1. The world's greatest wilderness,
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2. the open ocean.
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3. It covers over half
the surface of our planet.
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4. Here, there is nowhere to hide
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5. and little to eat.
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6. It's the marine
equivalent of a desert.
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7. And patrolling this desert,
spinner dolphins.
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8. They stick together.
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9. In a super pod, 5,000-strong.
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10. That maximises their chances
of finding something to eat.
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11. Like all who live here,
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12. they must go to extraordinary lengths
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13. to make their home in the big blue.
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14. There are rare moments
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15. when these empty seas
can explode with life.
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16. Lanternfish off the Pacific Coast
of Costa Rica.
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17. They're scarcely bigger than minnows.
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18. But what they lack in size,
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19. they make up for in numbers.
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20. They are one of the most
numerous fish anywhere.
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21. Normally they only come
to the surface at night
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22. to feed on plankton.
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23. But this immense shoal
has risen during the day,
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24. almost certainly in order to spawn.
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25. For the dolphins,
this would be a bonanza.
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26. They have located the shoal
using their echo-sounding calls.
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27. But they
have to get to it quickly.
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28. They are not the only hunters here.
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29. Yellowfin tuna have also
detected the shoal.
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30. And behind them,
with their two-metre wingspans,
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31. Mobula rays.
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32. Now sailfish,
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33. one of the fastest fish in the sea,
have joined the chase.
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34. The lanternfish may return
to the deep at any moment.
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35. But now, the dolphins have got here.
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36. They swim beneath the shoal,
pinning it to the surface
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37. and forcing the lanternfish
to pack more closely together.
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38. And now the sea begins to boil.
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39. The tuna charge into
the shoal at over 40 miles an hour.
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40. The slower swimming rays arrive at last.
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41. With their immense mouths agape,
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42. they scoop up the lanternfish
by the hundred.
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43. The shoal has now
been largely dispersed,
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44. and the sailfish pick off the survivors.
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45. In just 15 minutes,
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46. all that's left
is a silvery confetti of scales.
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47. But here, such feasts
are only too infrequent.
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48. Whilst the dolphins perform
great feats of endurance,
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49. others are driven
to even greater extremes
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50. to find food in this ocean desert.
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51. A sleeping giant.
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52. A sperm whale.
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53. This family is resting
between bouts of feeding.
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54. Who knows what the owners
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55. of the biggest brain
in the planet dream about.
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56. One has a calf.
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57. It's about two weeks old, but still
dependent on its mother's milk.
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58. It's hungry.
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59. It communicates with
its mother using a pattern of clicks.
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60. But its mother slumbers on.
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61. The calf,
covered in suckerfish,
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62. of which it can't yet rid itself,
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63. has to be patient.
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64. Sleep over, and refreshed,
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65. the whales move on.
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66. Sperm whales don't wait for their prey
to rise to the surface.
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67. They swim down
into the depths to find it.
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68. They take a series of heavy breaths...
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69. to saturate their blood with oxygen.
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70. Then, down they go.
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71. This entire family
dives together in search of squid.
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72. The mother will push her body
to the limits of her endurance,
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73. and already it's hard for her calf
to keep up with her.
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74. The calf sticks to its mother
as closely as it can
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75. touching her frequently
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76. as if for reassurance.
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77. But 500 metres down,
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78. it seems the calf
can't hold its breath any longer.
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79. In their early years,
calves are forced to sit out the hunt.
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80. The adults continue their dive.
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81. The mother changes her calls
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82. into a series of louder
and more rapid clicks.
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83. She's now using sonar
to hunt down shoals of squid.
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84. At 800 metres, a burst of clicks.
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85. Then, silence.
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86. She's made a catch.
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87. The hunters could be away
for as much as an hour.
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88. Finally, the mother
returns from the deep
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89. with a stomach full of squid.
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90. After a long wait,
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91. this hungry calf can take some milk.
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92. It's one of the richest
produced by any mammal.
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93. And the calf guzzles
a bathful of it a day.
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94. It may be six years before a calf
masters the art of deep diving
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95. and is able to find food for itself.
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96. The emptiness of the big blue
is what makes life so hard for hunters.
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97. But it's this emptiness
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98. that makes it
comparatively safe for prey.
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99. A baby turtle, hatched just days ago,
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100. is leaving the crowded,
dangerous waters of the coast,
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101. and heading for the open ocean.
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102. Only recently have we
begun to solve the mystery
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103. of where baby turtles disappear to
in their early years.
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104. To start with, they fill
their little stomachs with plankton.
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105. But soon, they need
something more substantial.
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106. Hundreds of miles offshore,
in every ocean,
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107. there are communities
of young castaways.
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108. So, anything
that floats attracts them.
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109. A Ivy-
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110. It may have been
at sea for several years,
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111. and it has already become
the centre of a small community.
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112. Young pufferfish are here
for the same reason.
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113. A floating log
is just the kind of refuge
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114. this young turtle has been looking for.
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115. Here, there's not only seaweed
on which to graze,
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116. but barnacles.
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117. But it's important to stay undercover.
