The Power of Flowers How to Grow a Planet


The Power of Flowers

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I've spent most of my life trying to understand

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the forces that shaped our planet,

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and as a geologist, it always seemed to me

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that rocks were right at the heart of things.

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But now, I'm discovering it's not only volcanoes and colliding continents

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that have driven the Earth's greatest changes,

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because at crucial moments in its history,

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another force has helped create the planet we live on...

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...plants.

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It's a whole new story about the Earth,

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revealing how, from its earliest history,

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plants have shaped our world.

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So far, we've seen how plants and their ancestors began

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by producing our life-giving atmosphere.

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I'm breathing oxygen that was made two-and-a-half billion years ago.

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They'd harnessed light from the sun,

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bringing energy to the world.

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And they'd formed the fertile soil,

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allowing life to colonise the land.

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But the next chapter will take us even further,

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because a powerful newcomer to the plant world was on its way.

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It would conquer every corner of the planet.

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It would shape the very surface of the Earth

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and it would drive the evolution of animal life,

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including our own ancestors.

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This is its story.

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These buildings are nearly 1,000 years old.

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The largest religious site in the world,

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covering 200 square kilometres.

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This is the temple of Angkor Wat in Cambodia.

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I am here to witness the importance

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of one of the most powerful symbols known to humankind.

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A symbol central to an ancient Buddhist ceremony.

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Flowers.

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(BUDDHIST CHANTING)

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You see lotus flowers and jasmine just arranged beautifully up there.

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The lotus are the big ones and the jasmine the trail of little flowers.

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See how the lotus petals are all folded in amongst themselves,

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the different layers representing the various levels of heaven.

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For these monks, flowers have a crucial role.

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And this is just one ceremony from one religion.

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Flowers are central to cultures throughout the world.

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They're deeply woven into all our lives.

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But it's not only a human obsession.

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Because since they evolved,

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flowers have been the driving force for the whole of life on Earth.

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They've become enmeshed in the lives

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of virtually the entire animal kingdom in all its rich diversity.

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From the smallest insect to some of the largest mammals,

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they've all been shaped by flowers.

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But how did this happen?

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And why?

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The emergence of flowers

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is one of the biggest turning points in Earth's history.

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To understand how they changed our planet,

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we need to go right back to a prehistoric time...

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...to the moment when the very first flower appeared.

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Up until around 140 million years ago, the Earth was very different.

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The animal kingdom was dominated by dinosaurs.

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And the separate continents we know today didn't exist.

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Instead, there had been a single huge continent, Pangaea.

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I'm heading for a place that's about as close as you can get

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to that ancient supercontinent.

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It's in the remote South Pacific, 1,500km from Australia.

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The island of New Caledonia.

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It looks like Paradise, doesn't it?

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What makes New Caledonia just so interesting

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is that it's like a Noah's Ark of ancient plants.

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This little journey is going to take us back in time 140 million years.

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Because this part of the world is so isolated,

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it gives a glimpse of the plant world before flowers existed.

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Back then, the plant kingdom had two mighty rulers.

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One of them was the tall conifers,

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like this prehistoric species of pine.

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Look at these trees. Bizarre, aren't they?

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They're huge.

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Araucaria, Cook pine,

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named after Captain Cook who explored this corner of the world.

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Pine trees are a family of conifers that are amongst the oldest in the world

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so when the dinosaurs were around, these were nature's real giants.

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What made flowers so revolutionary

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was the limitations of the ancient plants that came before them.

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To reproduce, conifers like these relied on the vagaries of the wind.

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This is pollen, the male sex cells of conifers.

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Each grain has to be magnified 1,000 times to really see it.

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The two air sacs, one in each side, catch the breeze.

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With luck, the male pollen will be blown

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to a female cone on a nearby tree.

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But for that to happen, each conifer needs vast amounts.

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It's very wasteful.

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Up to 10 billion grains have to be released by a single tree.

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The other big player back then was the ferns.

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Their method of reproduction was also restricting.

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Because ferns evolved in wet, swampy conditions,

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they needed water to transport their sex cells.

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And they use a surprising device.

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What they do is they release a sperm,

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which swims through the water and mud to a nearby plant

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and fertilises the egg.

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Under a microscope, you can see that by thrashing around,

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the male sperm cell can propel itself through water.

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It's able to swim for over two hours.

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It's amazing to think that a plant

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produces something like a human sperm.

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But the downside was that ferns had to live near water.

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It was hugely limiting.

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All this meant something was lacking in the world of Pangaea...

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..diversity.

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There were few species of ferns and even fewer types of conifers.

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Just 1% of the range of plants we have today.

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And the animal kingdom was also limited.

