Shallow Seas Planet Earth


Shallow Seas

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Our planet's continents are fringed by shallow seas.

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Rarely more than 200m deep, they lie on the continental shelves

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which may stretch sometimes for hundreds of miles,

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before the sea floor drops into deeper, darker waters.

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Altogether, they constitute a mere 8% of the world's oceans,

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but they contain the vast majority of its marine life.

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DEEP, ECHOING CRIES

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A male humpback whale sings to attract a mate.

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ECHOING WHALE SONG

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The whales have just returned to their breeding grounds

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in the shallow seas of the tropics.

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The calf is no more than a few weeks old.

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Despite being three metres long and weighing nearly a tonne,

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he is nonetheless vulnerable.

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But his mother watches over him and, as he begins to tire,

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she supports him close to the surface so that he can breathe more easily.

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These shallows around the equator are excellent nurseries.

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They're warm, calm, and contain very few predators.

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The playful calf is now drinking 500 litres of milk a day.

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But his mother must starve.

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There is nothing for her to eat here.

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Like many tropical shallow seas,

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these crystal-clear waters are virtually lifeless.

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They receive year-round sunlight,

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but they lack the nutrients essential for the growth of plankton.

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The mother will be trapped here for the next five months

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until her calf is strong enough to make the journey

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to the feeding grounds, near the poles.

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Coral reefs are oases in a watery desert.

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Most tropical shallows are barren, but these coral havens contain

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one quarter of all the marine life on our planet.

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Reefs are the work of polyps -

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tiny colonial animals like minute sea anemones.

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Yet the Great Barrier Reef is so big it can be seen from the moon.

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It's actually 2,000 separate reefs that together form a barrier

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stretching for over 1,000 miles along Australia's north-eastern coast.

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Despite its vast size, this reef does not contain

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the greatest variety of marine life on the planet.

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For that, one must travel north, to Indonesia.

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There are individual reefs in Indonesia that contain

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almost as many kinds of fish as live in the whole of the Caribbean.

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There are also ten times the number of coral species.

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Corals thrive in these waters with the help of microscopic plants -

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algae - that grow within the tissues of the polyps.

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And the polyps feed by snaring passing morsels with their tentacles.

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At night, the algae are inactive, but then the polyps put out

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even more tentacles, so coral, in effect, feeds around the clock.

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This well-balanced alliance brings benefits to both polyps and algae,

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and between them they turn the barren seas into rich gardens.

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The Indonesian reefs contain such a variety of life

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because they lie at a giant crossroads.

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This is the meeting place for different seas,

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the Indian Ocean and the Pacific.

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Here, everything demands a closer look.

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On the surface of this sea fan, there are two polyps that are not polyps.

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They're pygmy seahorses,

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the world's smallest, less than two centimetres high.

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They are males, settling a territorial dispute by head-butting.

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An electric flash?

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No, the display of a file clam.

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Perhaps this extraordinary pulsation of the clam's fleshy mantle

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is a warning to frighten away nibbling fish,

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but no-one really knows.

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And there are snakes here too.

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Lots of them!

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These are banded sea kraits.

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They lay their eggs on land, but they hunt here in the water.

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They're too slow to catch fish in a straight chase.

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So they seek prey that is hiding in the nooks and crannies of the coral.

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Their bite is highly venomous and paralyses their victims.

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And on this reef, the snakes do not hunt alone.

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Shoals of yellow goatfish and trevally are seeking similar prey

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and they attract the snakes' attention.

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As one group of hunters searches the reef, they're joined by the other.

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At least 30 snakes have now joined the caravan.

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The big fish scare the prey into cracks,

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and there the snakes can catch them.

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And anything fleeing from the kraits

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will swim straight in to the mouths of the waiting trevally.

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There's nowhere to hide.

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As the raiders scour the reef, more and more snakes join the hunt.

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This co-operation between snakes and fish,

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spectacular though it is, has only recently been observed,

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for it only happens on the most remote reefs in Indonesia.

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Perhaps such hunting alliances were once a common sight, but today

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no more than 6% of Indonesia's reefs are in their pristine state.

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Beyond the coral, stretches a world of shifting sand.

