Autumn


Autumn

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Every year, spectacular seasons transform our planet.

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They're the driving force of all life on Earth...

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..bringing opportunities and huge challenges.

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Spring bursts with new life...

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..but it's a race to grab fleeting chances.

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Summer brings glorious abundance,

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but the heat can push animals to their limits.

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Autumn is nature's great gold rush...

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..but competition is fierce.

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Winter creates a frozen wonderland...

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..but only the most resourceful will survive.

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In every corner of the planet,

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animals rise to overcome the seemingly impossible...

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..to thrive against the odds...

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..as the seasons create the greatest shows on Earth.

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Autumn - the season when nature puts on its most flamboyant displays.

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It's as generous with its bounty as it is with its beauty.

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But the good times won't last. The clock is ticking.

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For many animals, it's their last chance to get ready before the cold

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closes in.

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And the first challenge is to fatten up and fill the larder.

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The great Northwoods of North America...

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..26 million acres of forest.

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In autumn, as the days get shorter and the light fades...

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..the trees go through a stunning transformation.

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They draw all the goodness out of their leaves...

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..and then they let them go.

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In a Canadian forest, along with the falling leaves,

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the trees are releasing a seasonal feast...

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..acorns.

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For a chipmunk, it's manna from heaven.

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He's stockpiling acorns for winter,

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and the quickest way to carry them is cramming as many into his mouth

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as possible.

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He can get six in, at a push.

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There's no time to waste.

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Within a couple of weeks, the forest could be under half a metre of snow.

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He needs to gather at least 100 acorns

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to see him through the lean months ahead.

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A chipmunk keeps his store of nuts hidden away in his winter burrow,

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a metre underground, and for good reason.

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There are thieves around.

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As soon as the coast is clear,

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a light-fingered neighbour takes his chance.

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With winter coming, pinching someone else's supplies

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is a serious business.

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The precious pile is starting to look very thin...

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..and that could mean starvation for the rightful owner.

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The honest chipmunk is still slogging away, gathering acorns...

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..but, when he returns, he's in for a shock -

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there's almost nothing left of the store.

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Retribution is swift.

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CHATTERING AND SQUEAKING

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With the thief sent packing, it's straight back to work.

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When winter comes, every nut will count.

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Autumn's abundance will be a lifeline.

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Chipmunks aren't the only ones getting ready.

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In Yellowstone in North America, the trees are turning gold.

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This moose has spent the summer fattening up on greenery.

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She'll stand up to her knees in water for hours at a time,

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feasting on pond weed.

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When there's good food underwater, a long nose comes in useful,

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and she can close her huge nostrils to keep the water out.

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But the good times are coming to an end.

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Once winter takes hold, the lake will freeze

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and she'll be reduced to eating bare twigs from trees.

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So she's packing away more than 10kg of greens a day...

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..while she still can.

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But there's another animal in this neck of the woods with a more

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radical approach to gathering food.

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TREE CRACKS

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A beaver - the only animal capable of chopping down an entire tree.

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He'll fell a cottonwood in a couple of hours, using only his teeth.

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He chews away just enough to make it unstable...

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..and lets the wind do the rest.

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TREE CRACKS

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And then the real hard work starts.

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He chops the branches into manageable chunks to eat later...

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..and the best way to get them back home is by water.

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So he and his partner have built a network of waterways

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especially for the job.

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While he's busy bringing in the supplies,

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she's doing some maintenance to the dam.

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In a couple of weeks, their canal system will freeze up,

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so they're gathering food now, while they still can.

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They'll survive all winter eating nothing but these branches.

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He drags them one at a time to his underwater larder.

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He might bring in several hundred of them...

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..so even when the pond has frozen over,

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there will still be plenty of food.

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All this industry has caught the attention of a young moose.

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A beaver's pond could be the perfect place to find something to eat.

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But he can forget that idea.

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This is no time for sharing.

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Autumn might be the season of glorious colour,

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but it can be a wild time, too.

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THUNDER RUMBLES

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As the temperature starts to fall,

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changes in air pressure cause massive storms.

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THUNDER RUMBLES

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In the river in southern Alaska,

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the storms are about to bring in one of autumn's biggest feasts,

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and on the river bank, a hungry crowd is gathering...