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Scientists have found evidence of 700 different dinosaurs.

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It sounds a lot,

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but today there are over 5,500 species of mammals alone.

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There was little variety.

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It was a monotonous green world.

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And that's how life on the planet would have continued.

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140 million years ago, somewhere in Pangaea,

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one plant of one species happened to chance on a new way of reproducing.

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And it would change the Earth for ever.

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I've pushed further into New Caledonia's jungle.

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The plant I'm after is really rare, which is why I've come so far.

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This is the only place that you find it. It's died out everywhere else.

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Mind you, amongst all of this, it's like a needle in a haystack.

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Hang on a minute.

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That looks like the leaves.

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That wood.

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Got them.

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I've come all the way round the world to find that.

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That is the Amborella plant.

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Amborella trichopoda is the closest living relative

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of the first flower to evolve.

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All flowers today have descended from its ancestor.

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Botanists believe it began when a single plant mutated

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to have leaves that became petals which, instead of being green,

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were probably white like those of Amborella.

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We now consider them to be the very first petals of the very first flower.

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To grasp the significance of this plant, you have to imagine a scene

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in some primordial forest where everything's just completely green.

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And then there's this flash of colour and glint of white.

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Some chance mutation.

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And the thing is that scurrying amongst it is a little beetle.

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Certainly not a bee because bees hadn't evolved yet,

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but a beetle spies this dash of white and scurries across to have a look.

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And then munches on these little white buds

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that are just packed full of pollen.

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But not all the pollen is eaten.

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Some sticks to the beetle, and on it goes to other plants.

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Unknowingly, it's become a courier, delivering pollen from plant to plant,

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pollinating them as it looks for food.

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Plants had evolved an ingenious way of reproducing

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that no longer relied on haphazard methods,

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like the wind for conifers or water for ferns.

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Instead it was reliable.

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Insects carried pollen directly to other plants.

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It was the birth of flowers.

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It's hard to grasp just how revolutionary this was.

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I'm used to thinking of momentous changes in the Earth

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as occurring through huge events -

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vast continents colliding or mountains uplifting,

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but this was the tiniest of events.

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A subtle alteration of how a plant looked

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and a chance encounter with a curious beetle.

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And on the back of that, the world changed for ever.

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Back then, the supercontinent of Pangaea was splitting up.

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Smaller continents were forming...

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...creating countless new landscapes...

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..with new climates and environments -

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rising mountain ranges...

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..and dry inhospitable deserts.

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For conifers and ferns, so dependent on wind and water,

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the new landscapes were impregnable.

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But for flowering plants, it was the chance they'd been waiting for.

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Because they had a powerful in-built advantage.

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This is a monkey puzzle tree.

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Like most conifers, monkey puzzles live for hundreds of years,

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and crucially, they don't reach sexual maturity till they're 40.

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Now...this is a campion flower,

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which in the shadow of this thing looks pretty puny,

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but the campion flower has the last laugh

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because this, like most flowers, matures much quicker.

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In fact, the campion flower can reproduce after just four months.

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It means that in the time that it takes this conifer

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to produce just one generation,

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the flowers can go through 120 generations.

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What's so fascinating is the impact that this has got on evolution

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because every time there's a new generation,

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there's a possibility of a genetic mutation,

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a mutation that might give a characteristic that helps survival.

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So the faster the life cycles,

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the more species can adapt to new environments,

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which, of course, is crucial to our story.

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140 million years ago, these rapid life cycles

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helped flowers exploit the most hostile environments.

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Just like Tankwa Karoo in South Africa.

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Because beneath this desert is a hidden carpet of flowers.

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Each year, it rains for just two months.

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The plants only have this brief window to reproduce.

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So how do they ensure they are pollinated in time?

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They evolved colour.

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Each type of flower that you see is using colour

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in a struggle to get noticed by insects.

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And there isn't much time.

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In a few weeks or days the rains will be gone,

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and if these flowers aren't fertilised by then, the plants will die

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and the opportunity to reproduce will be lost.

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Hundreds of different flowers, dozens of different colours,

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whether it be orange gazanias,

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purple dew flowers,

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or the red balloon pea plant.

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And it wasn't random.

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Many used a different specific colour to attract insects.

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They became targets,

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using insects to transfer the right pollen to the right plant,

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even over great distances.

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And flowers evolved a clever way to enhance this colour.

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To the naked eye, a petal looks smooth.

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But magnify it 1,000 times and you can see its real structure.

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It's not a flat surface at all.

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Instead, the petal is made up of countless nodules.

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Each acts like a tiny prism, which reflects and diffracts light.

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It gives the petal an iridescence, to attract passing insects.

