All language subtitles for Dolphins.and.Whales.3D_.Tribes.of.the.Ocean.2008.720p.BluRay.x264.[YTS.MX]-English

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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:26,609 --> 00:00:29,987 DARYL HANNAH: The oceans are the source of all life on our planet. 2 00:00:31,322 --> 00:00:36,827 Without healthy oceans, no life, even on land, can continue to exist. 3 00:00:38,371 --> 00:00:42,041 Cetaceans, better known as dolphins and whales, 4 00:00:42,125 --> 00:00:45,044 have been roaming the oceans for millions of years. 5 00:00:45,754 --> 00:00:47,546 Yet in only one century, 6 00:00:47,630 --> 00:00:51,050 we have slaughtered many of them close to extinction. 7 00:00:54,220 --> 00:00:56,764 Despite some efforts to protect them, 8 00:00:56,848 --> 00:00:59,558 human activity has forced these weakened populations 9 00:00:59,642 --> 00:01:02,311 to face the greatest danger of all, 10 00:01:02,395 --> 00:01:05,773 the destruction of their habitat and food resources. 11 00:01:07,275 --> 00:01:10,402 We live on land. They live in the oceans. 12 00:01:10,487 --> 00:01:13,197 But we all breathe the same air. 13 00:01:13,281 --> 00:01:14,740 We share the same planet, 14 00:01:14,824 --> 00:01:18,535 yet only a few of us have had the privilege to meet them underwater. 15 00:01:19,329 --> 00:01:23,874 Let's share their worId for a while and meet these tribes of the oceans, 16 00:01:24,000 --> 00:01:26,293 the dolphins and the whales. 17 00:02:07,877 --> 00:02:11,588 Cruising through the sparkling waters of the Azores Islands, 18 00:02:11,673 --> 00:02:16,593 these sperm whales can reach 60 feet in length and weigh up to 45 tons. 19 00:02:17,303 --> 00:02:20,514 They are the largest of all the toothed whales. 20 00:02:22,475 --> 00:02:24,893 (SOFT INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC PLAYING) 21 00:02:40,869 --> 00:02:45,247 Sperm whales are social creatures, enjoying companionship. 22 00:02:46,040 --> 00:02:49,918 They take care of one another and even look after the injured. 23 00:02:59,137 --> 00:03:02,014 The females raise their young in nurseries, 24 00:03:02,098 --> 00:03:07,019 one female caring for another's baby while she dives into the abyss to feed. 25 00:03:13,735 --> 00:03:16,862 The sperm whale, like all marine mammals, 26 00:03:16,946 --> 00:03:19,531 must surface regularly to breathe. 27 00:03:20,742 --> 00:03:22,075 (INHALING) 28 00:03:33,463 --> 00:03:38,759 They also have the ability to dive up to 7,000 feet for as long as an hour 29 00:03:38,843 --> 00:03:42,512 while searching for their favourite food, the giant squid. 30 00:04:08,706 --> 00:04:13,502 The scars on his head were most likely received during fights with his prey 31 00:04:13,586 --> 00:04:16,588 or from an encounter with a jealous rival. 32 00:04:35,066 --> 00:04:38,819 Sperm whales once roamed the Earth in vast numbers. 33 00:04:39,696 --> 00:04:43,031 They were hunted almost to extinction during the last century, 34 00:04:43,116 --> 00:04:47,494 mainly because of the precious oil that fills their huge square heads. 35 00:05:14,397 --> 00:05:18,775 This creature, while hunting, used to lead fishermen to squid, 36 00:05:18,860 --> 00:05:22,070 thus becoming commonly known as the pilot whale. 37 00:05:25,158 --> 00:05:28,785 At only 1 5 feet, this toothed whale is relatively small. 