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..grizzly bears.

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If they're going to survive the coming winter,

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they need to build up their weight by more than half in just a few weeks.

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It's the wettest time of the year

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but all this rain is good news for the bears.

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It's flooding the rivers...

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..opening the way for millions of fish to start heading their way.

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Pacific salmon.

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They've travelled thousands of miles of sea and now they're swimming

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inland to spawn.

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They're returning to the very rivers where they were born.

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And the bears are lining up to meet them.

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They're gathering at a waterfall.

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They know that the salmon must pass through this bottleneck in the river.

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It will be the best fishing for miles around.

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BEARS GRUNT

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The biggest males start to fight over the prime spots.

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BEARS ROAR

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The salmon are starting to collect in a whirlpool at the bottom of

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the falls.

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With one almighty push, the first fish starts its ascent.

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It uses its whole body to leap more than two metres in the air...

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..and if it's lucky, past the waiting bears.

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But eventually, the migration hits its peak.

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There are so many salmon, the bears can hardly miss.

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A big male bear can catch as many as 30 fish a day.

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But it's not always as easy as it looks.

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This is a tough neighbourhood.

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A female with three young cubs nervously approaches the river.

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She's desperate to fish, but these big males could attack her family...

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BEARS ROAR

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..so it's dangerous.

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BEARS ROAR

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BEARS ROAR

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After a long summer nursing three cubs, she's skin and bone.

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Unless she can eat soon, she'll struggle to get them through winter.

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The big males carry on bingeing...

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..but one by one, they haul themselves out of the river for an afternoon nap.

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They're so full, they can hardly move.

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It's the young mother's big chance.

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She climbs to the top of the falls, but she'll have to be quick.

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SHE GROWLS

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SHE GROWLS

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SHE GROWLS

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Finally!

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The salmon run is vital to every bear on the river.

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They'll sleep for six months, all through the bitter Alaskan winter...

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..so the fat they lay down now will help guarantee

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their survival.

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If this young mother can keep fishing...

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..she'll give her family the best chance of making it through till spring.

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But not everywhere offers such rich autumn pickings.

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For animals across the planet, sometimes, the only option is to leave home

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and look for better times elsewhere.

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In North America every autumn,

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hundreds of pronghorn trek across Yellowstone...

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..to escape the advancing snow.

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They leave their summer pastures and race to the safety of the lowlands,

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where they can graze all winter.

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In the Arctic, birds that came here in spring are starting to make

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an exit.

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The seas have provided a bounty all summer, but as autumn creeps in,

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food is getting harder to find.

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The bonanza is over.

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Hundreds of thousands of birds are heading south.

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SQUAWKING

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Snow geese spend the short summer in the Canadian Arctic,

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raising their families,

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but in autumn, they travel 3,000 miles south

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to the warmth of the Gulf of Mexico.

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The birds fly together in enormous flocks.

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There may be more than five million of them,

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all making this vast round trip.

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But for some animals, these journeys are fraught with danger.

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On the Norwegian island of Svalbard,

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100,000 Brunnich's guillemots have been here since spring,

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nesting on the safety of the sea cliffs.

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Now their food's running out

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and it's time for these young families to go.

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But these parents face the worst possible mission.

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SQUAWKING

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Each pair have one precious chick

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and they've spent all summer looking after it.

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Now they must persuade it to jump off the cliff, down to the sea.

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It's a drop of 150 metres.

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The chicks are only three weeks old...

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..and they can't fly properly.

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It's a terrifying leap of faith.

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And there's worse.

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There's a family of hungry Arctic foxes waiting on the beach.

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The chicks must make it all the way to the sea without touching land.

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The first dad encourages his chick over the edge.

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Not far enough.

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He makes a desperate dash for the sea.

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FOX GROWLS

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CHICK SQUEAKS

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The next family step up to take their turn.

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Anxious to save his offspring from the same fate,

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his dad goes with him.

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But they both fall short.

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So close and yet so far.

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FOX BARKS

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A third family has witnessed the grim fate of the neighbours,

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but there's no other way down.

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SPLASHING

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It may not be the most graceful landing, but they're all down safe.

