Deserts Planet Earth II


Deserts

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Imagine a world where temperatures rise to 120 degrees Fahrenheit.

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Where there's no escape from sun, wind and dust.

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Imagine a world with almost no food or water.

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These are the conditions in

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one third of the lands of our planet.

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To live here demands the most extraordinary survival strategies.

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This is the oldest desert in the world.

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The Namib in south-west Africa.

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It's been dry for 55 million years.

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Life here for a hunter is as hard as it gets.

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A pride of lions.

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One of the very few that endures this desert's scorching temperatures

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and lack of water.

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Hunting here presents special problems.

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A herd of oryx, the only prey within 20 miles.

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Out here, there is no cover for an ambush.

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It'll have to be a straight chase.

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They have failed

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and each failed hunt brings the lions closer to starvation.

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To find enough to eat,

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the pride continually searches an area the size of Switzerland.

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Three days and 100 miles later, and still no kill.

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These are desperate times.

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BIRDS CAW

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A dry riverbed on the edge of their territory.

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The only animals here are giraffe,

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but these one-tonne giants could kill a lion with a single kick.

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Lions seldom tackle such formidable prey...

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..but this pride can't go on much longer without food.

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The whole pride must work together as a team if they're to succeed.

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Two lionesses lead the chase.

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Others race to cut off possible escape routes.

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The giraffe has the speed and stamina to outrun the pride...

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..but it's being chased into a trap.

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Up ahead, the lead female waits.

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It's now up to her.

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Most lion hunts end in failure.

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But no lions fail more often than those that live in the desert.

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Once again, the pride must continue their search.

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THUNDER RUMBLES

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It does, sometimes, rain in the desert.

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Here, in the American West, storms can strike with devastating force.

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After ten months of drought,

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millions of tonnes of water are dumped on the land in under an hour.

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Over millions of years,

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sand and gravel carried by the rampaging floods

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have carved channels through the solid rock.

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Slot canyons, 150 feet deep.

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In some places, these canyons have widened

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until the land between them is sculpted into tablelands

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and isolated pinnacles,

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some of the most dramatic landscapes on the planet.

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The rain may be long gone...

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..but there is water here...

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..locked away within the tissues of specialist desert plants.

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Cacti are unique to American deserts.

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They all hoard water,

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storing it in swollen stems

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and protecting it behind a barricade of spines.

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They're so successful that they dominate these deserts.

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But this forest of spikes can cause

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problems for the animals that live here.

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A Harris hawk.

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It has developed special techniques for hunting amongst the cacti.

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Ground squirrels.

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Prey.

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At the first sign of danger they bolt for the safety of the thorns.

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But the hawks have a tactic to flush them out.

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These are the only birds of prey that hunt in packs.

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Flying in formation, they try to drive their quarry into the open.

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But this squirrel is staying put.

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So now the hawks continue the hunt...

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..on foot.

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They're closing in from all sides.

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Soon, all escape routes are cut off.

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The squirrel is trapped.

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The spines that cover almost every plant in this desert

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can provide protection and shelter for many animals.

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So, why should these spikes be hung with corpses?

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What kind of creature could be responsible

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for creating such a gruesome scene?

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There's a mysterious killer at work in this desert.

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It's a butcherbird.

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This little songbird uses the spines as a butcher uses his hook -

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to hold its prey as it dismembers it.

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CHICKS SQUAWK

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And with chicks to feed, he also uses the spines as a larder.

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He's been stocking it for weeks.

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Hanging his prey out of the reach of scavengers on the ground

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ensures that his newly hatched young will never go hungry.

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An ingenious solution to making the good times last in the desert...

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..if a little macabre.

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CHICKS SQUAWK

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Some deserts are so arid,

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they appear totally devoid of all vegetation.

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Yet even these landscapes can be transformed in a matter of days.

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The deserts of Peru are amongst the driest in the world,

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but just add a little water and plants that have lain dormant

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for months will burst into life.

