1. In a far corner
of S oath-East Asia,
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2. lies the Coral Triangle.
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3. A cluster of the richest coral reefs,
in the world.
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4. Undersea cities crammed full of life.
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5. As in any crowded metropolis,
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6. there is fierce rivalry for space,
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7. for food
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8. and for a partner.
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9. But the reef is also a place
full of opportunity.
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10. A cuttlefish.
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11. It specialises in hunting crabs.
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12. But a large crab is a dangerous quarry.
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13. It has powerful claws.
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14. The cuttlefish, however,
has a remarkable talent.
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15. Its skin contains millions
of pigment cells
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16. with which it can create
ever-changing colours
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17. and patterns.
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18. And that apparently hypnotises the crab.
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19. A cuttlefish may be clever,
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20. but a shark is bigger.
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21. And it eats cuttlefish.
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22. Time to disappear.
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23. Back to the hunt.
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24. A new target,
but the same mesmerising technique.
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25. For those that manage to establish
themselves in these bustling
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26. undersea cities,
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27. there can be great rewards.
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28. Corals build themselves
homes of limestone,
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29. in the warm, clear,
shallow seas of the Tropics.
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30. Their reefs occupy less than one tenth
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31. of one percent of the ocean floor.
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32. Yet, they're home to a quarter
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33. of all known marine species.
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34. They are complex,
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35. infinitely variant structures,
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36. providing all kinds of homes
for their many residents,
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37. from penthouse suites,
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38. to backstreet dens.
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39. Here, on Australia's Great Barrier Reef,
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40. a coral grouper lives
by hunting for small fish.
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41. But how do you get a meal here,
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42. when you're too big
to squeeze into crevices?
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43. And the grouper also has a rival,
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44. one which is highly intelligent,
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45. and seeks the same kind of prey.
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46. An octopus.
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47. It can reach into really narrow cracks.
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48. Even so,
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49. its prey often escapes.
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50. What if they could work together?
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51. The grouper turns pale,
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52. and tries to attract
the octopus's attention.
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53. It performs a head stand.
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54. Not only is the grouper signalling
to the octopus,
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55. it's indicating
where the prey is hiding.
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56. The octopus reaches inside.
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57. The fish take fright.
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58. And swim straight into
the grouper's jaws.
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59. Sometimes, the octopus gets the reward,
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60. sometimes, the grouper does.
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61. Two very different species
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62. have discovered
that teamwork can bring success,
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63. in reef city.
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64. Teamwork, in fact,
is the very foundation of life
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65. on the reef.
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66. The corals themselves
also rely on a partnership.
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67. But one of a much more intimate kind.
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68. Corals are colonies
of anemone-like animals,
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69. polyps.
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70. Some as small as grains of sand.
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71. Living inside the tissues of each polyp,
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72. are minute plant-like cells,
invisible to the naked eye.
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73. By day flourishing in tropical sunshine,
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74. the plant-like cells provide the polyps
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75. with up to 90% of their food.
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76. And when it's dark,
the polyps continue to feed
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77. by using their tentacles to grab
edible particles drifting by.
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78. The polyps also extract
calcium carbonate from the sea water,
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79. and use it to build a stony housing
for themselves.
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80. Coral colonies
can continue to grow for centuries.
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81. Possibly millennia.
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82. And they can build structures
that can reach the size of a house.
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83. The biggest of their cities,
is the Great Barrier Reef.
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84. It runs for over 7400 miles
along the coast of North East Australia.
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85. Activity in coral reefs,
wherever they are, never ceases.
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86. At dawn, the day shift begins.
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87. Accompanied by a chorus
of submarine song,
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88. created by fish, shrimps,
and other inhabitants of the reef.
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89. Every resident in this city,
has its role.
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90. Scavengers, like the sea cucumber,
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91. recycle the waste of others.
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92. These parrot fish,
bite off chunks of coral
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93. and crunch it
to extract the contents.
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94. And then, excrete the rest as sand.
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95. Green turtles, here in Borneo,
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96. pay regular visits
to a particular patch of coral.
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97. This little female is up early
and one step ahead of the others.
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98. Turtles travel long distances along
the reef in order to get here.
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99. This is their destination.
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100. Turtle Rock.
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101. Generations of visiting turtles
have worn a hollow in its top.
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102. This is home to blennies
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103. and surgeon fish.
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104. They clean the visitors picking off
any algae, parasites and dead skin,
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105. that they can find.
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106. Other client are close behind.
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107. A queue is forming.
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108. The big males barge their way in.
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109. And the smaller female is forced out.