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Out there, with nowhere to hide,

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survival is not easy and camouflage can be crucial.

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If this wasn't moving, you might think it was a shell or a rock.

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In fact, it's an octopus.

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A gurnard -

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its huge pectoral fins disguise its shape,

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and they can also help in clearing away sand when searching for food.

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The jawfish hides underground.

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The wonderpus octopus on the other hand, has such a powerful bite that

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it has a special warning display to tell others to keep out of its way.

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Here and there, plants manage to take root,

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and they're cropped by green turtles.

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Sea grasses are the only flowering plants

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that have managed to grow in the sea.

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Although they put out a few ribbon-like leaves,

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they produce very extensive networks of fleshy stems -

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rhizomes - that are buried in the sand.

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At their lushest,

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they can transform the sea bed into an underwater meadow.

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The largest expanse grows in the shallow waters

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of Shark Bay in Western Australia.

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These vast aquatic grasslands stretch for 1,500 square miles.

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And like terrestrial prairies, they support herds of grazers - dugongs.

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Dugongs are the largest herbivores in the sea.

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They can be three metres long and weigh half a tonne,

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and they eat nothing but sea grass,

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mostly the fleshy rhizomes, which they excavate with their mobile lips.

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A herd can clear a patch of sea grass

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the size of a football pitch in a single day.

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Food is not evenly distributed in the tropical shallow seas

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and it can take a lot of finding.

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But bottlenose dolphins are inquisitive, energetic

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and very intelligent, and they have discovered a shoal of bait fish.

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Together they ride a wave, using it to carry them into the shallows,

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and there it will be easier to make the catch.

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In Western Australia,

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these dolphins have taken on an even tougher challenge.

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The fish have taken refuge close to the beach,

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where the water is only a few centimetres deep.

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Tail-slapping is a method dolphins often use to stun their prey,

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but it doesn't seem to work here.

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The fish are tantalisingly close,

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but they're still out of reach.

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So the dolphins try another technique.

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Vigorously pumping their tails, they work up some speed.

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And then they hydroplane!

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Their momentum carries them right through the shallowest waters

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and on to the fish.

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Now, they're in real danger of being stranded,

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but fortune favours the brave.

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Younger dolphins lie alongside watching.

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But, so far, only eight individuals here

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have mastered this daring technique.

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Although most life in tropical waters

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is concentrated around the coral reefs and the sea grass meadows,

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there are some spectacular exceptions.

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The desert of Bahrain seems a very unlikely place

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to find a crowded, bustling colony of seabirds,

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but every year 100,000 Socotra Cormorants gather here to breed.

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CROAKING

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It's swelteringly hot and only vigorous panting

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can prevent the birds from fatal overheating.

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This hardly seems a good place to rear young.

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But at least there are no land-based predators here.

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The only source of trouble is likely to be the neighbours.

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So each nest is built just beyond pecking reach.

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But what about food?

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There's only bare sand and the warm, shallow sea beyond.

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Neither seem likely to produce enough nourishment

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to support bird life on this scale.

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The answer is blowing in the wind.

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Sand, whipped up by shamals,

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offshore winds, blows into the seas of the Arabian Gulf.

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With the grains come nutrients which act as fertilizer

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and they transform the shallow sea into a rich fishing ground.

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So, paradoxically, it's the roasted sands of Arabia

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that prevent the Gulf from being another desert in the sea.

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The whale calf is now five months old.

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He's almost doubled in size

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and his days in his tropical nursery are coming to an end.

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It has been a warm and safe place in which to grow up,

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but there's nothing to eat here for his mother.

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She has been living off her fat reserves

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for the last eight months and she's close to starving.

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She must leave now while she still has enough energy to guide

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and protect her calf on the long voyage ahead.

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All across the tropics, humpbacks are heading away from the equator

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towards the rich temperate seas

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of both the Southern and the Northern Hemispheres.

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These are colder, rougher and more dangerous waters.

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Mother and calf must stay close.

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FINS SLAP

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They can send sound signals to one another above the roar of the ocean,

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by slapping fins on the surface.

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In winter, the temperate seas are lashed by violent storms.