38 00:05:36,127 --> 00:05:39,671 These social creatures live in small, very organised pods 39 00:05:39,797 --> 00:05:43,592 and will, in turn, join larger pods headed by one leader. 40 00:05:44,469 --> 00:05:47,346 They will blindly follow that leader anywhere, 41 00:05:47,430 --> 00:05:49,890 sometimes to their own detriment. 42 00:05:50,975 --> 00:05:54,603 When one strands on a beach, the others will follow. 43 00:05:56,564 --> 00:05:59,107 Why? We don't know for sure. 44 00:06:01,069 --> 00:06:04,112 Sadly, still slaughtered in some places, 45 00:06:04,697 --> 00:06:08,950 only about 1 85,000 pilot whales remain in the world today. 46 00:06:23,049 --> 00:06:26,968 They seem to be smiling at us, the spotted dolphins. 47 00:06:28,179 --> 00:06:32,307 Of all of the tribes of the ocean, they've become our best friends. 48 00:06:36,312 --> 00:06:38,105 (DOLPHINS SQUEAKING) 49 00:06:39,524 --> 00:06:44,027 Like the sperm whale, dolphins are actually toothed whales, 50 00:06:44,487 --> 00:06:47,656 grabbing and tearing at prey with their teeth. 51 00:06:54,497 --> 00:06:56,206 (DOLPHINS CLICKING) 52 00:07:08,678 --> 00:07:12,848 These spotted dolphins were grey when they were born and spotless. 53 00:07:13,683 --> 00:07:16,476 Very social, they, too, live in pods. 54 00:07:27,613 --> 00:07:30,699 Dolphins love to interact with each other. 55 00:07:30,825 --> 00:07:34,953 They play, touch, fight, hit and caress. 56 00:07:39,417 --> 00:07:40,667 Check this out. 57 00:07:40,751 --> 00:07:45,714 Displaying amazingly intelligent behaviour and a wonderful facility for teamwork, 58 00:07:45,840 --> 00:07:50,343 these adults have intentionally picked up some algae from the sea floor 59 00:07:50,887 --> 00:07:52,554 to start a game. 60 00:07:58,102 --> 00:08:00,812 They play for fun, not fighting for the piece 61 00:08:00,897 --> 00:08:04,524 but cordially passing it around like a game of catch. 62 00:09:29,569 --> 00:09:32,195 One of the great mysteries of the animal kingdom 63 00:09:32,280 --> 00:09:35,615 is the spine-tingling humpback whale song. 64 00:09:37,868 --> 00:09:39,494 (SNORTING) 65 00:09:47,795 --> 00:09:49,379 (SCREECHING) 66 00:10:03,853 --> 00:10:05,186 (SQUEAKING) 67 00:10:21,370 --> 00:10:25,373 The male humpbacks create eerie, hauntingly beautiful tunes. 68 00:10:25,958 --> 00:10:30,670 Are they mating calls to females or warning calls to ward off other males? 69 00:10:31,422 --> 00:10:33,381 We don't know for sure. 70 00:10:50,399 --> 00:10:51,816 (VOCALISING) 71 00:11:20,805 --> 00:11:24,766 These complex communications can be heard from great distances 72 00:11:24,850 --> 00:11:27,602 and may be repeated for several hours. 73 00:11:40,282 --> 00:11:42,242 (VOCALISING CONTINUES) 74 00:12:25,244 --> 00:12:29,956 This graceful and elegant underwater ballet is one of the most beautiful shows 75 00:12:30,040 --> 00:12:33,334 we will ever see below the surface of the ocean. 76 00:13:17,713 --> 00:13:20,298 The humpback is a baleen whale. 77 00:13:20,382 --> 00:13:25,220 Instead of teeth, they have baleen plates that filter food out of the water. 