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110. She takes a quick turn around the block,
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111. while the others are squabbling.
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112. And then, she sneaks back in.
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113. So the cleaners get a nutritious meal,
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114. and their customers are freed of
their parasites and other encumbrances.
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115. And it's now thought, that a spot
of pampering at a cleaning station
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116. may even reduce stress.
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117. The lands of the Middle East
are so hot and dry,
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118. that much of their surface
is almost lifeless.
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119. But here in the Red Sea,
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120. Coral Reefs flourish wonderfully.
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121. The waters offshore,
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122. are almost as rich
in life as a rainforest.
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123. And some animals come to the reefs
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124. simply for rest and relaxation.
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125. The family of bottlenose dolphins
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126. are resting on the reef
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127. after a night's feeding offshore.
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128. Whilst the adult and their babies sleep,
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129. the adolescents set of the explore...
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130. and they appear to make up games.
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131. You might call this one,
"Catch the coral."
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132. The rules aren't entirely clear.
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133. They pick up different bits
of broken coral,
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134. and drop them.
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135. Some fall fast.
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136. Others sink more slowly.
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137. And some seem to be descending in a way
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138. that pleases everybody.
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139. Only the most successful city residents
can afford the luxury of playing games.
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140. But, such games do that their value.
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141. They may help the youngsters develop
the coordination and the agility
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142. that they will need when
they start hunting in the open sea.
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143. Every reef
has a sharply defined boundary.
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144. Its city walls.
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145. On the outer side is the drop off.
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146. These ramparts protect the city
from the ocean waves.
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147. But twice a day, the walls are covered
by the incoming tide.
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148. In the Bahamas, the rush of the water
creates a truly strange phenomenon.
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149. Seamen once told tales
of a giant sea monster,
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150. lurking here deep inside the reef,
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151. that would drag sailors to their doom.
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152. Today, we know it is in fact a whirlpool
created by the incoming tide
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153. rushing over deep coral caves.
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154. These currents bring in fresh supplies
of microscopic food to the reef
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155. from the open ocean.
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156. And in the Maldives,
on the biggest tides,
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157. one particular coral lagoon
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158. become so flooded with plankton,
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159. that it attracts hundreds
of ocean giants.
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160. Manta Rays.
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161. With three-metre wing spans.
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162. With their huge sloth
like mouths wide open
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163. they filter out the plankton.
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164. And the mantas create
a vortex of their own
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165. that further concentrates their food.
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166. This behaviour has been called
the manta cyclone.
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167. Then the tide changes,
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168. and the supply of food is cut of.
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169. The mantas leave the lagoon.
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170. Life on the sheltered side of the reef
is tranquil and peaceful.
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171. In these suburbs,
any creature wishing to escape
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172. from the bustling crowds of reef city,
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173. can find plenty of space.
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174. On the other hand,
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175. there is nowhere to hide.
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176. That, at night,
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177. makes it a dangerous place.
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178. Nocturnal predators,
such as this lion fish,
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179. patrol the reef edge.
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180. The hunter has become the hunted.
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181. A hobbit,
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182. a giant carnivorous worm
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183. with jaws as sharp as daggers.
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184. It has an ancestry that stretches back
more than four hundred million years.
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185. It's a metre long.
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186. It tastes for scent.
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187. And feels for movement.
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188. Dawn, and with light,
the reef becomes a safer place.
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189. Little bream return to foraging.
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190. The bobbit might still be hungry.
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191. But now in daylight
the odds have shifted.
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192. The bream can see the bobbit.
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193. Instead of retreating,
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194. they join together to blow away
the sand covering the worm.
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195. So, taking away
its advantage of surprise.
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196. By revealing the [rabbit's hiding place,
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197. they will all be able
to feed more safely.
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198. But it pays to remember
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199. there is a bobbit about.
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200. Out here, on the sand flats,
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201. there is safe accommodation for some.
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202. The family of saddleback clownfish
have found an excellent home.
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203. The tentacles
of this carpet anemone can kill.
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204. But the clownfish
are immune to the poison,
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205. so they can shelter from danger.
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206. In return, the fish keep the anemone
clean of debris.
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207. As with all clownfish,
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208. the family is ruled by a big female.
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209. Her white face marks her out
as the boss.
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210. The diminutive male
has to prove his worth,
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211. so he works tirelessly,
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212. removing debris and generally keeping
on top of the housework.
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213. His greatest challenge
is to find a safe place
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214. where the boss can lay her eggs.
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215. But there's nothing solid here
for the female to lay them on.
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216. A nearby shell could be the solution.
