deadly.
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00:10:20,746 --> 00:10:25,208
One distracts the bull up front,
while her sisters attack from behind.
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00:10:36,553 --> 00:10:38,930
The cats must somehow
topple the buffalo,
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00:10:39,139 --> 00:10:42,433
but with swamp under foot,
they can't get any traction.
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00:11:27,354 --> 00:11:29,021
The bull is weakening,
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00:11:29,940 --> 00:11:32,191
but the lions are tiring, too.
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00:11:37,447 --> 00:11:41,200
It's now a battle of will
as much as strength.
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00:11:44,496 --> 00:11:48,124
To live, the bull must somehow
shake off the lioness.
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00:12:27,581 --> 00:12:29,206
The bull is wounded,
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00:12:29,333 --> 00:12:33,169
but thanks to his thick hide,
he will recover.
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00:12:39,259 --> 00:12:42,720
For the pride, these are hungry times.
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00:12:51,188 --> 00:12:56,192
But, ultimately, once the water recedes,
there will be new life,
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00:12:57,194 --> 00:12:59,445
and new food to benefit all.
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00:13:09,039 --> 00:13:13,084
In the right conditions,
grasses have the extraordinary ability
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00:13:13,210 --> 00:13:18,130
to grow from first shoots to flower
in a matter of only days.
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Grasses become the miniature equivalents
of fruiting trees.
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00:13:37,067 --> 00:13:39,694
And for creatures living
within the grass,
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this is a landscape as vast
and towering as any rainforest.
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00:13:49,579 --> 00:13:52,581
An excellent place
to build a tiny tree house
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for a harvest mouse.
80
00:14:09,016 --> 00:14:12,893
During summer,
European meadowlands are full of food,
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00:14:16,815 --> 00:14:19,108
but only for those that can reach it.
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00:14:38,336 --> 00:14:41,464
Climbing grass is harder
than climbing trees,
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00:14:41,631 --> 00:14:44,967
not least because their stems
just won't stay still.
84
00:14:53,060 --> 00:14:56,562
Her prehensile tail
acts like a fifth limb,
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00:14:56,646 --> 00:15:00,816
so she's as agile as a monkey
clambering around in a tree.
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00:15:08,867 --> 00:15:10,201
And just as well,
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00:15:10,577 --> 00:15:15,164
for the best food in this tiny forest
is at the very top of its canopy.
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00:15:26,343 --> 00:15:29,386
Feeding up here, she's exposed.
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00:15:37,062 --> 00:15:38,270
A barn owl.
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00:16:10,554 --> 00:16:12,429
Not her finest move...
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00:16:16,393 --> 00:16:17,643
But it did the trick.
92
00:16:19,896 --> 00:16:23,440
Harvest mice seldom go
all the way down to the ground.
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00:16:26,903 --> 00:16:30,281
It's a tangled and
dangerous world down here.
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00:16:44,087 --> 00:16:48,465
But she can read the pattern
of the stems overhead like a map,
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00:16:49,634 --> 00:16:51,594
and so find her way home.
96
00:16:59,978 --> 00:17:02,521
And not a minute too soon.
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00:17:07,277 --> 00:17:09,445
There are mouths to feed.
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00:17:23,793 --> 00:17:25,961
Her babies must fatten up quickly.
99
00:17:28,340 --> 00:17:33,010
They need to harvest the summer grasses
while they're still rich with food.
100
00:17:41,811 --> 00:17:46,815
On the African savannah, too,
seasonal grasses are filled with life,
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00:17:47,317 --> 00:17:48,734
but it won't last long.
102
00:17:52,489 --> 00:17:55,866
Carmine bee-eaters
are superb aerial hunters,
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00:17:57,661 --> 00:18:01,247
experts at catching insects in midair.
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00:18:08,922 --> 00:18:12,508
But they have no way of
flushing their prey out of the grass.
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00:18:23,061 --> 00:18:26,397
Once alarmed, most insects stay put.
106
00:18:29,901 --> 00:18:33,696
The bee-eaters need someone
to stir things up a bit.
107
00:18:39,869 --> 00:18:41,036
A kori bustard.
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00:18:46,293 --> 00:18:48,711
It's the world's heaviest flying bird,
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00:18:48,795 --> 00:18:51,547
so it should be bulky enough
to kick up some insects.
