1.  In the far north, 
			  
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2.  after three dark months of winter, 
			  
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3.  a world is waiting 
			  
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4.  for a trigger. 
			  
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5.  The sunshine of spring. 
			  
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6.  Starfish are the first to respond. 
			  
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7.  They race for the highest point, 
			  
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8.  and, sensing changes in the water, 
			  
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9.  with the tips of their tube feet, 
			  
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10.  they spawn. 
			  
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11.  Sea cucumbers, 
			  
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12.  with only their mouths exposed, 
			  
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13.  HOW emerge. 
			  
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14.  They collect as many
starfish eggs as they can. 
			  
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15.  Which is quite a lot
when you've got ten arms. 
			  
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16.  Now sea pens 
			  
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17.  rise up to claim a share. 
			  
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18.  The creatures here 
			  
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19.  must grab what they can
of this annual banquet. 
			  
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20.  For the light has also set in motion, 
			  
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21.  the greatest transformation of all. 
			  
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22.  Fronds of kelp, 
			  
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23.  a marine alga, rise towards the surface, 
			  
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24.  lifted by their gas-filled bladders. 
			  
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25.  Soon, a marine forest has materialised. 
			  
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26.  Teeming with life of all kinds, 
			  
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27.  these green seas 
			  
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28.  are some of the most productive
but fiercely competitive waters 
			  
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29.  in all the oceans. 
			  
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30.  The southern tip of Africa. 
			  
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31.  Here two great oceans collide. 
			  
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32.  In the shallows, 
			  
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33.  fed by rich currents, 
			  
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34.  are bountiful forests of kelp. 
			  
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35.  Barely visible, except for
the pulsating siphons 
			  
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36.  through which it breathes, 
			  
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37.  a common octopus waiting for prey
to pass by. 
			  
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38.  A crab will do. 
			  
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39.  The octopus sets off in pursuit. 
			  
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40.  And then lurks 
			  
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41.  with the patience of an ambush hunter. 
			  
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42.  But the octopus shares the Cape waters 
			  
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43.  with a great concentration
of other predators. 
			  
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44.  Fur seals, 
			  
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45.  and sharks. 
			  
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46.  They all eat octopus, 
			  
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47.  if they can find one. 
			  
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48.  And Pyjama Sharks are experts 
			  
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49.  at hunting in the undergrowth. 
			  
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50.  Time to disappear. 
			  
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51.  But these tough-skinned little sharks 
			  
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52.  are small enough to reach deep
into crevices. 
			  
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53.  But the octopus is far from finished. 
			  
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54.  She slips her tentacles
into the shark's gills. 
			  
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55.  That prevents the shark from breathing. 
			  
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56.  So the shark has to let go. 
			  
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57.  When caught out
in the open and vulnerable, 
			  
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58.  this octopus does something
truly extraordinary, 
			  
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59.  and never recorded before. 
			  
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60.  She disguises herself 
			  
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61.  with a protective armour of shells. 
			  
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62.  She's hiding 
			  
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63.  in plain sight. 
			  
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64.  The shark can sense its prey. 
			  
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65.  But the shells confuse it. 
			  
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66.  In a forest full of hungry mouths, 
			  
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67.  superior wits allow this octopus
to stay alive. 
			  
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68.  Forests of kelp 
			  
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69.  flourish in seasonal waters
around the globe, 
			  
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70.  particularly along the Pacific Coast
of North America. 
			  
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71.  Here, the biggest kelps of all 
			  
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72.  grow in vast forests, 
			  
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73.  stretching for hundreds of miles. 
			  
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74.  In some places, 
			  
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75.  the giant fronds rise up
to 60 metres tall. 
			  
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76.  The thickets they create 
			  
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77.  are crowded with life. 
			  
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78.  Competition here for space and food 
			  
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79.  is intense. 
			  
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80.  A challenging problem 
			  
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81.  for the Garibaldi fish. 
			  
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82.  He tends to his patch of seaweed 
			  
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83.  filled with tiny creatures that he eats. 
			  
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84.  As with most farmers, 
			  
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85.  his work never ends. 
			  
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86.  He removes snails and any other grazers 
			  
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87.  that come to eat his algae. 
			  
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88.  No matter how big they are. 
			  
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89.  He has to deal with pests of all kinds. 
			  
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90.  This can be the worst of them. 
			  
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91.  Sea urchins that can scrape off
every vestige of algae from a rock. 
			  
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92.  Its spines are needle sharp. 
			  
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93.  Somehow the Garibaldi must remove it. 
			  