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The turbulence stirs the water and draws nutrients up from the depths.

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But nutrients alone cannot support life.

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There must also be sunlight.

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In the spring, as the sun daily climbs higher in the sky,

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the algae start to grow.

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Blooms the size of the Amazon Rainforest turn the seas green.

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Individually, the algae are tiny, but together they produce three-quarters

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of all the oxygen in our atmosphere.

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They're eaten by an array of bewildering creatures.

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Salps appear in the plankton soup.

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Individuals link together to form chains,

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which can stretch for 15 metres.

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Pumping water through their bodies,

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they strain out algae and other edible particles.

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Comb jellies cruise through the water.

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They too flourish in this seasonal soup and for short periods,

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they appear in astounding numbers.

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Krill, shrimp-like creatures.

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By weight, they're the most abundant animals on the planet.

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A single swarm can contain two million tonnes of them.

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And that is a lot of fish food.

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The shallow temperate seas

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support the greatest concentrations of fish on our planet.

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Huge shoals migrate from their over-wintering grounds in the depths

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to feed in these rich waters.

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It's these shoals that support most of the world's sea mammals.

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Sea lions have all the agility and speed needed

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to collect what they want,

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and seemingly delight in doing so.

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Dusky dolphin, often in pods 200 strong,

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work together to reap the harvest.

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They break-up the shoals into smaller, more manageable balls,

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and all the hunters benefit.

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WHIRRING

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By mid-summer, the surface nutrients have all been absorbed.

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The algae die and the food chain collapses.

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In a few special places, however,

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the temperate seas sustain these levels of life throughout the summer.

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Along the coast of California, ocean currents carry a constant

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supply of nutrients up from the depths to the surface layers.

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These upwellings

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fertilise forests of giant kelp that thrive in the summer sunshine.

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The algal towers are as high as a three-story house

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and they can grow by half a metre a day.

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Life in the kelp is as full of drama as in any other forest,

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but the cast is less familiar.

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An army of sea urchins is mounting an attack.

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The urchin plague strikes at the kelps' holdfasts,

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their crucial attachments to the rock.

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Holdfasts are extremely tough,

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but each urchin has five teeth,

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which are self-sharpening and are replaced every few months.

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Urchins fell vast areas of kelp forest,

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creating clearings known as urchin barrens.

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Yet barrens is a poor description.

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Millions of invertebrates invade the sea bed.

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The most fearsome predator here is a giant.

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The sunflower starfish is a metre across

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with an appetite for brittle stars.

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It uses its feet to taste for prey.

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When its actions are speeded up, it becomes clear

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that the predator's fondness for the brittle stars

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is almost matched by the brittle stars' ability to get out of the way.

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Sand dollars, flat sea urchins, cluster together as a defence.

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But it doesn't seem to work against the sunflower star fish.

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The predator extrudes its stomach and wraps it around its victims,

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liquefying their soft parts.

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Nothing is left of them except their white skeletons.

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The Californian upwellings are seasonal and relatively small.

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But in Southern Africa, they're so big they create seas

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rich enough to support colonies of over a million seals.

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The Benguela Current sweeps along the western coastline of Southern Africa,

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driving nutrient-rich waters up to the surface.

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And then, at the southern tip of Africa,

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it meets the Agulhas Current arriving from the East.

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The result, even richer waters.

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The seals here thrive on a diet of fish and squid.

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In temperate seas, there may actually be more squid than fish.

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These are chokka squid and they lay their egg capsules in sandy shallows

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bathed by the warmer Agulhas Current.

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Each capsule contains 100 tiny squid.

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Within a few days, they develop spots of pigment which, when they're adult,

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they will use to communicate with one another.

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With females continuing to lay eggs, and males still preoccupied

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with repelling rivals, the squid drop their guard.

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Stingray!

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Short-tail stingray can be up to two metres across.

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They're the largest of all the stingrays

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and they have appetites to match.

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Another predator is on the prowl...

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..the aptly named ragged-tooth shark.

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Raggies grow to three metres long,

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but they share these waters with a shark twice their size.

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The great white...

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..the largest predatory fish on the planet.