78 00:13:30,226 --> 00:13:32,811 They have an appetite to match their size, 79 00:13:32,895 --> 00:13:37,899 eating an average of 5,000 pounds of krill and small schooling fish every day. 80 00:13:59,964 --> 00:14:02,715 With a life expectancy of 50 years, 81 00:14:02,800 --> 00:14:08,096 a humpback whale can reach over 60 feet in length and weigh up to 50 tons. 82 00:14:13,102 --> 00:14:14,978 Humpbacks are nomads, 83 00:14:15,604 --> 00:14:19,607 migrating to the icy polar waters for the summer where they feed. 84 00:14:20,109 --> 00:14:24,612 Summer's gone, they will make the 3 month, 3,000 mile journey 85 00:14:24,697 --> 00:14:27,782 back to tropical waters to breed and calve. 86 00:14:35,165 --> 00:14:37,792 Today, despite some recovery, 87 00:14:37,918 --> 00:14:41,379 the humpback whale is still a victim of human activity, 88 00:14:41,463 --> 00:14:43,715 and its future is precarious. 89 00:14:59,857 --> 00:15:03,610 The beluga whale lives in the frigid waters of the Arctic. 90 00:15:07,531 --> 00:15:11,492 Born grey, they don't turn white until six years of age. 91 00:15:18,500 --> 00:15:19,834 (SQUEAKING) 92 00:15:25,716 --> 00:15:29,761 It is also called the sea canary because of its bird-like sounds. 93 00:15:37,478 --> 00:15:41,189 The beluga is the only whale that can move its head in all directions. 94 00:15:42,358 --> 00:15:46,861 This friendly-looking creature can appear to have very human expressions. 95 00:15:55,871 --> 00:15:59,999 Human activity has resulted in massive pollution of their habitat 96 00:16:00,376 --> 00:16:04,379 and has put some of these tribes in great danger of extinction. 97 00:16:04,964 --> 00:16:09,509 The beluga whale may soon become a ghostly shadow of the Arctic, 98 00:16:10,594 --> 00:16:12,220 a mere memory. 99 00:16:24,149 --> 00:16:25,191 (SQUEAKING) 100 00:16:25,275 --> 00:16:28,403 Now, here's a very difficult tribe to approach. 101 00:16:28,988 --> 00:16:33,366 Risso's dolphins are fairly large, weighing up to 1,100 pounds. 102 00:16:35,619 --> 00:16:39,414 Their battered look comes from the numerous scars that cover their bodies. 103 00:16:40,499 --> 00:16:43,668 The older they are, the more scars they have, 104 00:16:43,752 --> 00:16:48,381 and over time, their naturally dark grey bodies turn nearly white. 105 00:16:50,843 --> 00:16:53,970 They get those scars during rough social play. 106 00:17:13,699 --> 00:17:15,908 As belligerent as they can be, 107 00:17:15,993 --> 00:17:19,787 these fascinating dolphins will remain in a tight-knit social structure 108 00:17:19,872 --> 00:17:22,206 enjoying strength in numbers. 109 00:17:59,703 --> 00:18:02,246 (SOOTHING INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC PLAYING) 110 00:18:07,002 --> 00:18:12,423 In the shallow coastal waters of Florida lives the most peaceful of marine mammals, 111 00:18:12,508 --> 00:18:14,092 the manatee. 112 00:18:22,351 --> 00:18:26,729 It may look something like a cetacean but this is a sirenian. 113 00:18:29,733 --> 00:18:33,903 Manatees, much like dolphins and whales, evolved from land mammals 114 00:18:34,029 --> 00:18:36,364 and later returned to the sea. 115 00:18:43,831 --> 00:18:48,126 The curious-looking manatees are more closely related to elephants 116 00:18:48,210 --> 00:18:50,419 than any other living animal. 117 00:19:02,391 --> 00:19:04,725 Despite the corpulent look, 118 00:19:04,852 --> 00:19:06,769 their layer of blubber is so thin 119 00:19:06,895 --> 00:19:10,356 that it cannot protect them when the temperature drops. 120 00:19:11,066 --> 00:19:13,734 They won't survive in water below 68 degrees, 121 00:19:13,861 --> 00:19:17,155 so in winter, they will seek out warm springs. 