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When parents fly with their chicks,

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they have a much better chance of survival.

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THEY CHIRP

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But this is only the start of their journey.

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Now they have to travel south to the coast of Greenland,

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where they will spend the winter.

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And because they're not strong enough to fly,

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the chicks are going to have to swim there...

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..and it's 600 miles.

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But Mum and Dad will be with them all the way.

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Even when you can fly, these autumn journeys are an enormous challenge.

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In the skies above Central Asia,

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it's the start of one of the toughest migrations on the planet.

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THEY SQUAWK

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Demoiselle cranes.

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They've spent the summer in Mongolia and Kazakhstan, but now winter is

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breathing down their necks, so they're flying south to India.

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But first, they must cross the world's highest mountain range,

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the Himalayas.

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In places, these peaks tower five miles high.

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The cranes can't go round them

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because this mountain range spans five countries.

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They have to find a way through.

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And to make things worse,

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autumn brings treacherous storms to this part of the world.

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The cranes gain height, trying to break through the clouds,

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but strong headwinds force them back.

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They're beaten, for now...

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..so they set up camp for the night.

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SQUAWKING

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But they dare not linger.

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There'll be more storms on the way.

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SQUAWKING

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At dawn, there's a window of clear weather.

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SQUAWKING

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It's now or never.

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But to get any further, the cranes must cross Sniper Alley.

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The golden eagles that live here have been expecting them.

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The eagles know the cranes will be coming this way in autumn.

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Normally, they'd be too fast to catch...

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..but, right now, they're flying tired...

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..and the eagles work in pairs.

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One eagle picks out a young bird and sets up an ambush.

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BIRD SQUAWKS

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He drives it into the talons of his partner.

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The exhausted crane never stood a chance.

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One man down, the rest of the flock pushes on.

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They use rising columns of air to help them gain height.

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They may reach altitudes of 26,000 feet.

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And finally, they're across this vast mountain barrier and heading

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south towards India.

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Many of them won't make it, but this monumental journey is the only way

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to stay ahead of a brutal winter.

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They'll fly a distance of more than 1,000 miles and, in spring,

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they'll fly all the way back.

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For another animal, autumn starts a migration

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of a totally different kind...

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..and it happens under the sea.

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The oceans cool more slowly than the land,

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but as the temperature starts to change,

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it triggers an unusual autumn spectacle.

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In the Southern Ocean of South Australia,

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there's a big crowd starting to gather.

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Giant spider crabs are marching in unison across the sea floor.

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They spend most of the year offshore...

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..but, in the autumn, these big orange crabs head to the shallows.

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They're getting ready to moult.

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They've outgrown their shells and they need to grow a new one.

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It can take them up to an hour to crack open their old armour plating

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and wriggle out.

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But it takes a couple of weeks for their new shells to develop...

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..and waiting naked on the sea floor...

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..is dangerous.

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A stingray.

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The crabs scatter in a panic.

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There may be 250,000 to choose from, but the ray is particular.

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The softer the crabs, the easier they are to swallow.

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But the ray barely makes a dent in the population.

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There's safety in numbers.

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And with so many crabs gathered together,

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some take the opportunity to look for a partner.

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With the party over,

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the crabs step over the discarded remains of their old wardrobe

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and head back to the deep.

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For lots of animals, autumn is the season for finding a mate.

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But it's an intense time of year.

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And with winter round the corner,

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the search for a partner is full of challenges.

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Only the toughest will succeed.

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Male wild ass, fuelled with testosterone,

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tear up the Tibetan plains as they compete for mares.

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Timing is critical.

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They need to mate now so their foals will be born next summer,

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when there is plenty to eat.

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Off the coast of Britain, grey seal bull fights are a bloody affair.

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Only the biggest and bravest will get to breed...

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..and he'll mate with every female on the beach.

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In North America, male elk live quiet lives until autumn,

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when they come together for the rut.

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They grow a new set of antlers every year,

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weighing almost 20kg.

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The bigger the antlers, the stronger the bull.

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ELK GRUNTS

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But for one animal, the battle to breed is not only about brute force,

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it's also about technique.

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Patagonia, South America.

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Autumn is approaching

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and a male Darwin's beetle is looking for a partner.