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And when a desert suddenly turns green,

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even the most seemingly desolate can become a land of opportunity.

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No creature exploits the greening of a desert more quickly

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or more dramatically than a locust.

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Madagascar's arid south-west

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has received its highest rainfall in years.

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Now, an army is on the march,

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attracted by the smell of newly sprouting grass.

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Locusts are normally solitary creatures,

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but when food becomes suddenly plentiful they come together

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into an unstoppable force that devours everything in its path.

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But this devastation is about to get a lot worse.

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The locusts now transform into winged adults,

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and with conditions as good as this,

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they do so three times faster than normal.

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Now they are at their most voracious...

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and with wings, they can take to the skies.

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Once airborne, the locusts can travel over 60 miles a day

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in their search for new feeding grounds.

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A super swarm of this scale may only appear once in a decade.

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This one extends over 200 square miles

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and contains several billion individuals.

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Between them, they will devour 40,000 tonnes of food in a day.

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Nothing can strip a land of its vegetation with such speed

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and thoroughness as a plague of locusts.

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When the food eventually runs out, the whole army will die...

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but not before it's devastated the land.

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With no plants to bind them,

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thin soils soon turn to dust and blow away.

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Now, these barren lands are left to the mercy of the elements.

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Scorched by the sun and scoured by windblown sand,

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desert rock is shaped into strange, otherworldly landscapes.

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These rocky deserts may have a beguiling beauty,

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but when they become this barren, very little life can endure.

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For many animals, the only way to survive the most hostile times

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is to keep moving.

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In the Kalahari, brief rains have given way to the dry season.

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Food and water are becoming increasingly scarce.

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For these zebra, it's time to leave.

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They're setting off on

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the longest overland migration made by any mammal in Africa,

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marching towards the scent of distant rains.

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As drought intensifies,

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desert-living elephants must also undertake long journeys

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in search of water.

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The older females can remember where,

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even in times of extreme drought, there may still be water

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and sometimes lead the herd to a water hole they may not have visited

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for decades.

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These zebra are almost at the end of their journey.

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This is what they've been heading for...

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..a rare water hole.

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In deserts, most water holes are short lived.

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They appear after rains,

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but then vanish almost as quickly as they came.

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Animals have come here from many miles around.

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Yet this can be a dangerous place in which to linger.

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60 miles away, in the heart of the desert,

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sandgrouse chicks are hatching.

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It's safer for them to be here.

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But being so distant from water is a gamble.

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With only their mother to shield them from the sun,

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if they get nothing to drink, they will be dead within hours.

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Their only hope is their father.

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Every morning he makes the 120-mile round trip

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to get water for the family.

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Grouse from all over the desert visit this oasis,

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arriving together in large flocks,

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and that is important.

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There's safety in numbers.

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The male snatches a drink,

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but he also needs to collect water for his chicks.

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Using specially adapted breast feathers,

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he can soak up water like a sponge.

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But it takes time, and he is in danger.

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Goshawk.

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Sandgrouse here are their main prey.

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Again and again, the male sandgrouse risk their lives

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in order to collect water for their chicks.

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This is why sandgrouse nest so far from water holes.

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At last, he's soaked up as much as he can.

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Carrying a quarter of his body weight in water,

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he can now set off on the long journey home.

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He's back, and just in time.

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He can give the chicks their first ever drink.

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But he will have to undertake this perilous journey every day

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for the next two months until his chicks can finally make the flight

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to the water hole for themselves.

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It's July in the deserts of Nevada in the western United States.

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The hottest time of the year.

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Bands of wild horses, mustang,

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are converging on one of the last remaining water holes for miles.

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Now, water not only offers them the chance to drink,

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it can also bring power.

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If a stallion can control access to water,

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he will have secured mating rights to the entire herd.

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So stallions try to dominate these pools,

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fighting off rivals who venture too close.

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A stranger.