122 00:19:33,088 --> 00:19:35,882 The manatee is also called the sea cow. 123 00:19:36,300 --> 00:19:40,011 In fact, it's the only marine mammal that eats vegetation. 124 00:20:42,658 --> 00:20:45,159 The manatee's diet causes fIatulence. 125 00:20:47,829 --> 00:20:49,956 (CHUCKLES) Look at aII those bubbIes. 126 00:21:07,557 --> 00:21:11,102 A manatee calf will live with its mother for five years. 127 00:21:11,853 --> 00:21:16,357 They'll nurse from the long teat located at the base of her pectoral fins. 128 00:21:24,533 --> 00:21:26,284 Just to keep their bodies warm, 129 00:21:26,368 --> 00:21:30,204 they have to eat more than 100 pounds of water plants a day. 130 00:21:35,210 --> 00:21:37,837 The 3,000 manatees left in Florida 131 00:21:37,921 --> 00:21:41,841 are one of the last surviving sirenian tribes in the worId. 132 00:21:43,135 --> 00:21:44,802 But for how long? 133 00:21:45,220 --> 00:21:48,472 Every day, human development takes a little more of their habitat. 134 00:21:49,891 --> 00:21:52,768 Soon, they may have nowhere left to live. 135 00:22:04,072 --> 00:22:08,367 The orca, or killer whale, is the king of the ocean. 136 00:22:09,619 --> 00:22:12,455 It is the largest of the dolphin family. 137 00:22:12,664 --> 00:22:16,375 It can reach 32 feet in length and weigh up to 10 tons. 138 00:22:22,049 --> 00:22:23,299 (SCREECHING) 139 00:22:25,260 --> 00:22:29,722 They will spend their entire lives in pods as large as 25 individuals. 140 00:22:30,474 --> 00:22:32,933 The eldest female will always lead. 141 00:22:34,311 --> 00:22:36,020 Mother knows best. 142 00:22:41,026 --> 00:22:43,778 This extraordinarily intelligent animal, 143 00:22:44,112 --> 00:22:46,614 probably the smartest of them all, 144 00:22:46,698 --> 00:22:49,867 exhibits highly sophisticated social behaviour. 145 00:22:50,952 --> 00:22:52,286 (WHISTLING) 146 00:22:53,789 --> 00:22:57,291 They have their own dialects, varying from pod to pod. 147 00:22:58,126 --> 00:22:59,585 They will work as a team, 148 00:22:59,669 --> 00:23:04,298 and are able to adapt their hunting strategy when faced with new situations. 149 00:23:08,470 --> 00:23:11,514 The orca is the greatest predator of the ocean 150 00:23:11,681 --> 00:23:14,642 and will even attack the great white shark. 151 00:23:22,734 --> 00:23:25,486 Their frightening nickname, killer whale, 152 00:23:25,987 --> 00:23:30,574 derives from the fact that they are the only whales that kill other whales. 153 00:23:36,123 --> 00:23:40,334 Orcas, too, are suffering from pollution and depletion of their prey. 154 00:23:42,295 --> 00:23:43,921 At the head of the food chain, 155 00:23:44,005 --> 00:23:48,175 they have become one of the most contaminated of all the cetaceans. 156 00:23:48,385 --> 00:23:52,847 They are slowly being poisoned by the polluted prey upon which they feed. 157 00:23:54,099 --> 00:23:56,767 Another tribe losing ground. 158 00:24:13,994 --> 00:24:17,413 The fin whale is one of the largest creatures on Earth. 159 00:24:17,956 --> 00:24:20,499 Only one, the blue whale, is larger. 160 00:24:23,962 --> 00:24:25,713 Looking at these dolphins, 161 00:24:25,797 --> 00:24:28,924 it is easy to imagine how big this fin whale is. 162 00:24:29,759 --> 00:24:33,596 It can reach up to 88 feet in length, and weigh up to 70 tons. 163 00:24:43,064 --> 00:24:46,734 Are these spotted dolphins hunting with the fin whale? 