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His success will be down to the size of his jaws...

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..and how he uses them.

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He heads off to the forest to start his search.

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The females will be in the trees,

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probably feeding somewhere on the trunk.

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They should be easy enough to find.

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But when the trees are more than 25 metres tall,

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it's a long way to climb.

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There she is.

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Unfortunately for him,

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all the other males in the neighbourhood are also after her.

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He has no choice but to fight them off.

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But it's not just about strength.

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It's about...

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grappling.

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He reaches over the rival's head and hooks his enormous jaws under

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his wing covers.

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He gets a grip,

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lifts...

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..and chucks.

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He climbs onwards.

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There are other males standing in his way,

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but nothing will stop him now.

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They meet at last.

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She doesn't appear to be totally smitten.

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But she finally allows him to wrap his great big jaws around her...

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..and they get intimate.

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But then,

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he throws HER out of the tree.

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Beetle armour is tough and, luckily,

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she's just where she needs to be to lay her eggs on the forest floor,

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among the roots.

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For many animals, these fights to breed

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are triggered by the shortening days.

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It's a race to get ahead of your rivals before time runs out.

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In Alaska, the tundra is turning red

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and the stage is set for an almighty showdown.

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A musk ox.

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He's spent the last few weeks

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fighting to keep control of a harem of females.

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Over the few weeks that they are in season, he'll mate with all of them.

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But he needs to be on his guard

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because he has competition.

0:37:070:37:08

Another bull is trying to muscle in.

0:37:120:37:14

The dominant bull is going to have to fight him off.

0:37:210:37:24

The interloper turns his back

0:37:240:37:26

and the king charges.

0:37:260:37:29

These bulls have a layer of horn across their heads

0:37:550:37:58

ten centimetres thick,

0:37:580:37:59

which helps protect their brains.

0:37:590:38:01

But the impact is so loud...

0:38:040:38:06

..it can be heard a mile away.

0:38:080:38:09

CRUNCHING

0:38:110:38:12

The dominant male tries to turn his challenger around.

0:38:270:38:30

If he can strike at his flank, it will all be over.

0:38:300:38:33

With the competition seen off, the male returns to his females.

0:38:450:38:49

If he can keep other bulls away,

0:38:500:38:52

it will be his calves born on these pastures next spring.

0:38:520:38:55

With winter just around the corner,

0:39:050:39:08

this is a critical time for young animals, too.

0:39:080:39:11

They've grown up through summer's good times and now they must start

0:39:120:39:17

learning to fend for themselves.

0:39:170:39:19

For some, it's a steep learning curve.

0:39:270:39:29

This grey seal pup on the coast of Norfolk is only two weeks old,

0:39:300:39:35

but his mother is already teaching him to swim.

0:39:350:39:38

In another week, she'll be off

0:39:390:39:41

starting another family and the pup will

0:39:410:39:44

have to face winter completely on his own.

0:39:440:39:46

In North America, grizzly bear cubs

0:39:520:39:54

stay with their mother for two years,

0:39:540:39:58

but it's never too early to start tackling your first fish.

0:39:580:40:01

These young stoats in a British meadow

0:40:150:40:18

have only one summer to grow up.

0:40:180:40:20

By autumn, they have to have learnt the art of hunting for themselves.

0:40:200:40:24

The stalk...

0:40:290:40:31

..the chase...

0:40:320:40:33

..the ambush - deadly skills all learnt through play.

0:40:350:40:41

These young animals rush towards independence

0:40:460:40:48

as the world changes around them.

0:40:480:40:51

But for some,

0:40:510:40:52

the shifting of the seasons brings unexpected advantages.

0:40:520:40:56

In the northern hemisphere, as the days shorten,

0:40:580:41:01

the trees are almost bare.

0:41:010:41:02

With less life and the temperature dropping,

0:41:040:41:06

the leaves can no longer produce food.

0:41:060:41:08

So the trees get rid of them.

0:41:100:41:11

Nearer the equator, autumn is the beginning of the dry season.

0:41:210:41:25

The leaves are falling, but it's not because of lack of light.

0:41:250:41:29

There's not enough water.

0:41:300:41:32

Zimbabwe in southern Africa.