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217. If only he can move it
to the protection of the anemone.
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218. Too heavy.
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219. Besides, it has a mind of its own.
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220. The hermit crab.
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221. But out here, twice a day,
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222. the anemone is swept by tidal currents,
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223. and they bring in new opportunities.
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224. An old plastic bottle.
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225. Perhaps, this will do.
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226. Not heavy enough.
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227. A coconut shell.
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228. It looks just right.
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229. But it's a long way from home.
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230. And he can't move it by himself.
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231. So the pair now work together.
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232. A little adjustment
to the anemone's tentacles,
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233. in order to clear a space for it.
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234. And the shell is tucked in.
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235. The female lays.
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236. A safe nursery at last.
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237. He has proved himself worthy
to father her young.
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238. And he fertilizes them.
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239. Now he will meticulously tend the eggs,
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240. keeping them clean
and healthy until they hatch
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241. in 10 days time.
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242. Reef creatures go to great lengths to
give their young a head start in life.
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243. And nowhere more so
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244. than on the remotest reefs in the world.
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245. French Polynesia,
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246. the very heart of the South Pacific.
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247. Protected by their isolation,
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248. some of the reefs here,
are still virtually pristine.
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249. This marbled grouper has made it
in the city and reached adulthood.
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250. Now, it's the time to mate.
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251. To find a partner, he must head
to the most dangerous part of this reef:
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252. The drop off.
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253. Patrolled by grey reef sharks,
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254. hundreds of them.
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255. They seem to be resting,
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256. for now.
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257. Thousands of other groupers
have gathered on the seabed below.
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258. The females are almost bursting
with eggs.
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259. But to mate with one,
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260. he must first get through the crowd
of other waiting males.
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261. And they all have the same thing
on their minds.
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262. They jostle to get as close as possible
to a female.
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263. This male may have
secured pole position,
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264. but the female won't release
her eggs for him to fertilize,
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265. until conditions are just right.
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266. Now the sharks begin to close in,
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267. sensing that
the critical moment is approaching.
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268. The tide is beginning to turn.
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269. This could be the moment to spawn.
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270. Suddenly, the females rush up
towards the surface
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271. releasing their clouds
of eggs as they go.
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272. The males pursue them,
simultaneously releasing their sperm.
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273. It's an act
the groupers seem prepared to die for.
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274. It's now or never.
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275. The fertilized eggs,
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276. will now be swept away
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277. from the many hungry mouths
of the reef dwellers.
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278. Most of the billions of eggs
that cloud the sea,
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279. will be eaten.
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280. But a few,
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281. a tiny but crucial minority,
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282. will find another reef
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283. and make it their home.
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284. But today's coral reefs
are facing a new threat.
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285. The seas are warming.
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286. A rise in temperature
of just one for two degrees
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287. for just a few weeks,
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288. can be enough to cause the coral polyps
to eject their plant-like cells.
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289. When that happens,
the corals lose both their colour,
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290. and their main source of food.
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291. If the high temperatures are sustained,
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292. coral, bleached in this way,
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293. is likely to die.
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294. In recent years, it's thought that
half the world's coral reefs
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295. have been affected by bleaching.
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296. Including, since 2016,
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297. around two thirds
of the shallow water corals,
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298. on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
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299. These once crowded submarine cities,
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300. are reduced
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301. to bleak ruins.
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302. and many of their inhabitants,
left homeless.
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303. Some scientists predict
that by the end of the century,
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304. coral reef cities as we know them,
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305. could be a thing of the past.
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306. Is there any future for these most
precious of ocean treasures?
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307. Well, that ultimately depends
on how fast they heat up,
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308. and how warm the seas become.
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309. And there is a glimmer of hope,
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310. because of the way
the corals reproduce themselves.
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311. On one special night of the year,
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312. the full moon triggers
an extraordinary event:
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313. The spawning of the coral.
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314. With extraordinary synchrony,
entire reefs reproduce.
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315. Billions of fertilized eggs drift away
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316. carried by the ocean currents.
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317. And it's not just the corals that spawn,
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318. so do many other residents of the reef.
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319. A whole range of young
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320. are swept through the oceans,
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321. ready to settle on a vacant site,
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322. and bring back into existence
the complex community,
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323. that is a coral reef.
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324. We may not know what the future
hold for our seas,
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325. but coral reefs can regenerate.
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326. As long as some reefs survive,
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327. some hope can remain.
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328. Next time, we head
into the vastness of the open ocean.
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329. To survive in this blue wilderness,
some are fast,
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330. others use deadly strategies,
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331. and a few rely on the closeness
of their families.
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