164 00:25:05,921 --> 00:25:09,924 After a large school of fish has been herded into a tight ball, 165 00:25:10,133 --> 00:25:12,092 many predators appear. 166 00:25:27,943 --> 00:25:29,527 The large bait ball of fish 167 00:25:29,611 --> 00:25:33,072 is first being attacked from above by shearwater birds. 168 00:25:56,888 --> 00:25:59,473 Now, the spotted dolphins from below. 169 00:26:17,617 --> 00:26:22,580 And finally, here comes the giant fin whale, taking its turn. 170 00:26:29,421 --> 00:26:31,338 In one fantastic gulp, 171 00:26:31,423 --> 00:26:35,259 it takes the entire school of fish into its enormous mouth. 172 00:26:43,685 --> 00:26:46,645 Look how the ventral grooves below its mouth have expanded, 173 00:26:46,730 --> 00:26:49,481 like a giant balloon, to hold the catch. 174 00:26:51,359 --> 00:26:54,194 The water will be filtered out through the baleen plates, 175 00:26:54,279 --> 00:26:57,239 and the entire school of fish, trapped inside, 176 00:26:57,324 --> 00:26:59,867 will become this fin whale's dinner. 177 00:27:01,202 --> 00:27:05,372 They will eat up to 3 tons of krill and small fish each day. 178 00:27:09,544 --> 00:27:13,881 Although supposedly protected, the fin whale is still hunted today 179 00:27:14,299 --> 00:27:16,508 and is extremely vulnerable. 180 00:27:16,885 --> 00:27:21,221 In addition to modern commercial whaling and collisions with ships, 181 00:27:21,598 --> 00:27:25,309 the fin whale is now also being impacted by climate change. 182 00:27:25,685 --> 00:27:31,732 Indeed, krill, its primary source of food, depends on the cover of sea ice, 183 00:27:32,525 --> 00:27:34,318 which is now melting. 184 00:27:48,124 --> 00:27:49,917 The common dolphin, 185 00:27:51,044 --> 00:27:54,546 creature of legend, art, poetry, 186 00:27:55,507 --> 00:27:57,925 from ancient times to the present. 187 00:27:58,426 --> 00:28:00,511 Why this mystical appeal? 188 00:28:01,137 --> 00:28:05,265 What about these magical tribes so captures the human imagination? 189 00:28:10,939 --> 00:28:12,648 (DOLPHlNS CLlCKING) 190 00:28:12,816 --> 00:28:15,734 The clicks we hear are used for echolocation, 191 00:28:16,069 --> 00:28:19,363 a sixth sense that allows them to see, so to speak. 192 00:28:20,240 --> 00:28:23,450 They use it to detect objects, track down prey, 193 00:28:23,576 --> 00:28:27,621 locate one another, avoid predators and orient themselves. 194 00:28:47,308 --> 00:28:49,977 They use squeaks as a form of language. 195 00:28:50,979 --> 00:28:53,188 These sounds enable them to communicate with each other 196 00:28:53,273 --> 00:28:56,817 when hunting, playing or keeping track of their young. 197 00:29:07,203 --> 00:29:10,998 Today, common dolphins are still hunted for their meat, 198 00:29:11,708 --> 00:29:16,920 and around 300,000 dolphins and whales die every year entangled in fishing nets. 199 00:29:17,881 --> 00:29:19,673 Eight hundred a day. 200 00:29:40,695 --> 00:29:43,238 A mother right whale and her baby, 201 00:29:43,490 --> 00:29:48,327 nurturing, nurtured, a bond formed over several years. 202 00:30:01,049 --> 00:30:04,343 She will have one offspring about every three years 203 00:30:04,636 --> 00:30:08,180 and will nurse it with her rich milk for roughly 12 months. 204 00:30:15,396 --> 00:30:19,691 The right whale's mouth contains about 250 baleen plates, 205 00:30:20,151 --> 00:30:23,070 enabling it to filter tons of zooplankton. 