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00:18:59,889 --> 00:19:00,931
Bingo!
111
00:19:04,060 --> 00:19:09,273
Until someone else comes along
and cramps your style.
112
00:19:15,447 --> 00:19:19,658
Never mind, perhaps there are
bigger opportunities ahead.
113
00:19:22,954 --> 00:19:24,663
What about an ostrich?
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00:19:27,459 --> 00:19:28,834
The heaviest bird of all.
115
00:19:35,008 --> 00:19:38,802
This time there's more than enough
transport to go around.
116
00:19:49,272 --> 00:19:53,317
Soon, almost every ostrich
has its own passenger.
117
00:20:01,451 --> 00:20:05,287
But free riders are only
tolerated for so long.
118
00:20:12,128 --> 00:20:14,296
What the bee-eaters really need
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00:20:14,381 --> 00:20:17,800
is a creature so big
it won't even notice them.
120
00:20:28,395 --> 00:20:33,690
Nothing cuts a swathe through grass
like an African bull elephant.
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00:20:50,708 --> 00:20:54,878
The trick is to fly as close to
the front of the giant as possible.
122
00:20:55,547 --> 00:20:58,841
They only have a split second
to grab the prize.
123
00:21:08,935 --> 00:21:13,272
As more insects are stirred up,
the competition intensifies.
124
00:21:36,212 --> 00:21:40,799
With summer drawing to a close,
the race to stock up is on.
125
00:21:46,264 --> 00:21:51,560
Soon, the grass will wither,
and this opportunity will have gone.
126
00:22:01,446 --> 00:22:04,114
As the dry season takes hold,
127
00:22:04,240 --> 00:22:06,950
food becomes increasingly thin
on the ground.
128
00:22:09,746 --> 00:22:14,833
Now, only the most specialised predators
on the plains can make a living.
129
00:22:20,590 --> 00:22:25,427
She may be spotted like a cheetah,
but this cat is no sprinter.
130
00:22:38,691 --> 00:22:44,279
Instead, she has extra-long legs
which give her a high vantage point.
131
00:22:55,792 --> 00:23:01,129
But a serval cat's main weapon
are enormous radar ears.
132
00:23:05,510 --> 00:23:08,804
They help her pinpoint prey
hiding in the grass.
133
00:23:17,981 --> 00:23:21,066
But the prey she seeks are canny.
134
00:23:25,029 --> 00:23:26,488
Southern vlei rats.
135
00:23:29,909 --> 00:23:33,412
They know that any sustained movement
can give them away.
136
00:23:39,335 --> 00:23:41,878
So they move in short bursts.
137
00:23:50,179 --> 00:23:53,515
But even the slightest rustle
will give her a clue.
138
00:24:16,748 --> 00:24:17,789
Warm.
139
00:24:30,720 --> 00:24:31,887
Warmer.
140
00:24:46,736 --> 00:24:47,903
Missed.
141
00:26:10,737 --> 00:26:13,989
In better times,
she could catch 10 a day,
142
00:26:15,366 --> 00:26:20,036
but now, with so few rodents around,
she will have to go hungry.
143
00:26:22,498 --> 00:26:27,169
As drought intensifies,
life gets tougher for all.
144
00:26:34,177 --> 00:26:38,013
Predators with permanent territories
must tough it out,
145
00:26:38,765 --> 00:26:42,893
while most of their prey
disappear over the horizon.
146
00:26:47,356 --> 00:26:53,111
To avoid starvation, many grassland
animals follow a nomadic way of life.
147
00:26:55,573 --> 00:26:59,785
Over 2,000,000 wildebeests wander
the East African savannahs
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00:26:59,869 --> 00:27:01,620
chasing the rains.
149
00:27:15,885 --> 00:27:18,053
And they are not alone.
150
00:27:20,473 --> 00:27:22,015
Arriving on the wing,
151
00:27:22,099 --> 00:27:25,936
Jackson's Widowbirds
also seek fresh grass.
152
00:27:28,064 --> 00:27:31,316
Although, it's not just
food that they're after.
153
00:27:36,322 --> 00:27:38,490
This male wants a mate.
154
00:27:41,786 --> 00:27:44,913
He's grown elaborate breeding plumage
for this moment,
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00:27:47,083 --> 00:27:50,085
but he needs a stage
on which to show it off.