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118. A young ocean-going
silky shark is here too.
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119. It's learning what tastes good,
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120. and what doesn't.
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121. We now know
that many young turtles
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122. stay in such places for several years
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123. until adulthood.
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124. Even if it means facing
the full force of the high seas.
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125. The sun, beating down
on the deep blue,
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126. warms the surface waters
so that they evaporate.
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127. As the vapour rises,
it condenses into clouds.
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128. They rapidly build into
gigantic burgeoning towers,
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129. which eventually
generate violent storms,
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130. some a thousand miles across.
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131. Hurricane force winds
sweep across the open ocean,
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132. building waves
that could rise to 30 metres tall.
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133. Out here, ships have been
known to sink without trace.
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134. One hundred
and thirty million containers
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135. are shipped across
the oceans every year.
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136. And on average, four of them
fall into the sea every day.
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137. In 1992,
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138. a few were lost that contained
a consignment of bath toys,
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139. including 7,000
plastic ducks like these.
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140. They started their travels
a thousand miles off Alaska.
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141. Some drifted
right across the Pacific Ocean,
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142. and reached Australia.
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143. Others were carried north,
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144. and landed on shores
between Russia and Alaska.
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145. They even found their way
into the high Arctic.
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146. One duck,
having been at sea for 15 years,
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147. and crossing three oceans,
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148. eventually landed
on the west coast of Scotland.
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149. Their travels vividly illustrate
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150. how a network of currents
connects all our oceans
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151. into one gigantic circulatory system.
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152. Many of the inhabitants of the big blue
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153. rely on these currents
to carry them to feeding grounds.
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154. The blue shark.
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155. It travels over 5,000 miles a year,
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156. riding on the currents,
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157. supported by its broad wing-shaped fins.
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158. This one may not
have eaten for two months.
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159. But the currents can carry
promising traces of fatty oils
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160. from many miles away
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161. and will lead it to its next meal.
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162. After days of travel,
the smell of food gets stronger.
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163. A dead whale,
recently struck by a ship.
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164. This could be a real feast,
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165. but the blue shark must be cautious.
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166. Great white sharks,
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167. ten times heavier than the blue,
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168. are highly possessive
around a whale carcass.
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169. Great whites are eager
to feed on energy-rich whale blubber,
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170. which we now know
forms a major part of their diet.
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171. Once the great white has had its fill,
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172. smaller sharks, like the blue shark,
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173. tackle what's left of the carcass.
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174. As the oils from this dead whale
spread more widely,
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175. more and more blue sharks appear.
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176. Within days, the carcass
will be stripped of its blubber.
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177. Then, no longer kept buoyant by its oil,
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178. it will sink into the depths below.
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179. The blue, with its reserves
of fat replenished,
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180. can now survive
for another two months without eating.
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181. Over half of all animals
in the open ocean
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182. drift in currents.
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183. jellyfish cross entire oceans
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184. feeding on whatever happens
to tangle with their tentacles.
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185. Some can grow to a metre,
even two metres across.
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186. And when, by lucky chance,
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187. they encounter
a patch of sea rich in plankton,
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188. their numbers explode.
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189. It's such a successful strategy,
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190. that jellies are one of the most
common lifeforms on the planet.
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191. But among the jellies,
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192. and looking somewhat like them,
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193. is a rather more complex
and sinister creature.
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194. The Portuguese man 0' war.
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195. It floats with the help
of a gas-filled bladder,
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196. propped by a vertical membrane.
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197. With that serving as a sail,
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198. it maintains a steady course
through the waves.
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199. Long threads trail behind it,
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200. some as much as 30 metres long.
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201. Each is armed with
many thousands of stinging cells.
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202. A single tentacle could kill a fish,
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203. or, in rare cases, a human.
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204. But among its lethal tentacles,
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205. lurks a man 0' war fish
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206. that feeds by nibbling them.
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207. Whilst this fish
has some resistance to the stings,
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208. it must still be extremely careful.
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209. Most other fish are not so lucky.
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210. A tentacle has caught
this one, and reels it in.
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211. It's already paralysed.
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212. Specialised muscular tentacles
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213. transfer the victim to others
that digest the catch,
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214. liquefying it with powerful chemicals.
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215. Eventually all that is left
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216. is a scaly husk.
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217. This voracious man 0' war
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218. may collect over a hundred
small fish in a day.
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219. For the most part,
the big blue seems featureless.
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220. A place where the winds blow,
uninterrupted by land.
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221. But beneath the surface,
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222. there are long
mountain ranges, deep trenches,
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223. and isolated volcanic peaks
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224. that make it far more varied
than the human eye can see.
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225. We're only just discovering
in any detail
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226. how the inhabitants
of the big blue exploit that.
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227. A lonely whale shark
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228. on a special journey.
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229. She is as long as a small aircraft,
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230. and she weighs over 20 tonnes.
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231. Like many sharks, she does not lay eggs,
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232. but gives birth to live young.
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233. She carries up to 500 of them
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234. in her swollen belly.
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235. She may be the biggest fish in the sea,
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236. but the place where whale sharks
give birth has not yet been found.