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And in their use of colour, flowers went even further.

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It's a heck of a contraption, isn't it?

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A special camera to give you a kind of...

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insect's view of what a flower looks like.

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That's nice. Look at that.

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Insects and this camera

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can see a part of the light spectrum called ultraviolet

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that's normally invisible to us humans.

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The camera reveals how flowers that appear plain to us

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look completely different to insects

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And the markings are really important

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because they are like airport runway lights

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that guide the insect down onto the petals.

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Like neon signs that say "free food here".

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But once the flowers were pollinated, they still faced a big challenge

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because their offspring then had to make it through the rest of the year.

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Here in the Karoo, that could be ten months of drought.

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To survive, flowers perfected another trick,

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which had a powerful impact on life on Earth.

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Seeds.

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Because seeds have this remarkable ability

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that we don't normally think about.

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These are seeds of the Canna indica flower, and this...

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This is an empty shotgun cartridge.

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I'm going to pack the seeds in where the lead pellets would have been.

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(GUNSHOTS)

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(BANG)

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Oh! It's gone right through.

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Look at that!

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That looks perfectly intact.

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The story goes that during the Indian Mutiny of the 19th century...

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soldiers used these seeds instead of lead shot.

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They're hard enough to be blasted out of a barrel and through wood.

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These seeds are so tough, in fact,

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that it's said that despite being fired from a gun, they can still germinate.

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Sounds unlikely, I know,

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though we'll see.

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But a tough shell wasn't all, because seeds from flowering plants

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developed a further evolutionary advantage

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that no other plant possessed.

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It all starts at the moment of pollination.

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Having been delivered by an insect,

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two cells from the pollen burrow deep into the flower's ovary.

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Here, one fertilises an egg to create an embryonic plant.

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But, and here's the clever bit,

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the second cell from the pollen does a completely different job.

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Instead of becoming a new plant,

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it grows into a food source for the fertilised egg.

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A kind of packed lunch.

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It's called double fertilisation

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and it's unique to the seeds of flowers.

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It meant seeds could lie dormant for months or even years

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until conditions were right.

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As for my Canna indica seeds, well, this is how they fared.

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Despite being blasted from a shotgun,

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four weeks later, here they are now...

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..successfully germinating into a tiny flowering plant.

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Remarkable!

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By 100 million years ago,

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flowers were redrawing the global map of where plants could live.

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They were turning once infertile areas into oases of life.

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And it wasn't just about plants.

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Because these flower oases were now luring animals, too.

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There was one ability above all that gave flowers the power to do this.

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Plants can do something unique

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that marks them out amongst all other living things on the planet.

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Their leaves can capture energy from our nearest star, the sun,

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and turn it into food.

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And the total amount of energy photosynthesis brings to the Earth

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is staggering.

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I know this is a bit odd,

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but just imagine that this little scooter and all the fuel that it uses

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represents all the energy that the USA consumes in just one year.

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Now imagine that you take all the plants in the world,

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all the trees, flowers and grasses...

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..all the jungles, forests and savannas

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and you add up the total energy

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harnessed by plants from the sun every year.

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It's not two scooters' worth or ten.

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It's all of this.

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40 times the amount of energy consumed by America every year.

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It's 100 trillion watts of energy every year.

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Astonishing as this is, flowers took all this energy and went even further.

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An adaptation that would have enormous repercussions

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for the animal kingdom.

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They developed this ingenious method

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of making the sugars available to their pollinators,

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and if I take this syringe here and just slide it delicately in here...

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..I can show you what they came up with.

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It's this really sweet-tasting liquid, nectar, of course.

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One of the most energetic sources of food on the planet

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and something animals found utterly irresistible.

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The nectar from this bird of paradise flower

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has three times the sugar concentration of Coca-Cola.

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Flowers were now pumping bite-sized packets of liquid energy

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into the food chain.

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And this began driving the evolution of entirely new insects.

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Just take a look at this.

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Isn't it beautiful?

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For me, this is one of the most incredible fossils ever found.

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It's such intricate detail.

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The material is amber.

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And inside it is a bee.

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It's a very primitive bee that got stuck in liquid tree resin

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which then solidified and preserved the hapless insect.

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Bee fossils like these began appearing roughly 100 million years ago.

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And what they show is the incredible impact

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flowering plants were now having on evolution.

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What I love about this fossil is that it's like a snapshot of an ancient past,

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just captured in time.

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And it makes you realise that there was a particular point

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when bees first arrived on Earth.

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Bees evolved from carnivorous wasps

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which had turned their backs on meat in favour of pollen and nectar.

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As they evolved, their whole bodies became covered in hair,

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to collect more pollen.