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Each dawn, Cape fur seals leave their colony to go fishing.

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To reach the open sea, they must cross a narrow strip of water,

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and that is patrolled by great whites.

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Each seal is indeed swimming for its life.

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The shark relies on surprise.

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The great white's turn of speed is powered by a high metabolism.

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They only thrive in cold temperate seas, for only these waters contain

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sufficient food necessary to fuel such a ravenous predator.

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As you travel towards the poles,

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north or south, the colder, stormier seas can become even richer.

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Midway between South Africa and the South Pole

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lies the isolated island of Marion.

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The island sits in the infamous Roaring Forties, where incessant

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gale force winds draw nutrients up from the depths,

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ensuring plenty of food for king penguins.

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The kings are returning from a three day fishing trip

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with food for their chicks.

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But first they must cross a crowded beach,

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threading their way between gigantic and bad-tempered elephant seals.

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SEAL SNORTS

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PENGUINS CAW

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The 200,000 penguins breeding here

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are testament to the richness of the fishing.

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King chicks are dependent on their mothers for over a year and

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this puts a great deal of pressure on the parents.

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CALLING AND CHIRPING

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Being flightless,

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the returning penguins must cross the open beach on foot.

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Fur seals, that have come to the beach to breed, are waiting for them.

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Fur seals normally live on krill, but these have now acquired

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an unexpected taste for blubber-rich penguins.

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SEAL ROARS

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Penguins may be featherweights by comparison,

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but they have razor sharp bills and a feisty character.

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The seal could easily lose an eye.

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The only safe way to grab a penguin

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is from behind and the birds are well aware of that.

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PENGUIN CHIRPS, SEAL SNORTS

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SEAL GRUNTS

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Both animals are clumsy on this terrain.

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But the penguin has the more to lose.

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SEAL ROARS

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Made it!

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Two out of three penguins survive the seal attacks

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and succeed in reaching their ever-hungry chicks.

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The humpbacks are nearing the end of their epic journeys.

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After two months and thousands of miles,

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they're entering the Polar Seas, both in the north and the south.

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In the far north,

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winter is over at last and the ice is starting to melt.

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The Aleutian Island Chain, running west from Alaska,

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is the gateway to the Bering Sea.

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With the retreating ice,

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rough weather and ferocious currents stir-up these shallow seas.

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Add sunshine and the mix is spectacularly productive.

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Five million shearwaters have flown almost 10,000 miles

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from Australia to get here.

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In all, 80 million seabirds, come here for the summer.

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The greatest concentration to be found anywhere on Earth.

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The humpbacks have finally arrived!

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The giant shearwater flocks hunt the krill swarms,

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sometimes diving to depths of 40 metres to reach them.

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A large humpback eats three tonnes of krill a day.

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The Polar Seas in summer are the most productive on the planet

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and the whales gorge themselves round the clock.

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The fat reserves they lay down now

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will keep them alive during the year to come.

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But it may not always be this way.

0:47:190:47:22

Fish and krill stocks are declining so rapidly

0:47:220:47:25

that spectacles like this may soon be part of history.

0:47:250:47:29

Once the mother and calf have reached their feeding grounds,

0:47:390:47:43

they will separate.

0:47:430:47:44

With luck, the calf will make the epic journey across the oceans,

0:47:470:47:53

from equator to pole, another 70 times,

0:47:530:47:56

cruising back and forth between the shallow seas,

0:47:560:48:00

where life proliferates so abundantly on our planet.

0:48:000:48:05

A one-tonne great white shark, captured in ultra slow motion.

0:48:290:48:35

To a record a breach like this, which in real-time lasts just a second,

0:48:350:48:40

was certainly Shallow Sea's greatest filming challenge.

0:48:400:48:44

Simon's Town in South Africa is a thriving seaside resort.

0:48:500:48:55

Yet just a few miles offshore

0:48:570:48:59

is a major gathering of great white sharks.

0:48:590:49:03

Cameraman Simon King and his crew arrived

0:49:070:49:09

with an assortment of cameras, including an ultra slow motion unit.

0:49:090:49:14

And for support while filming out in the rolling high seas,

0:49:140:49:18

the rim of a bicycle wheel, to keep Simon firmly on board.