156
00:27:54,590 --> 00:27:59,094
By carefully selecting grass blades,
each trimmed to the correct length,
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00:27:59,846 --> 00:28:02,097
he's creating something very special.
158
00:28:17,697 --> 00:28:20,365
He needs an even surface,
159
00:28:22,493 --> 00:28:23,869
and a centre-piece.
160
00:28:26,789 --> 00:28:28,206
The stage is set.
161
00:28:29,625 --> 00:28:34,296
His bachelor pad is sufficiently
neat and tidy to attract a female.
162
00:28:36,215 --> 00:28:37,299
The problem is,
163
00:28:37,800 --> 00:28:39,009
can she see it?
164
00:28:43,222 --> 00:28:44,389
He has competition.
165
00:28:55,192 --> 00:28:59,529
It might take more than a little
gardening to impress the ladies.
166
00:29:02,074 --> 00:29:03,992
Jumping is the right idea,
167
00:29:05,411 --> 00:29:07,871
but he's misjudged
the height of the grass.
168
00:29:18,215 --> 00:29:20,216
His rival makes it look easy.
169
00:29:44,450 --> 00:29:46,618
Time to raise his game.
170
00:30:23,739 --> 00:30:28,660
It's not only who jumps the highest,
but who can keep doing so the longest.
171
00:30:38,129 --> 00:30:43,091
Unable to go the distance,
his rivals drop out one by one.
172
00:30:47,930 --> 00:30:51,182
Stamina has won him admirers,
173
00:30:52,685 --> 00:30:55,979
now he can show off
his courtship arena...
174
00:31:05,823 --> 00:31:09,617
And engage in a little
romantic hide-and-seek.
175
00:31:22,048 --> 00:31:24,799
Finally, he's done enough.
176
00:31:36,979 --> 00:31:41,316
The East African savannahs
support millions of grazers.
177
00:31:42,693 --> 00:31:46,321
Each year they devour
millions of tonnes of grass,
178
00:31:48,574 --> 00:31:50,784
and yet there's one creature here
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00:31:50,868 --> 00:31:55,997
whose impact is far greater
than all these animals combined.
180
00:32:00,169 --> 00:32:03,254
They're found wherever
grass grows on the planet,
181
00:32:04,048 --> 00:32:07,342
yet their labours go
almost entirely unnoticed.
182
00:32:12,431 --> 00:32:18,186
One of the most remarkable is found here
on the grasslands of South America.
183
00:32:21,232 --> 00:32:27,195
These blades are so tough that virtually
no large grass eaters can stomach them.
184
00:32:28,531 --> 00:32:32,283
Yet they're harvested
on an industrial scale...
185
00:32:36,455 --> 00:32:39,207
...by tiny grass cutter ants.
186
00:32:46,423 --> 00:32:49,300
But they themselves
can't digest one bit of it.
187
00:32:52,721 --> 00:32:54,055
So, why bother?
188
00:32:58,602 --> 00:33:01,229
The answer is underground,
189
00:33:03,315 --> 00:33:05,441
and it's very ingenious.
190
00:33:10,322 --> 00:33:15,827
Each blade is cut to length
and placed into a garden of fungus.
191
00:33:21,083 --> 00:33:27,755
The rotting grass feeds the fungus,
and in turn the fungus feeds the ants.
192
00:33:31,468 --> 00:33:35,972
But feeding 5,000,000 workers
requires intensive agriculture.
193
00:33:38,684 --> 00:33:42,103
Luckily, they are an industrious lot.
194
00:33:46,775 --> 00:33:51,863
This colony alone will collect
over half a tonne of grass every year.
195
00:33:56,285 --> 00:33:59,787
With billions of ant colonies
across the world's grasslands
196
00:33:59,955 --> 00:34:05,543
all doing exactly the same thing,
that's a mind-boggling amount of grass.
197
00:34:34,990 --> 00:34:39,077
It's estimated that over one third
of the grass that grows on Earth
198
00:34:39,578 --> 00:34:42,330
will be harvested by an insect.
199
00:34:48,671 --> 00:34:54,759
In northern Australia, termites
memorialise their industry in sculpture.
200
00:35:03,060 --> 00:35:06,229
These astonishing mounds
are three metres tall.