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They developed sophisticated compound eyes,

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with hundreds of tiny lenses to spot the flowers.

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Inside were special cells to detect UV light.

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There are more types of early bees in South Africa

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than anywhere else in the world so it's thought they originated here.

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And if you think about it,

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without the power of flowers, you'd have no bees at all.

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But by creating insects to pollinate them,

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the flowers introduced a new problem for themselves.

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There was a risk that after an insect picked up pollen from a flower,

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it would then travel on to a different species of flower and fail to fertilise it

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The pollen would be wasted.

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The solution of flowers was inspired.

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Down under these cliffs on the South African coast,

0:29:510:29:55

you can see what they came up with.

0:29:550:29:57

This lovely pink flower is Orphium frutescens...

0:30:000:30:04

..which flourishes here in these salty conditions near the sea,

0:30:050:30:08

but what's truly amazing about this plant

0:30:080:30:10

is that it's struck up this exclusive relationship with a particular bee.

0:30:100:30:14

Orphium flowers don't contain nectar.

0:30:160:30:19

The payment they provide is pollen.

0:30:190:30:22

But strangely, they keep it locked up.

0:30:220:30:25

Special twisted stamens stop it being stolen by visiting insects.

0:30:250:30:29

All, that is, except one -

0:30:290:30:33

the female carpenter bee.

0:30:330:30:35

Only she has the key.

0:30:350:30:38

Let me show you what the bee has to do, using these tuning forks here.

0:30:400:30:45

When the bee lands on the flower,

0:30:450:30:47

it changes the rate at which it beats its wings to just the right frequency.

0:30:470:30:52

From this note...

0:30:520:30:53

(HIGH NOTE)

0:30:530:30:55

..to this one.

0:30:560:30:57

(LOWER NOTE)

0:30:570:30:59

Middle C.

0:31:000:31:02

And it's these vibrations that are the key to unlocking the stamens

0:31:020:31:06

which open up at the top here and just shower the bee with pollen.

0:31:060:31:12

(TUNING FORK BUZZES)

0:31:120:31:13

Ah! Look at that.

0:31:130:31:15

Look at the amount of yellow pollen on there. Fantastic!

0:31:150:31:18

(BEE BUZZES)

0:31:200:31:22

Now watch the bee do the same,

0:31:220:31:25

hitting the middle C note...

0:31:250:31:27

(BUZZING DROPS)

0:31:270:31:28

..with the beat of its wings...

0:31:280:31:31

..and unlocking the pollen.

0:31:320:31:34

No other insect does this.

0:31:350:31:38

It's incredible, isn't it?

0:31:380:31:40

One single species of flower, one particular type of bee

0:31:400:31:44

have evolved together to give this intimate partnership.

0:31:440:31:48

It ensured that a flower's pollen was successfully taken

0:31:500:31:55

to a plant of the same species.

0:31:550:31:57

But these increasingly tight relationships

0:32:000:32:02

between insects and flowers had another impact on life on Earth.

0:32:020:32:06

Because they led to tighter and more isolated populations,

0:32:060:32:10

that started creating gaps in the overall ecosystem.

0:32:100:32:14

This, in turn, encouraged new species to evolve, filling in those spaces.

0:32:140:32:20

Flowers were now driving a huge increase in the diversity of life.

0:32:220:32:27

And they were fuelling this increase by pumping nectar into the food chain.

0:32:280:32:33

The insects, bees, butterflies and moths, such as the hawk moth,

0:32:380:32:44

were eating it with long, probing tongues.

0:32:440:32:47

There were new species of birds, like the Calliope hummingbird,

0:32:490:32:54

with beaks perfect for trumpet-shaped flowers.

0:32:540:32:56

And predators, such as these toucans, that ate the pollinators.

0:32:590:33:03

Between 120 and about 90 million years ago,

0:33:040:33:08

all thanks to flowering plants,

0:33:080:33:10

evolution had entered the most explosive phase in the Earth's history.

0:33:100:33:16

By now Pangaea had split up,

0:33:270:33:29

creating the continents so familiar to us today,

0:33:290:33:33

and flowers dominated them.

0:33:330:33:36

They'd conquered the ancient conifers and ferns, and covered half the Earth.

0:33:370:33:41

But it wasn't just life they were changing.

0:33:460:33:49

Because they started altering the very shape of the planet itself.

0:33:500:33:54

This is Ha Long Bay in Vietnam.

0:34:010:34:04

I'm here because it's evidence of how flowers unleashed

0:34:040:34:08

some of the most powerful forces on Earth.

0:34:080:34:11

This whole landscape just dwarfs you.