0:41:400:41:42

The trees are getting ready for seven months with no rain.

0:41:430:41:46

Trees lose moisture through their leaves

0:41:490:41:51

so it's better to drop them now.

0:41:510:41:53

And that's a great opportunity for two young cheetah cubs just on

0:42:030:42:07

the brink of adulthood.

0:42:070:42:09

These sisters are 18 months old and they are ready to leave home.

0:42:150:42:19

But first, they must learn how to hunt,

0:42:190:42:23

and autumn is the perfect time to practise.

0:42:230:42:26

With fewer leaves on the trees, their prey has nowhere to hide.

0:42:270:42:31

They pick out a target.

0:42:380:42:39

GRUNTING

0:42:420:42:43

A male impala is tricky prey,

0:42:460:42:50

but they've spent weeks fighting during the autumn rut.

0:42:500:42:53

They're exhausted

0:42:540:42:56

and visible.

0:42:560:42:57

The cheetah sisters have their chance.

0:43:070:43:09

They'd usually hunt in the open.

0:43:140:43:16

When they're hunting among trees,

0:43:180:43:20

it'll be more about agility and speed.

0:43:200:43:23

If they can start their chase close to the impala,

0:43:270:43:31

they'll have a better chance of running him down.

0:43:310:43:33

But they'll need to work together.

0:43:510:43:53

The sisters creep as close as they dare.

0:44:040:44:07

The trap is set.

0:44:230:44:25

But she loses her stride and the impala gains ground.

0:44:360:44:40

That's when her sister makes her move.

0:44:580:45:00

This is a dangerous moment.

0:45:090:45:11

As long as the impala is still on his feet,

0:45:120:45:15

he could inflict some serious injuries.

0:45:150:45:17

But the young cheetahs deliver the killing bite.

0:45:200:45:22

With this first success, they've entered adulthood.

0:45:330:45:36

By next autumn, they'll be experts.

0:45:390:45:41

For some animals, the race to independence

0:45:460:45:49

takes place in one of the most hostile places on Earth.

0:45:490:45:53

This is autumn in Antarctica.

0:45:550:45:58

The snow is already falling

0:46:020:46:04

and temperatures are plunging to minus 20 degrees centigrade.

0:46:040:46:07

A colony of Adelie penguins

0:46:130:46:14

is rushing to get their chicks to adulthood.

0:46:140:46:17

They only have a few weeks before winter is back in full force.

0:46:170:46:22

The chicks are only three weeks old.

0:46:270:46:30

Their downy coats aren't waterproof,

0:46:300:46:33

so they huddle together to keep warm,

0:46:330:46:35

while their parents are out at sea.

0:46:350:46:37

They may be gone for days...

0:46:410:46:43

..and the chicks can hardly wait for them to come back

0:46:440:46:46

with something to eat.

0:46:460:46:48

The adults work round the clock to keep their ravenous chicks fed.

0:46:580:47:01

When they return, it's an excited dash for food.

0:47:040:47:08

SQUAWKING AND CHITTERING

0:47:080:47:10

There are two chicks in these families,

0:47:170:47:19

but there's probably only enough food for one.

0:47:190:47:22

Most Adelie couples only manage to raise a single chick in a season.

0:47:380:47:42

In a place like this...

0:47:450:47:46

..there's just not enough for everyone.

0:47:470:47:49

Meanwhile, chick number one is getting bigger by the day.

0:47:550:47:59

He'll pack away 30kg of food while he's growing up.

0:47:590:48:02

A month on, and the chicks are losing the last of their baby down.

0:48:100:48:15

Now they have their feathers, it's time for their next rite of passage.

0:48:150:48:19

The adults go first.

0:48:240:48:25

They make it look effortless.

0:48:330:48:35

But the chicks don't seem so sure.

0:48:400:48:42

Apparently, penguins aren't born with a love of water.

0:48:480:48:50

Even when they're in, they're having problems staying submerged.

0:48:560:48:59

They're going to have to practise their buoyancy control.

0:49:020:49:05

They might seem awkward, but they're just about ready.

0:49:170:49:20

Now they'll drift off with their parents,

0:49:220:49:25

out into the Southern Ocean,

0:49:250:49:27

where they'll spend the next five months

0:49:270:49:29

fishing and avoiding the worst of the Antarctic winter.