201
00:35:07,022 --> 00:35:10,066
They're always built
on a north-south axis,
202
00:35:10,192 --> 00:35:13,569
which is why their builders
are called compass termites.
203
00:35:27,710 --> 00:35:29,502
These castles of clay
204
00:35:29,586 --> 00:35:32,422
protect their builders
from extremes of heat
205
00:35:32,548 --> 00:35:36,551
and seasonal floods
experienced on many grasslands.
206
00:35:48,564 --> 00:35:52,984
Termites manage to do
what most grass eaters can't,
207
00:35:54,111 --> 00:35:57,572
break down dead grass
and extract the nutrients.
208
00:35:58,991 --> 00:36:03,077
But they themselves can be food
for those that can reach them.
209
00:36:08,959 --> 00:36:10,793
A half-metre-long tongue
210
00:36:12,171 --> 00:36:14,422
covered in microscopic hooks,
211
00:36:17,926 --> 00:36:22,472
followed by claws longer
than those of a velociraptor.
212
00:36:28,937 --> 00:36:32,523
A giant anteater
on the plains of South America.
213
00:36:37,696 --> 00:36:40,948
It can devour 20,000 insects a day.
214
00:36:46,455 --> 00:36:51,876
Powerful forelegs enable it to rip apart
a termite hill with ease.
215
00:37:02,304 --> 00:37:07,642
And as the sun bakes the grass,
the termites face new danger.
216
00:37:30,666 --> 00:37:34,919
In minutes, fire turns grassland to ash.
217
00:37:49,393 --> 00:37:55,189
But the grasses are not dead.
Their underground stems are unharmed.
218
00:37:58,569 --> 00:38:01,028
Weeks, months may pass,
219
00:38:01,530 --> 00:38:06,409
but eventually the rains will return
and the grass will sprout again.
220
00:38:13,876 --> 00:38:19,255
Some grasslands must endure
not only fire, but ice.
221
00:38:24,803 --> 00:38:29,724
As winter approaches, the prairies
of North America begin to freeze.
222
00:38:46,408 --> 00:38:48,993
In summer, bison roamed freely,
223
00:38:49,077 --> 00:38:52,747
almost continuously cropping
the abundant green grass.
224
00:38:54,750 --> 00:39:00,129
Now, that grass is not only withered
and frozen, it's about to be buried.
225
00:39:22,611 --> 00:39:27,490
Sixty million tonnes of snow
now blanket this herd's territory.
226
00:39:31,703 --> 00:39:35,081
Pushing through deep snow
is exhausting work,
227
00:39:35,165 --> 00:39:37,875
and the bison are now slowly starving.
228
00:39:45,175 --> 00:39:48,636
Just keeping warm
saps huge amounts of energy.
229
00:39:55,394 --> 00:39:59,689
Their thick coats can insulate them
down to minus 30 Celsius.
230
00:40:00,649 --> 00:40:02,650
It's now minus 40.
231
00:40:05,821 --> 00:40:11,659
The only thing that will keep them alive
is buried beneath a metre of snow.
232
00:40:16,498 --> 00:40:20,167
And that's a problem shared
with a surprising neighbour.
233
00:40:38,770 --> 00:40:42,565
The food the fox seeks
is also deep beneath the snow.
234
00:40:55,454 --> 00:41:00,291
The survival of both creatures depends
on getting through to the ground.
235
00:41:06,048 --> 00:41:09,759
For the bison, it will be
a matter of brute strength.
236
00:41:14,723 --> 00:41:19,602
Massive neck muscles enable them
to shovel five tonnes of snow a day.
237
00:41:26,401 --> 00:41:29,403
Their light-weight neighbour
needs more precision.
238
00:41:58,183 --> 00:42:00,267
The bison have reached their goal,
239
00:42:01,103 --> 00:42:03,521
a mouthful of withered grass.
240
00:42:07,442 --> 00:42:12,279
And where the bison have dug,
the fox now spots an opportunity.
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00:42:21,623 --> 00:42:23,791
Every footstep counts,
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00:42:26,837 --> 00:42:28,546
but he mustn't break through...
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00:42:29,631 --> 00:42:30,631
Yet.
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00:42:34,052 --> 00:42:37,638
He listens carefully
to pinpoint his target.