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He's travelled ten miles to be here

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because the pools where he's come from have already dried up.

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With him come his females.

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If he can't provide them with water, they will leave him

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for the white stallion who already dominates this pool.

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So, he will have to fight.

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There is everything to lose.

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A broken leg or a shattered jaw

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would mean a slow and painful death.

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A missed kick, and it's all over.

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The new arrival has won...

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and his prize is more than just the chance to drink.

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He has provided for his herd, and in the process,

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stolen his rival's females.

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The white stallion's rule is over.

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Desert life is not only shaped by the scarcity of water,

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but also by the relentless power of the sun.

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The highest temperatures on Earth

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have all been recorded in its deserts.

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Changes in the climate mean temperatures here

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are rising more than the global average and,

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as deserts heat up, they are also expanding.

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Every year, a further 50,000 square miles of grass and farmland

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are turning into barren stretches of dust and rock.

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In the heat of the day, surface temperatures can reach 160 degrees,

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far too hot to handle for most.

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But not for this shovel-snouted lizard.

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Raising its feet off the ground in turn...

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..enables each to briefly cool.

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But even this dancing desert specialist

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can't stand the heat for long.

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One option is to find shade.

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Dune grass, the only vegetation here, provides virtually none,

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but just an inch beneath the surface of the sand,

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it is several degrees cooler.

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Avoiding the extreme heat imposes a rhythm on desert life.

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And many animals here choose the simplest option of all...

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..staying hidden all day,

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and only venturing out in the cool of the night.

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As darkness falls, animals appear from seemingly nowhere.

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And, among them, inevitably,

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are hunters.

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One of the most voracious nocturnal predators

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is also one of the hardest to see.

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This mysterious creature hardly ever appears on the surface of the dunes.

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But there are signs on the sand that can give it away.

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It lives only here, where the sand grains are so perfectly dry

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and polished, that they flow almost like water.

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It's no bigger than a ping-pong ball.

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A golden mole.

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It's totally blind,

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but there's nothing to see underground anyway.

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Instead, it has superb hearing.

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Its entire head acts as an amplifier

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that picks up vibrations through the sand, so, to locate prey

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on the surface of the dune, it has, paradoxically,

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to thrust its face into the dune.

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Termites.

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Not easy to catch when you're blind.

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Far better to go into stealth mode.

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Once below the sand, it can detect the slightest movement...

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..allowing it to strike with pinpoint accuracy.

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Well, most of the time.

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They can travel two thirds of a mile a night in search of its dinner...

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..and right now, it has just detected its main course.

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Little wonder it's sometimes called "the shark of the dunes".

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Food can be so scarce in the desert that, even at night,

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animals can't afford to be choosy about what they eat.

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Israel's Negev desert.

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Otonycteris, the desert long-eared bat, is on the hunt.

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Most bats catch flying insects on the wing, but there are so few

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of these in the desert that this bat must do things differently.

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It has to hunt on the ground.

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But what really sets it apart is what it's hunting...

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..a deathstalker scorpion.

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The venom of this species is potent enough to kill a human.

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Tackling it seems madness for a bat weighing just half an ounce.

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In the pitch-black, both predator and prey are effectively blind,

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but the scorpion has one advantage -

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he can sense the approach of the bat through vibrations in the sand.

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Otonycteris must rely entirely on its hearing.

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If the scorpion doesn't move, it won't know it's there.

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The battle is on.

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Armed with crushing pincers and a sting loaded with venom,

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this scorpion is a dangerous opponent.

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A direct strike on the head.

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Is it all over?

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Not for this bat.

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Otonycteris clearly has some immunity to the venom,

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but repeated stings must still be extraordinarily painful.

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And if the bat is not to go hungry,

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it must catch another three scorpions before sunrise.

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Desert animals have developed remarkable strategies

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to make the most of the rare opportunities that come their way.

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Although some deserts may not see rain for several years,

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most will hold a little water in one form or another.