0:34:120:34:15

You can see these pinnacles of limestone just soaring upwards,

0:34:150:34:20

limestone that you get all over Vietnam.

0:34:200:34:22

And it gives this really distinctive, even iconic landscape called karst.

0:34:220:34:28

The thing is, when you look at things as huge as that

0:34:280:34:31

you look for huge geological processes to create them,

0:34:310:34:35

but it's not always the case.

0:34:350:34:37

That's because 90 million years ago,

0:34:420:34:44

flowers began to build an empire across the planet...

0:34:440:34:47

..in a totally unexpected way.

0:34:500:34:53

They did it by creating vast tropical rainforests.

0:34:570:35:01

Almost all the trees are really giant flowering plants.

0:35:140:35:18

You can see one here in flower.

0:35:180:35:21

And all the trees are doing one thing.

0:35:210:35:25

Breathe out on a piece of glass

0:35:310:35:33

and it's pretty obvious that there's moisture in your breath.

0:35:330:35:36

And in a funny kind of way, plants are breathing out moisture too.

0:35:360:35:39

It's just much harder to see.

0:35:390:35:41

But take a look at this. If I tie a clear plastic bag over this big leaf,

0:35:440:35:49

then we should be able to actually see the plant breathing away.

0:35:490:35:55

And all we need to do now is... wait a couple of hours.

0:35:550:35:59

Look how much moisture this single banana leaf produces.

0:36:070:36:10

It's losing water, or transpiring,

0:36:140:36:17

through tiny pores in the leaf called stomata.

0:36:170:36:21

Close up, you can see the veins of the leaf,

0:36:240:36:27

which transport water around the plant.

0:36:270:36:30

Leaves of flowering plants contain four times more veins

0:36:310:36:35

than other plants.

0:36:350:36:36

Because they share the same type of special vein leaves,

0:36:430:36:46

trees like these act as kind of giant water pumps

0:36:460:36:50

drawing moisture up from the soil and pumping it into the atmosphere.

0:36:500:36:54

Some of these trees chuck out five tonnes of water every day.

0:36:540:36:58

All this transpiration meant that 90 million years ago,

0:37:070:37:11

flowering plants were creating more clouds...

0:37:110:37:15

..which led to more rain.

0:37:190:37:21

(THUNDER CRACKS)

0:37:210:37:23

Water that, when it fell,

0:37:240:37:26

was then drawn up from the forest floor by the same trees,

0:37:260:37:30

forming a self-sustaining cycle of almost perpetual rainfall.

0:37:300:37:35

In fact, 80% of the water in the rainforests

0:37:370:37:41

came from the flowering plants themselves.

0:37:410:37:44

In this new age of rain,

0:37:470:37:49

water became an ever powerful sculpting force.

0:37:490:37:53

And today, you can see its effects in an astonishing hidden world.

0:37:560:38:01

Deep beneath the rainforest in central Vietnam

0:38:150:38:19

are the caverns of Hang Son Doong.

0:38:190:38:21

We are the first British film crew to explore them.

0:38:230:38:27

Hang Son Doong is the largest cave passage ever discovered

0:38:320:38:37

anywhere on Earth.

0:38:370:38:39

This single cavern is nearly two kilometres long.

0:39:040:39:08

All carved from solid rock by nothing more than water.

0:39:090:39:14

All of which has trickled down from a single source -

0:39:220:39:25

the vast jungle above.

0:39:250:39:28

It is a relentless force that has carved out a dozen enormous caverns.

0:39:300:39:34

An underground monument to the power of flowering plants.

0:39:370:39:41

And deep in this labyrinth is what, for me, is perhaps the greatest

0:39:510:39:55

of all the wonders of the plant world.

0:39:550:39:58

Here, at the heart of the cave, a whole rainforest.

0:40:080:40:14

Where the roof has collapsed,

0:40:240:40:26

flowering plants have made their home...

0:40:260:40:29

..200 metres below ground level.

0:40:330:40:36

It is like a lost world.

0:40:400:40:42

The thing is, just a few minutes ago, there was me in a cool, dark cave,

0:40:420:40:48

and then ejected into this place with streaming sunlight.

0:40:480:40:52

Hot and sticky rainforest.

0:40:520:40:55

And where there's water and light, flowers have produced life.

0:40:570:41:01

Plants such as this banana flower thrive,

0:41:130:41:16

which in turn attracts butterflies and other animals.

0:41:160:41:19

It's a thriving ecosystem here.

0:41:220:41:25

And the whole thing is fed, really,

0:41:250:41:27

everything, this whole food chain, is fed by the flowering plants.

0:41:270:41:31

Flowering plants have created a small but perfect version

0:41:360:41:40

of the rainforest above.