0:49:180:49:23

Guided by shark expert Chris Fallows, the crew headed nine miles offshore,

0:49:280:49:35

to Seal Island, home to 60,000 fur seals.

0:49:350:49:39

They arrive at dawn, just in time for the first wave of shark attacks.

0:49:420:49:48

-Oh!

-There. Seal still going!

0:49:480:49:52

Straight away, the action was explosive.

0:49:520:49:55

Wow! And one there and the seal's still here on the right.

0:49:550:50:00

Seals all over the show here.

0:50:020:50:04

Great whites only come to Seal Island for two months of the year,

0:50:040:50:08

coinciding with the seal pupping season, and even then,

0:50:080:50:12

their hunting behaviour is very unpredictable.

0:50:120:50:14

It is non-stop.

0:50:170:50:20

Sharks are attacking seals everywhere.

0:50:200:50:22

The team were lucky to hit such a busy time.

0:50:220:50:25

But the real problem was where to point the camera.

0:50:250:50:29

Extraordinary what these seals have to go through every single day

0:50:310:50:35

if they want to go out to sea to find a meal.

0:50:350:50:37

They go across this relatively small patch of water, which is just

0:50:370:50:42

heaving with these enormous predators.

0:50:420:50:46

OK, what we're gonna do...

0:50:470:50:49

It really requires all of our attention.

0:50:490:50:52

Chris has studied shark attacks around Seal Island

0:50:520:50:55

for the last ten years.

0:50:550:50:56

To record a leaping strike,

0:50:560:50:58

it was essential to understand the daily movements of the seals.

0:50:580:51:02

Simon had no way of knowing where the sharks lay in wait.

0:51:060:51:10

They patrol close to the island

0:51:100:51:11

at depth looking up at the silhouettes of seals swimming above.

0:51:110:51:15

So Simon could only focus his camera

0:51:150:51:17

on the seals as they porpoised for their lives through this danger zone.

0:51:170:51:22

OK, hold on, hold on, Sean.

0:51:220:51:25

In theory, as long as he kept his camera running on the stream

0:51:260:51:30

of escaping seals, in time a shark would strike in frame.

0:51:300:51:34

Wow, unbelievable!

0:51:380:51:40

At last, a breach on camera.

0:51:400:51:43

If we manage to film that at ultra slow motion - ho, ho, ho!

0:51:430:51:47

To reveal the action, the team had modified a specialised studio camera,

0:51:480:51:52

normally used to analyse car crash safety tests in ultra slow motion.

0:51:520:51:59

Applied to a shark breach, this revolutionary camera

0:52:010:52:04

should slow down a one-second leap into a 40-second shot.

0:52:040:52:10

But the camera also had another important capability.

0:52:100:52:14

This is sending all its information back to a massive computer,

0:52:140:52:19

and every 2½ seconds

0:52:190:52:21

it's going in cycles, storing information the whole time.

0:52:210:52:24

When I press the trigger, which in fact is a door bell that we strapped onto the handle,

0:52:240:52:29

it remembers the image right in the middle.

0:52:290:52:32

That's the trigger, so, one-and-a-bit seconds before,

0:52:320:52:36

one-and-a-bit seconds after,

0:52:360:52:38

it will record everything that happens, and that's how we should

0:52:380:52:43

be able to record the entire breach of the shark from the point

0:52:430:52:46

it leaves the water to the point it enters.

0:52:460:52:49

That's the theory, anyway.

0:52:490:52:51

By firing the camera mid-way or just after the event,

0:52:510:52:55

Simon would be able to record all the previous action -

0:52:550:52:59

an invaluable ability since there could be no warning whatever

0:52:590:53:02

of where or when a shark would strike.

0:53:020:53:05

The camera was primed, but the fish had stopped jumping.

0:53:060:53:11

All went quiet for days.

0:53:140:53:16

Then, suddenly, the sharks were back in action.

0:53:240:53:27

The port side. It's gonna come back to you - seven o'clock!

0:53:270:53:31

And it's really quite extraordinary that already, in so short a time...

0:53:310:53:36

-Oh, hold on!