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The trick is simply knowing how to reach it.

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Dawn in the dunes of the Namib, and something magical is happening.

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Moist air lying over the neighbouring Atlantic is cooled

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and blown inland, forming fog banks that shroud the desert in mist.

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This precious moisture lies tantalisingly out of reach

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at the top of the dunes, and it won't last long.

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It'll be burnt off by the sun just hours after it rises.

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Darkling beetles race to the top of the dunes

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to reach the fog before it vanishes.

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Some of the Namib's dunes are 1,000 feet high,

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the tallest in the world.

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For a beetle no larger than a thumbnail, this is the equivalent

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of us climbing a dune twice the height of Everest.

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But even more impressive is what it does next.

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Standing perfectly still, facing into the wind,

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the beetle does a headstand.

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Fog begins to condense on its body.

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Microscopic bumps on its wing cases direct the water

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to grooves that channel it towards the mouth.

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Before returning down the slip face,

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it will drink 40% of its body weight.

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This little beetle has learned how to conjure water out of the air

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in one of the driest places on earth.

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And it's not alone on the top of the dunes.

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Web-footed geckos use a similar trick.

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Surely, few animals go to greater lengths to get a drink.

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Unfortunately, Namaqua chameleons know that on foggy mornings,

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the beetles coming down the dunes are juicier than those going up.

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The diversity of life that thrives in a world almost totally devoid

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of water is truly remarkable.

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Success in the desert depends on an extraordinary variety of

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survival strategies that have evolved over millions of years.

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But our planet is changing.

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The world's deserts are growing bigger, hotter and drier,

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and they're doing so faster than ever before.

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How life will cope here in the future remains to be seen.

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Finding animals in these vast empty landscapes was a persistent problem

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for the Deserts team.

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But surely this wouldn't be the case when they set out to film

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one of the greatest concentrations of wildlife on earth.

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It can't be hard to find a billion locusts, can it?

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OK.

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With news that freak rains have triggered

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a mass emergence of locusts in a remote part of Madagascar,

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the team sets off in pursuit.

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We've got some young hopper locusts just crossing the road

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in front of us here. We've just had to stop the cars.

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Here they are, here, all on the side of the road, look.

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It looks promising.

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But though finding hoppers is easy,

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filming them proves more of a challenge.

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Can we rethink this? Because it's not really working.

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The locusts are really skippy.

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Any kind of movement, they just freak out, So we're now doing

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our best locust-herding techniques to try to get them to go

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in front of the lens, which is proving harder than anticipated.

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This is my Monday morning locust-herding jazz hands.

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-Ah!

-What? What's that?

0:49:550:49:56

-What?

-It's a wasp nest.

0:49:560:49:58

Soon, the crew find themselves surrounded by locusts.

0:50:020:50:05

No need for jazz hands now.

0:50:050:50:08

It's a good start, but the team still need to film the winged swarms

0:50:120:50:16

that complete the story.

0:50:160:50:18

But, once airborne, they can travel 60 miles a day,

0:50:220:50:26

so finding a swarm won't be easy.

0:50:260:50:28

Fortunately, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation

0:50:310:50:35

are here, too, to help.

0:50:350:50:37

The FAO are on a mission to eradicate the plagues

0:50:410:50:44

decimating crops across Madagascar,

0:50:440:50:47

and if anyone knows where the locusts are,

0:50:470:50:52

it's the local expert, Hasibelo.

0:50:520:50:55

He thinks that they are moving this way.

0:50:550:50:58

Time to go swarm-chasing.

0:51:010:51:03

But chasing is the operative word.

0:51:060:51:09

The locusts always seem one step ahead.

0:51:090:51:12

It's amazing, really, because this plan's completely

0:51:140:51:17

radically changing, hour by hour. We now have to travel

0:51:170:51:20

several hours further north, which is...

0:51:200:51:23

-a bit of a pain.