0:41:400:41:42

Look at that mist.

0:41:490:41:51

There's a whole weird microclimate in here.

0:41:510:41:54

Clouds of moisture envelope everything.

0:41:540:41:57

And the plants just soak up that moisture,

0:41:570:42:00

just draw it up and then pass it out.

0:42:000:42:03

So that cycle of transpiration

0:42:030:42:05

that we see on a big scale up in the tropical forests

0:42:050:42:08

is captured in miniature down here.

0:42:080:42:10

Caves formed under all the world's great rainforests.

0:42:150:42:19

And this extra water even began to transform the global climate.

0:42:200:42:25

As water evaporates, it absorbs heat and cools the planet.

0:42:280:42:32

The Amazon rainforest alone keeps its whole region five degrees colder.

0:42:330:42:39

Across the planet, water injected into the water cycle

0:42:390:42:43

was eroding deep canyons,

0:42:430:42:46

carving high mountains,

0:42:460:42:48

and sculpting the karst towers so iconic of Asia.

0:42:480:42:52

It's extraordinary, isn't it?

0:42:560:42:59

Especially when you think that all this

0:42:590:43:01

comes not from huge forces deep underground,

0:43:010:43:04

but in part from tiny changes on the leaves of flowering plants.

0:43:040:43:09

65 million years ago was the age of the rainforests.

0:43:150:43:20

They'd spread from the equator to cover most of the Earth.

0:43:220:43:25

It meant three quarters of all plants were now flowers.

0:43:260:43:32

A rich, lush home for millions of new animals.

0:43:320:43:36

The dominance of the flowering plants seemed unassailable.

0:43:380:43:43

But it was not to last.

0:43:430:43:45

A 10km-wide asteroid coming from deep space was on a collision course.

0:43:510:43:58

It hit the Earth with a force of a billion Hiroshima bombs.

0:44:060:44:10

70 billion tonnes of pulverised rock were blasted into a low orbit.

0:44:100:44:16

Scientists called it ejector and travelling at supersonic speeds

0:44:200:44:25

its friction with the atmosphere heated the Earth up

0:44:250:44:29

by over 200 degrees Celsius.

0:44:290:44:31

It spontaneously triggered fires across the land.

0:44:330:44:37

It was one of the worst mass extinctions in the history of the Earth.

0:44:420:44:47

And famously killed off the dinosaurs.

0:44:500:44:53

But less well known is the immediate impact on plants.

0:45:010:45:05

Scientists believe that for them,

0:45:080:45:10

the effect of the asteroid was also devastating.

0:45:100:45:14

Not only were there fires,

0:45:160:45:19

but the ejector created clouds of nitric and sulphur dioxide...

0:45:190:45:23

..which fell as acid rain...

0:45:250:45:29

..destroying plants from the roots up.

0:45:310:45:34

I think it's really hard to imagine

0:45:500:45:52

what the most recent and powerful extinction event must've been like,

0:45:520:45:55

but perhaps the closest you can get to it is a newly-erupted volcano,

0:45:550:45:59

like here in White Island, New Zealand.

0:45:590:46:01

I think it's just the desolation, really.

0:46:040:46:06

The bleakness, that sense that life's just been...obliterated.

0:46:070:46:12

For plants,

0:46:150:46:17

the aftermath of the asteroid impact must have been similar.

0:46:170:46:21

Here on White Island,

0:46:210:46:22

vegetation has been incinerated by successive eruptions.

0:46:220:46:25

And the volcanic fumes create acid rain, just like after the asteroid.

0:46:270:46:32

For flowering plants, it was a disaster.

0:46:340:46:36

That close, almost inseparable relationship with insects

0:46:360:46:39

was now their Achilles heel,

0:46:390:46:41

because even if a flowering plant had survived the initial calamity,

0:46:410:46:45

it needed a specific animal to pollinate it,

0:46:450:46:48

and often they'd simply been wiped out.

0:46:480:46:51

But flowers weren't beaten yet.

0:47:010:47:03

All those evolutionary devices

0:47:040:47:07

that had allowed them to thrive on a hostile planet in the first place

0:47:070:47:10

now became their ultimate tools for survival.

0:47:100:47:14

Coloured petals to attract the few surviving pollinators.

0:47:160:47:20

Nectar to repay them in desperate times.

0:47:210:47:25

Above all, flowers could rely on those superb survival capsules

0:47:270:47:32

that could have been purpose-built for just such an apocalypse...

0:47:320:47:36

..seeds.

0:47:370:47:38

Now, following the asteroid impact,

0:47:480:47:51

seeds helped flowers to re-colonise the Earth.