206 00:30:30,703 --> 00:30:34,039 The huge, pale growths on the head and the lower jaw, 207 00:30:34,123 --> 00:30:37,084 called callosities, are home to whale lice 208 00:30:37,669 --> 00:30:40,921 that tint them with white, pink, yellow or orange. 209 00:30:41,589 --> 00:30:45,008 Unique formations, their own kind of fingerprint. 210 00:30:56,312 --> 00:30:58,605 Looking into the eye of a whale 211 00:30:58,940 --> 00:31:02,484 is said to be like looking into the window of one's soul. 212 00:31:06,489 --> 00:31:09,408 For the few humans who have come this close, 213 00:31:11,244 --> 00:31:15,414 the whale's gaze has provided a moment of true emotional connection. 214 00:31:24,299 --> 00:31:29,970 Whalers dubbed this creature the right whale because their entire body could be used. 215 00:31:30,763 --> 00:31:34,099 In addition to their long baleen plates and their blubber, 216 00:31:34,183 --> 00:31:37,769 they were also slow swimmers, easy to catch, 217 00:31:38,271 --> 00:31:43,191 and once dead, kept floating at the surface, so it made their processing easier. 218 00:31:43,735 --> 00:31:46,862 Thus, they were the right whales to hunt. 219 00:31:53,786 --> 00:31:55,787 Most southern right whales are born dark, 220 00:31:56,539 --> 00:31:59,833 but this one is white, a rare occurrence. 221 00:32:19,687 --> 00:32:22,272 There are very few right whales left. 222 00:32:23,983 --> 00:32:26,985 Southern right whales have shown some signs of recovery 223 00:32:27,070 --> 00:32:29,321 thanks to protective measures. 224 00:32:30,365 --> 00:32:33,617 However, we can only remain cautiously optimistic 225 00:32:33,701 --> 00:32:36,995 about the future of these last 9,000 individuals. 226 00:32:38,247 --> 00:32:41,708 As for their cousins, the Northern Atlantic right whales, 227 00:32:42,335 --> 00:32:46,296 it is estimated that a mere 300 are left in the worId. 228 00:32:47,048 --> 00:32:50,384 They are very, very close to extinction. 229 00:33:43,271 --> 00:33:45,188 The bottlenose dolphin. 230 00:33:46,149 --> 00:33:49,026 This tribe of dolphins is usually nomadic. 231 00:33:49,610 --> 00:33:52,988 Sometimes, though, they prefer to reside in one location, 232 00:33:53,072 --> 00:33:56,241 like these, swimming in the waters of the Bahamas. 233 00:33:58,578 --> 00:34:02,247 Dolphins stick together. Their pods are tight family groups, 234 00:34:02,331 --> 00:34:05,834 well-structured, and come with an established hierarchy. 235 00:34:09,756 --> 00:34:11,089 (WHlSTLING) 236 00:34:11,632 --> 00:34:15,010 The remarkable bottlenose dolphins are able to develop 237 00:34:15,094 --> 00:34:19,639 and teach their young different individual and group hunting strategies. 238 00:34:20,308 --> 00:34:23,560 They can then adapt these strategies to varying situations. 239 00:34:29,275 --> 00:34:32,235 They can chase through schools of fish in the open sea 240 00:34:32,320 --> 00:34:35,238 or corner a hapless prey against a sandbar. 241 00:34:37,658 --> 00:34:41,411 A hungry adult bottlenose may consume up to 30 pounds of fish, 242 00:34:41,496 --> 00:34:43,747 squid and crustaceans each day. 243 00:35:02,350 --> 00:35:05,352 Their brain is proportionally as large as ours. 244 00:35:06,354 --> 00:35:08,855 They communicate with a complex language 245 00:35:08,940 --> 00:35:12,275 and, amazingly, have individual signature whistles 246 00:35:12,360 --> 00:35:16,321 they use the same way we use names to identify one another. 