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237. Today, however, we may be a step
closer to solving this mystery.
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238. We have known
that great numbers of whale sharks,
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239. at certain times of the year,
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240. appear around the Galapagos Islands.
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241. Here they assemble around a tiny islet
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242. that rises abruptly
from particularly deep water.
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243. It's known as Darwin Island.
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244. Here, swirling currents
bring out nutrients from the deep,
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245. so enriching these waters
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246. that they attract
great concentrations of fish
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247. from far and wide.
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248. Thousands of hammerhead sharks
also assemble here.
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249. They are nearly all female.
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250. They, too, it seems,
have come here to breed.
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251. The whale shark receives
an extraordinary welcome.
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252. Silky sharks,
themselves three metres long,
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253. bounce against her rough skin,
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254. perhaps to scrape off
any parasites they might have.
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255. These sharks could be a danger
to any newly-born young.
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256. So, perhaps to avoid them,
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257. the whale shark dives
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258. down to around 600 metres.
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259. And there, she may release her young.
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260. In these great depths,
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261. away from the predators
that hunt in the waters above,
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262. and with abundant food,
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263. her babies could grow
and eventually disperse.
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264. No one, it is true,
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265. has ever seen young ones
in these little-visited depths.
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266. But the fact that hundreds
of expectant whale sharks
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267. come here every year,
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268. is strong evidence that somewhere here
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269. lies the nursery
of the biggest fish in the sea.
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270. There are almost 50,000 sizeable islands
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271. scattered across the world's oceans.
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272. One of them is South Georgia.
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273. An ideal place for those ocean-dwellers
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274. who are compelled to land
in order to breed.
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275. The wandering albatross.
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276. It may spend as much
as a year continuously at sea,
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277. searching for food,
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278. gliding on wings that are
three and a half metres across.
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279. The biggest of any living bird.
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280. The entire world population
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281. of 76, 000 Wanderers
nest on South Georgia
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282. and half a dozen or so
of the other smaller islands
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283. that lie in the Southern Ocean.
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284. It's spring.
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285. And this bird is returning
to the nest site it has always used.
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286. Its lifelong partner is already here.
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287. In South Georgia,
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288. individual birds have been
studied for their entire lives
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289. revealing that older pairs
in their late thirties
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290. will go to extraordinary lengths
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291. to give their young
the best possible start in life.
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292. This chick is now several weeks old,
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293. but still has its warm, downy coat.
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294. The chick will need a regular
supply of regurgitated fish and squid.
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295. With food so scarce in the open ocean,
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296. both parents may have to scour
thousands of square miles
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297. just to provide enough for one meal.
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298. Ageing parents struggle on
all through the Antarctic winter,
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299. to raise a chick that is big,
strong and healthy.
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300. After some 130 days,
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301. the youngster begins to replace
its down with flight feathers.
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302. Finally, nine months
after their egg was laid,
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303. this chick is ready to leave.
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304. Of all the chicks
they've reared in recent years,
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305. such a favoured chick
will have the best chance of survival.
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306. But it will also be their last.
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307. Elderly parents never recover
from their exertions.
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308. They will soon leave this island,
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309. never to be seen again.
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310. Surviving in the open ocean
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311. has always tested animals to the limit.
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312. But today, they face a new,
additional threat.
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313. Plastic.
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314. just over a hundred years ago,
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315. we invented a wonderful new material
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316. that could be moulded
into all kinds of shapes.
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317. And we took great trouble to ensure
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318. that it was hard-wearing, waterproof,
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319. and virtually indestructible.
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320. Now, every year,
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321. we dump around eight million
tonnes of it into the sea.
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322. Here, it entangles and drowns
vast numbers of marine creatures.
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323. But it has even more widespread
and far-reaching consequences.
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324. A pod of short-finned pilot whales.
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325. They live together in,
what are perhaps,
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326. the most closely-knit of families
in the whole ocean.
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327. Today, in the Atlantic waters
off Europe, as elsewhere,
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328. they have to share
the ocean with plastic.
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329. A mother is holding
her new-born young.
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330. It's dead.
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331. She is reluctant to let it go
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332. and has been carrying
it around for many days.
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333. As plastic breaks down,
it combines with other pollutants
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334. that are consumed
by vast numbers of marine creatures.
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335. In top predators like these,
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336. the toxic chemicals
can build up to lethal levels.
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337. It's possible her calf
may have been poisoned
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338. by her own contaminated milk.
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339. Pilot whales have big brains.
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340. They can certainly experience emotions.
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341. judging from
the behaviour of the adults,
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342. the loss of the infant
has affected the entire family.
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343. Unless the flow of plastics
into the world's oceans is reduced,
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344. marine life will be poisoned by them
for many centuries to come.
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345. The creatures
that live in the big blue
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346. are, perhaps, more remote
than any animals on the planet.
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347. But not remote enough, it seems,
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348. to escape the effects of what
we are doing to their world.
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349. Next time, we journey
into the bountiful green sea.
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350. These are enchanted worlds,
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351. home to strange creatures...
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352. where only the most ingenious
will triumph.
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