0:49:290:49:32

As autumn moves on, changing ocean currents

0:49:480:49:51

can bring a wealth of food to some parts of the world.

0:49:510:49:55

And off the coast of South Africa,

0:49:560:49:58

there is a perfect opportunity for one animal

0:49:580:50:01

to make a spectacular leap into adulthood.

0:50:010:50:04

Bird Island, the world's largest colony of Cape gannets.

0:50:080:50:13

The parents have been feeding their young for three months.

0:50:170:50:19

Now it's time the chicks learned to fend for themselves.

0:50:210:50:23

But first, they must learn how to fly.

0:50:280:50:30

They flap their wings to build up muscle strength.

0:50:490:50:51

Gradually, they lift themselves off the rocks.

0:50:530:50:56

Some are up and away first time.

0:51:050:51:07

Others end up floundering in the breaking waves.

0:51:170:51:19

But they all have to make the leap.

0:51:290:51:31

The fledglings leave the nest

0:51:360:51:38

with enough fat reserves to last only ten days.

0:51:380:51:40

So now, they need to learn how to fish.

0:51:400:51:44

Fast.

0:51:440:51:45

Luckily for them, as winter approaches,

0:51:480:51:51

the seas are about to fill with food.

0:51:510:51:53

Billions of sardines are moving in,

0:51:550:51:59

following seasonal currents of cold water,

0:51:590:52:01

running along the South African coast.

0:52:010:52:04

The young gannets have mastered their wings

0:52:140:52:17

and they've joined the hunt.

0:52:170:52:18

They're following a super pod of dolphins,

0:52:210:52:23

who are also chasing the sardines.

0:52:230:52:25

The dolphins drive the shoal to the surface

0:52:400:52:42

and round them up into a ball.

0:52:420:52:44

And the gannets make their move.

0:52:580:53:00

They climb to 30 metres above the surface

0:53:090:53:12

and plunge into the feast.

0:53:120:53:14

They hit the surface at 60mph.

0:53:320:53:35

So they must enter the water with their bodies perfectly streamlined.

0:53:370:53:41

Get it wrong and it's like hitting concrete.

0:53:520:53:55

For the young gannets, it's a skill they have to master first time.

0:53:560:53:59

These birds have had a steep learning curve.

0:54:230:54:25

Chasing the seasonal bounty

0:54:260:54:28

has given them a dramatic start to adulthood.

0:54:280:54:31

Life has one chance to take advantage of autumn's opportunities.

0:54:380:54:42

It's a race against the clock

0:54:470:54:49

to prepare for the challenges of winter.

0:54:490:54:52

Battles for partners are over.

0:54:540:54:57

Migrants have escaped the cold.

0:55:010:55:03

And young animals have learnt what they need to know

0:55:070:55:10

to begin their adult lives.

0:55:100:55:12

Autumn's survivors are ready.

0:55:130:55:16

The world is changing.

0:55:210:55:23

There's a chill in the air and the last leaves are caught up in frost.

0:55:230:55:28

For a chipmunk,

0:55:380:55:40

winter won't be such a hardship.

0:55:400:55:41

With a full store of nuts...

0:55:480:55:49

..he can rest easy

0:55:510:55:53

until spring.

0:55:530:55:54

In Yellowstone, the waterways are starting to freeze over.

0:56:060:56:09

CRACKING

0:56:140:56:16

But the beavers are still active.

0:56:160:56:18

Their underwater lodge is well insulated, and inside

0:56:230:56:28

there's a young family depending on the hard-earned larder of branches.

0:56:280:56:31

On Alaska's frozen tundra, the musk ox are toughening it out.

0:56:540:56:58

For the pregnant females, it will be a game of endurance,

0:57:030:57:06

as they wait until spring, when their calves will be born.

0:57:060:57:09

As winter takes over, autumn's glory is finished for another year.

0:57:120:57:17

Hit it! Over on CBeebies,

0:57:510:57:53

our mission is discovering more about the world.

0:57:530:57:55

ALL: Wow!

0:57:550:57:56

We've got a rocket ship, we've got a unicorn,

0:57:560:57:58

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