0:47:510:47:54

And as they did so,

0:47:550:47:57

once again flowers formed an inseparable relationship with animals.

0:47:570:48:02

The dinosaurs had gone, but another type of animal had replaced them...

0:48:020:48:09

..mammals.

0:48:090:48:10

This time, flowers used mammals to help them distribute their seeds.

0:48:150:48:18

Here in Thailand, this whole floating market celebrates

0:48:280:48:32

the clever evolutionary device flowers came up with.

0:48:320:48:36

More sophisticated flowers developed a really sneaky way

0:48:370:48:41

of spreading their seeds.

0:48:410:48:43

A method that didn't just disperse at metres, but kilometres.

0:48:430:48:47

And to do that, they again harnessed the hunger of animals.

0:48:470:48:50

They developed fruit.

0:48:500:48:52

What is that?

0:48:580:48:59

-Durian.

-This is durian?

0:48:590:49:01

-I cut. You taste.

-OK, yeah.

0:49:010:49:04

You can't come to Asia without trying the smelliest,

0:49:050:49:09

most notorious fruit on Earth.

0:49:090:49:12

Beautiful!

0:49:120:49:13

I hope it tastes better than it smells, though.

0:49:140:49:17

Ah! There's the seeds in there.

0:49:180:49:21

And then this flesh.

0:49:220:49:24

Texture's...

0:49:240:49:26

THEY LAUGH

0:49:280:49:31

They're all laughing. They're laughing.

0:49:310:49:33

It's like an off avocado, really.

0:49:330:49:36

I think that's what they call an acquired taste.

0:49:370:49:40

The botanical definition of a fruit

0:49:410:49:44

is that it must actually develop from the flower itself.

0:49:440:49:48

The fleshy coating was once the ovary, as it grew around the maturing seeds.

0:49:490:49:54

Lovely. Incredibly sweet.

0:49:540:49:57

Very subtle.

0:49:570:49:59

Isn't that great? The way all of them hide this inside, this little seed.

0:50:000:50:04

You can see why some warm-blooded mammal or bird

0:50:060:50:09

would want to eat this - it's just packed with nutrition.

0:50:090:50:12

And of course, as you do that...

0:50:120:50:14

you...

0:50:140:50:16

you swallow the seed.

0:50:160:50:18

And then later on you pass that out somewhere, miles away,

0:50:190:50:23

dumped in some little dollop of manure.

0:50:230:50:26

But that's really the point of all of these different types.

0:50:260:50:29

All this diversity is designed to attract animals to eat it.

0:50:290:50:33

Fruit is one of the most remarkable transformations in nature.

0:50:450:50:50

What begins as an advertisement for an insect, a flower,

0:50:520:50:56

becomes a protective covering for the seeds inside.

0:50:560:51:00

And then a final burst... swells into the juicy flesh of a fruit.

0:51:020:51:08

55 million years ago, one group of early mammals was evolving

0:51:240:51:29

that relied almost entirely on fruit.

0:51:290:51:32

In fact, without it, they'd probably never have existed.

0:51:320:51:37

It was an animal which would directly link flowers to our human story.

0:51:420:51:48

They live here in Thailand's Khao Sok National Park.

0:51:520:51:56

Somewhere in these trees there are primates.

0:51:560:52:00

GIBBONS CALLING

0:52:000:52:02

I'm sure they're up there.

0:52:020:52:04

You see the trees just... The branches moving but...

0:52:040:52:07

trying to pinpoint the actual gibbons is...really tricky.

0:52:070:52:13

Oh, there's one.

0:52:130:52:14

Do you see it? It's kind of silhouetted in the branches just up there.

0:52:160:52:20

I'm sure it... Yeah, it's moving.

0:52:220:52:25

My first gibbon.

0:52:250:52:28

The primates - lemurs, monkeys and apes -

0:52:290:52:32

evolved an inseparable partnership with the fruit from flowers.

0:52:320:52:36

And it determined their whole anatomy.

0:52:360:52:40

Primates have got the perfect tools for reaching fruit.

0:52:400:52:43

They've got these really strong hands which,

0:52:430:52:45

along with their powerful chest and shoulder muscles,

0:52:450:52:49

allow them to get up into the trees.

0:52:490:52:51

All these are important traits that we human primates have inherited today.

0:52:520:52:58

And all came from the need

0:52:590:53:01

for the first primates to reach the fruit of flowering plants.

0:53:010:53:05

Norberto Asensio is a primatologist.

0:53:100:53:13

He studies the crucial role fruit plays in the diet of monkeys.

0:53:130:53:18

For most primates, fruit is important. It's part of their diet - so what?

0:53:200:53:25

Is it the core of the diet? The essential core, do you think?