-And again! See, we just had one kick off now.

0:53:360:53:40

Another attack.

0:53:400:53:42

But it's a big ocean.

0:53:420:53:45

The only way to get there is at full speed,

0:53:450:53:49

to try and keep the spray off the gear,

0:53:490:53:54

and maybe, maybe the attack

0:53:550:53:57

has not finished by the time we reach the scene.

0:53:570:54:01

The shark's first surprise breach is always the most spectacular

0:54:010:54:04

and the team's real challenge was to be there when it happened.

0:54:040:54:09

Oh, so close!

0:54:090:54:12

Just, half a second away, half a second away all the time.

0:54:120:54:17

It's gonna happen.

0:54:170:54:20

Wow, another one! God, hold on!

0:54:200:54:22

Again, just too late and the seal escapes.

0:54:320:54:36

Boy, what a mixed feeling, because every time a seal gets away you go,

0:54:360:54:41

"Yes, to the seal,"

0:54:410:54:42

but it also means....

0:54:420:54:44

no shark attack recorded so, um, persevere.

0:54:440:54:50

-Big shark. He came up on...

-Here, here, here, here, here!

0:54:520:54:55

-Fired on it.

-Once the high speed camera has fired, it's out of action

0:54:590:55:04

for 15 minutes while the image is downloaded into the computer.

0:55:040:55:08

In the meantime, Simon switches across to a normal speed camera.

0:55:100:55:15

-It was off on the right at first, I know that.

-Oh, my god!

0:55:150:55:18

Oh, that was the one, damn it!

0:55:180:55:20

Just their luck - a perfect breach,

0:55:200:55:23

but the high speed camera is still downloading.

0:55:230:55:26

That was the one we should have fired on.

0:55:260:55:28

Be careful. Don't look down, you don't want to look down. Not pretty.

0:55:330:55:38

A seal has been fatally injured.

0:55:380:55:41

No, it's still alive. Shark, yeah.

0:55:410:55:44

For scientists and filmmakers alike,

0:55:460:55:49

recording behaviour like this is always charged with emotion.

0:55:490:55:53

When you have a situation like this,

0:55:530:55:54

we keep the boat in the same position, we don't put it in gear.

0:55:540:55:58

It's unfair on the seal, who's now using the boat as a cover,

0:55:580:56:01

and plus it's a very dangerous situation

0:56:010:56:03

for the shark can come up and catch a seal right next to the boat

0:56:030:56:06

and obviously, if it's a full breach we'll get the shark in the boat with us.

0:56:060:56:10

So, at times like this, we always have to be very cautious

0:56:100:56:13

and do our best to respect both the shark and the seal

0:56:130:56:16

by not changing the situation any more than we have to.

0:56:160:56:20

Filming the predation has all the thrill of a chase.

0:56:200:56:24

At the same time, you can't help but feel sorry for the seal.

0:56:240:56:28

So you can see 1,000 kills,

0:56:280:56:30

and it still doesn't wrench your heart. Every single day

0:56:300:56:33

you watch these little guys joggle and justle for their lives.

0:56:330:56:38

He's coming through, Simon.

0:56:380:56:40

For the next two weeks, the team became more and more

0:56:400:56:42

practised at predicting where the shark breaches would take place.

0:56:420:56:46

-Breach!

-And finally their experience paid off.

0:56:460:56:50

Still going.

0:56:500:56:52

Got it. Yes.

0:56:540:56:56

That should be on.

0:56:570:56:59

I should have got it. Oh, man, I think that might be the shot.

0:57:070:57:10

That might be the shot we were hoping for.

0:57:120:57:15

Here it comes, here it comes. Right through the middle, seal first.

0:57:210:57:25

Shark second.

0:57:270:57:28

That's very good.

0:57:330:57:34

Chuffed!

0:57:340:57:36

The high that comes with getting shots like these

0:57:490:57:53

after so much effort is always tempered with respect

0:57:530:57:57

for the predator, and sympathy for the prey.

0:57:570:57:59

Subtitles by Red Bee Media - 2006

0:58:350:58:38

E-mail [email protected]

0:58:380:58:41

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