247 00:35:33,714 --> 00:35:38,885 Dolphins, when in the intense throes of passion, become very playful, 248 00:35:39,554 --> 00:35:42,973 swim in an agitated manner and mate indiscriminately. 249 00:35:50,523 --> 00:35:53,859 It's quite common for the bottlenose to scratch each other with their teeth 250 00:35:53,943 --> 00:35:56,153 during courtship and mating. 251 00:36:36,694 --> 00:36:38,195 Time to play again. 252 00:36:38,279 --> 00:36:39,571 (SQUEAKS) 253 00:36:40,656 --> 00:36:41,865 Catch it. 254 00:36:52,126 --> 00:36:53,668 (SNORTING) 255 00:36:54,837 --> 00:36:56,630 A year has gone by. 256 00:36:56,714 --> 00:37:00,967 This female is back in the tropical waters of the kingdom of Tonga. 257 00:37:01,802 --> 00:37:04,930 Here, sheltered from predators and bad weather, 258 00:37:05,348 --> 00:37:08,558 she will give birth to a beautiful 1 4-foot baby. 259 00:37:26,827 --> 00:37:30,622 This newborn baby is so young that his eyes are still closed. 260 00:37:35,253 --> 00:37:38,421 His body doesn't yet know how to stay in balance. 261 00:37:49,267 --> 00:37:53,186 Every four minutes, for several days and nights, 262 00:37:54,188 --> 00:37:58,191 the mother will gently nudge her baby to the surface to breathe. 263 00:37:59,735 --> 00:38:03,530 During this period, mother and baby are extremely vulnerable. 264 00:38:06,242 --> 00:38:09,536 Even a big storm can be fatal to a newborn. 265 00:38:55,583 --> 00:38:57,500 A few days have gone by. 266 00:38:58,252 --> 00:39:01,671 This calf can finally swim and breathe on its own, 267 00:39:03,382 --> 00:39:07,093 though it still takes shelter under its mother's large fin. 268 00:39:19,815 --> 00:39:23,360 Weeks have gone by. The baby has grown stronger. 269 00:39:23,986 --> 00:39:25,695 Its skin is darker. 270 00:39:26,280 --> 00:39:29,074 From this point on for about two years, 271 00:39:29,158 --> 00:39:33,119 the mother will teach her youngster how to survive in the ocean. 272 00:39:36,457 --> 00:39:39,000 Mother and baby will often touch one another 273 00:39:39,085 --> 00:39:42,128 in what appears to be a gesture of affection. 274 00:39:47,593 --> 00:39:48,885 It will take about eight years 275 00:39:48,969 --> 00:39:53,223 before this young calf will be old enough to produce offspring of his own. 276 00:39:54,266 --> 00:39:56,393 Will he survive that long? 277 00:39:59,021 --> 00:40:03,983 Hope this young calf will grow old enough to sing his own unique and lovely song. 278 00:40:05,152 --> 00:40:08,321 Hope his song will not be the last one we hear. 279 00:40:10,616 --> 00:40:14,327 Dolphins and whales are one of the Earth's living wonders. 280 00:40:15,621 --> 00:40:19,749 Some assume they have the right to destroy our children's heritage. 281 00:40:20,042 --> 00:40:23,461 We can stop vandalising and plundering the oceans. 282 00:40:24,171 --> 00:40:26,339 We can change our way of life. 283 00:40:27,550 --> 00:40:30,343 Make no mistake, it's not too late. 284 00:40:30,761 --> 00:40:32,345 If we all join together, 285 00:40:32,430 --> 00:40:35,849 we have the power to save the dolphins and the whales, 286 00:40:35,933 --> 00:40:37,308 the tribes of the ocean. 287 00:40:41,480 --> 00:40:43,231 (GRUNTING) 288 00:40:47,445 --> 00:40:48,736 (CALLING) 28011

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