245
00:42:43,562 --> 00:42:44,645
It's moving.
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00:43:07,210 --> 00:43:08,252
A vole.
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00:43:10,922 --> 00:43:16,510
Small, but 100 times more nutritious
than a mouthful of dried grass.
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00:43:23,518 --> 00:43:29,732
To get through the winter on these
prairies, sometimes brain beats brawn.
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00:43:36,740 --> 00:43:42,453
Ultimately, life on all grasslands
depends on the turn of the seasons.
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00:44:07,813 --> 00:44:12,733
Eight hundred kilometres further north
than any tree can survive,
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00:44:12,818 --> 00:44:15,528
grass returns to life.
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00:44:26,873 --> 00:44:30,209
Caribou females have
journeyed to the far north
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00:44:30,961 --> 00:44:32,127
to calve.
254
00:44:36,132 --> 00:44:41,136
Over 70,000 caribou babies
will be born in the next few days.
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00:44:46,226 --> 00:44:51,272
As the calves appear, so too do the
leaves of the newly sprouting grass.
256
00:44:54,943 --> 00:44:56,986
And the calves must strengthen quickly.
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00:44:57,445 --> 00:45:00,781
Within days they will have to
keep up with their parents
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00:45:00,949 --> 00:45:02,950
on a never-ending march.
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00:45:08,164 --> 00:45:13,460
At one day old, they're already faster
than an Olympic sprinter.
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00:45:14,629 --> 00:45:18,799
They're testing the legs that will
carry them thousands of kilometres,
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00:45:20,343 --> 00:45:22,761
better to learn their limitations now.
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00:45:43,491 --> 00:45:47,786
It may look playful, but there's
no harder life on the grasslands
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00:45:47,871 --> 00:45:50,664
than that facing these infants.
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00:45:54,169 --> 00:45:56,503
The caribou mothers now join together,
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00:45:56,630 --> 00:45:59,840
each with an infant
exactly the same age.
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00:46:08,725 --> 00:46:14,063
They're setting off on the greatest
overland trek made by any animal.
267
00:46:38,213 --> 00:46:43,592
But wherever grass eaters travel,
predators lie in wait.
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00:46:50,725 --> 00:46:54,728
Here they are, Arctic wolves.
269
00:47:02,195 --> 00:47:03,821
They must seize their chance
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00:47:03,905 --> 00:47:06,532
while the caribou
pass through their territory.
271
00:47:44,154 --> 00:47:48,949
The wolf runs at the herd, trying to
flush out the weak or the slow.
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00:47:58,793 --> 00:48:00,502
A calf is separated.
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00:48:09,262 --> 00:48:14,141
At full tilt, 60 kilometres an hour,
the wolf is just faster.
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00:48:22,817 --> 00:48:25,444
But the calf has stamina.
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00:48:56,309 --> 00:49:01,897
Only a few weeks old, and this
calf's will to survive is remarkable.
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00:49:07,487 --> 00:49:09,363
And it needs to be,
277
00:49:09,864 --> 00:49:12,908
for these young caribou
have now started a journey
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00:49:13,201 --> 00:49:15,160
that will last a lifetime.
279
00:49:18,581 --> 00:49:23,585
Forever chasing the seasonal growth
of the grass on which they depend.
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00:49:33,054 --> 00:49:36,390
Like all grassland creatures,
they are at the mercy
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00:49:36,516 --> 00:49:41,103
of these unpredictable
but ultimately bountiful lands.
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00:49:47,527 --> 00:49:51,613
Grass can survive some of
the harshest conditions on Earth,
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00:49:51,739 --> 00:49:56,201
flood, fire and frost,
and still flourish.
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00:50:06,880 --> 00:50:10,424
So it is that grasslands
provide a stage
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00:50:10,717 --> 00:50:15,304
for the greatest gatherings of wildlife
on planet Earth.
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00:50:23,438 --> 00:50:25,105
Next time,
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00:50:25,523 --> 00:50:28,358
we venture to
the newest habitat on Earth,
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00:50:29,068 --> 00:50:30,611
our cities.
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00:50:31,446 --> 00:50:34,448
To reveal the extraordinary ways
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00:50:35,241 --> 00:50:38,702
that animals survive
in this man-made world.
24770
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