-It's a bit of a pain.

0:51:230:51:25

As they venture into the unknown,

0:51:280:51:30

it's clear it's been a very wet year indeed.

0:51:300:51:33

Traffic is one thing, but boats on the road?

0:51:400:51:45

Unconventional traffic.

0:51:450:51:46

Progress is slow, and soon stops altogether.

0:51:510:51:54

The locusts are just across the water, so the team must follow...

0:52:000:52:04

..on this.

0:52:070:52:09

What could possibly go wrong?

0:52:110:52:13

We're now stuck on, possibly, the world's most antiquated raft

0:52:180:52:22

trying to cross a very fast-flowing river.

0:52:220:52:25

But, onwards and upwards.

0:52:250:52:27

We've now got an hour-long river crossing, and we'll just have to see

0:52:270:52:31

what's on the other side.

0:52:310:52:32

With the river behind them, it should be plain sailing.

0:52:490:52:53

But once across, the team discovers that, yet again,

0:52:570:53:01

the locusts are nowhere to be seen.

0:53:010:53:03

And, after two weeks on the road,

0:53:100:53:12

the local street food is beginning to take its toll.

0:53:120:53:15

So Ed's not very well. Been yacking up and...

0:53:190:53:23

And not very nice stomach.

0:53:240:53:27

We just need to do whatever it takes now

0:53:270:53:29

to get us to where the swarms are.

0:53:290:53:32

The next day, the team forges on.

0:53:320:53:34

Briefly.

0:53:370:53:38

Here's Jamal, our driver.

0:53:420:53:45

What do we think? Yeah?

0:53:450:53:46

No?

0:53:470:53:49

The road has turned into a bog.

0:53:490:53:52

The cars can go no further.

0:53:520:53:55

We need to cross this area of water to get to the savanna

0:53:550:53:58

and find our locust swarms.

0:53:580:54:00

And it's amazing to think that, with the combined might of the

0:54:010:54:04

United Nations and the BBC, we are eventually defeated by a puddle.

0:54:040:54:10

Back to the drawing board.

0:54:120:54:14

Once again, it's Hasibelo to the rescue.

0:54:180:54:21

Well, we have a plan.

0:54:220:54:24

Taking to the air was never on the cards,

0:54:270:54:30

but thanks to the FAO's helicopter,

0:54:300:54:32

the team can now play the locusts at their own game.

0:54:320:54:36

More smoke?

0:55:000:55:01

This time, it's a billion locusts...

0:55:050:55:08

..and one very relieved producer.

0:55:160:55:19

Woohoo!

0:55:320:55:35

Against the odds, the team has located a super-swarm.

0:55:350:55:39

This is exactly what we've been looking for. We've driven halfway

0:55:570:56:00

across Madagascar to one of the most remote parts there is.

0:56:000:56:03

It's just been a nightmare, but, finally, we're here.

0:56:030:56:07

I mean, this is the biggest swarm we could have even hoped for.

0:56:070:56:10

It is just amazing.

0:56:100:56:11

Look at here, I'm going to film here.

0:56:110:56:13

It's incredibly exhilarating, and yet totally shocking,

0:56:150:56:18

to think of the devastation that swarms like this are causing.

0:56:180:56:22

It just makes you realise how important the FAO are

0:56:220:56:25

in getting this under control.

0:56:250:56:27

I'm just going to run through it.

0:56:310:56:32

I should be naked for this, but...

0:56:320:56:34

Thankfully, Rob kept his clothes on, and, more importantly,

0:56:490:56:54

this plague has now been halted,

0:56:540:56:56

but not before the team had witnessed one of the biggest swarms

0:56:560:57:00

ever recorded on film.

0:57:000:57:01

Next time, we journey to the world's great plains,

0:57:140:57:19

where spectacular gatherings of wildlife cope with extreme change...

0:57:190:57:24

..and surprising creatures survive in unexpected ways.

0:57:260:57:30

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