0:53:250:53:28

I would say so.

0:53:280:53:29

I would say that most of the primates will have 70% to 90% of their diet

0:53:290:53:35

-on fruit.

-It's quite a lot.

0:53:350:53:36

But back then, flowering plants created a problem for themselves.

0:53:370:53:43

Primates were so hungry for fruit...

0:53:430:53:45

..they would pick it long before the seeds inside were mature.

0:53:470:53:51

It meant seeds were being wasted.

0:53:520:53:54

So flowers came up with a solution.

0:53:570:54:00

When fruit was ripe, they made it sweet, juicy and brightly coloured.

0:54:060:54:12

It was a colour-coded time delay.

0:54:120:54:14

And it encouraged primates to take only fruit that was fully mature.

0:54:150:54:21

Norberto studies how this colour coding

0:54:230:54:26

drove changes in our ancient ancestors.

0:54:260:54:30

Before now, primates, like all mammals, were colour-blind.

0:54:300:54:35

This made spotting ripe fruit difficult, as I'm about to find out.

0:54:360:54:41

Let's do an experiment.

0:54:410:54:43

Here you have glasses that are going to turn you into a simple mammal.

0:54:430:54:49

Let's see.

0:54:490:54:51

Oh, gosh!

0:54:510:54:52

The glasses simulate colour blindness by removing red from the picture.

0:54:530:54:58

I can kind of tell the difference in contrast between some of them.

0:54:590:55:02

That's gone a very funny shade of bluishness.

0:55:020:55:07

The interesting ones are these reds.

0:55:070:55:09

I know they're red but they just don't seem red at all.

0:55:090:55:12

Overall it's just got a very... almost bland greyness to it all.

0:55:120:55:18

For primates to perceive red,

0:55:230:55:25

they had to evolve a more sophisticated vision system.

0:55:250:55:28

In the retina are special photo receptor cells that detect colour,

0:55:320:55:36

called cones.

0:55:360:55:38

There are 150,000 per square mm.

0:55:390:55:43

Early mammals only had two types of cone, one for green and one for blue.

0:55:440:55:49

It meant they were colour-blind.

0:55:500:55:52

But primates evolved a third type.

0:55:520:55:55

It was sensitive to red.

0:55:550:55:59

Now they could spot ripe fruit.

0:56:000:56:03

Colour vision helped give primates the advantage,

0:56:040:56:07

kick-starting the evolutionary journey that resulted in us humans.

0:56:070:56:12

That's why we have colour vision now

0:56:120:56:15

and we have this wonderful rainbow of colours

0:56:150:56:18

that we can see now and enjoy it.

0:56:180:56:21

Fruit drove the evolution of so many of the traits of our ancient ancestors,

0:56:250:56:30

but this simple need, the ability to see if fruit was ready to eat or not,

0:56:300:56:34

had given primates perhaps for the first time on our planet

0:56:340:56:38

this capacity to see in full glorious technicolour.

0:56:380:56:43

And it's something that I think we just take for granted.

0:56:430:56:46

Since they'd evolved 140 million years ago,

0:56:540:56:58

flowers had transformed our planet.

0:56:580:57:01

They'd come to dominate the plant kingdom,

0:57:010:57:04

sculpting the Earth itself.

0:57:040:57:06

Above all, flowers drove the evolution of animals,

0:57:070:57:12

especially primates,

0:57:120:57:14

shaping our human evolution.

0:57:140:57:17

It seems to me that we are rather animal-centric.

0:57:290:57:32

That by being members of the animal kingdom ourselves,

0:57:320:57:36

we somehow see them as the thing that's at the heart

0:57:360:57:38

of driving changes to life on Earth,

0:57:380:57:41

but I don't think that's true.

0:57:410:57:43

Most of the big changes to life on the planet

0:57:430:57:46

have been brought around by flowers.

0:57:460:57:48

They are the ones that are more manipulative, more inventive,

0:57:480:57:52

more powerful than any of the animals that they are interacting with.

0:57:520:57:55

Most animals are only here because of flowers, including us.

0:57:550:58:00

It's an intriguing thought for next time you're out doing the roses.

0:58:000:58:05

Next, we reveal the epic battle between the forests

0:58:060:58:10

and their greatest challenger, a new type of plant...

0:58:100:58:13

the grasses.

0:58:130:58:15

It was a conflict that would set the world on fire.

0:58:150:58:19

The victor would force our ancient ape ancestors out of the forests

0:58:190:58:23

and into the savanna.

0:58:230:58:25

And go on to trigger the birth of human civilisation.

0:58:260:58:31

Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:58:370:58:40

Email [email protected]

0:58:400:58:43

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