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94.  But the problem with sea urchins 
			  
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95.  is that they just keep coming. 
			  
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96.  When evening arrives
and the light fades, 
			  
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97.  he has to stop.
He not only needs a rest, 
			  
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98.  he needs to hide. 
			  
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99.  Because at night, 
			  
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100.  predators prowl through these forests. 
			  
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101.  A Torpedo Ray, 
			  
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102.  capable of stunning its victim
with 45 volts of electricity. 
			  
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103.  While the Garibaldi hides, 
			  
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104.  the urchins can feed
without interruption. 
			  
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105.  The light returns, 
			  
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106.  and he finds his farm is once again 
			  
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107.  under attack. 
			  
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108.  Urchins like locusts, 
			  
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109.  have the ability to swarm 
			  
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110.  and this can be disastrous 
			  
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111.  not just for the Garibaldi, 
			  
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112.  but for the kelp forest itself. 
			  
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113.  All the vegetation is now under attack. 
			  
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114.  The urchins move through the forest 
			  
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115.  cutting through the kelp fronds 
			  
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116.  and leaving behind vast barrens. 
			  
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117.  These urchin armies 
			  
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118.  have felled many kelp forests 
			  
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119.  along the Pacific Coast
of North America. 
			  
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120.  But help is at hand. 
			  
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121.  Sea otters. 
			  
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122.  All other kinds of otters spend much
of their lives on land. 
			  
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123.  But sea otters rarely leave the water. 
			  
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124.  At first, a newly born pup 
			  
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125.  is not a very good swimmer. 
			  
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126.  So its mother spends hours 
			  
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127.  grooming its fur to make it buoyant. 
			  
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128.  But to provide her youngster with milk, 
			  
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129.  and keep herself warm 
			  
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130.  she must eat up to 50%
of her bodyweight every day. 
			  
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131.  She does that by eating shellfish. 
			  
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132.  And urchins are among a sea otter's
favourite delicacies. 
			  
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133.  In the past, sea otters were hunted
so intensively for their fur, 
			  
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134.  that they came close to extinction. 
			  
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135.  With them gone, 
			  
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136.  many kelp forests were replaced with 
			  
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137.  urchin barrens. 
			  
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138.  Today, sea otters are protected. 
			  
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139.  And as their numbers slowly return, 
			  
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140.  many of the kelp forests
are recovering too. 
			  
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141.  Now, in some remote places, 
			  
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142.  sea otters are so numerous, 
			  
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143.  they assemble in huge wafts. 
			  
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144.  Something that hasn't been seen 
			  
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145.  for over a century. 
			  
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146.  In the sun drenched
shallows off Australia, 
			  
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147.  kelp is replaced by the sea 's
only flowering plants, 
			  
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148.  sea grass. 
			  
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149.  The most extensive of these marine
grasslands 
			  
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150.  can stretch for over 3,000 square miles. 
			  
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151.  All across the Tropics, 
			  
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152.  they're patrolled by tiger sharks. 
			  
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153.  They can grow
up to five metres in length. 
			  
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154.  And have powerful crushing jaws. 
			  
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155.  Green turtles are their prey. 
			  
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156.  The turtles feed almost entirely
on sea grass. 
			  
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157.  A single one can consume
up to two kilos of it in a day. 
			  
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158.  But they can never rest easy. 
			  
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159.  Healthy turtles will keep well away
from an approaching shark. 
			  
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160.  And just by keeping the turtles
on the move, 
			  
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161.  the sharks prevent
any one patch of sea grass 
			  
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162.  from being overgrazed. 
			  
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163.  And that has benefits for us all. 
			  
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164.  A patch of sea grass 
			  
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165.  can absorb and store
55 times as much carbon dioxide 
			  
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166.  as the same area of a rainforest. 
			  
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167.  So the prairies and their sharks 
			  
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168.  are surprising allies in the fight 
			  
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169.  against a warming climate. 
			  
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170.  The struggle to survive
in our green seas 
			  
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171.  can have far reaching consequences. 
			  
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172.  Once a year, 
			  
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173.  one particular meadow in Australia, 
			  
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174.  is transformed. 
			  
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175.  Around the first full moon of winter, 
			  
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176.  an army materialises. 
			  
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177.  Spider crabs. 
			  
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178.  For the past year
they've been feeding in deeper waters. 
			  
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179.  Now, they march across
the sea grass plains. 
			  
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180.  Hundreds of thousands of them. 
			  
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181.  They clamber over one another 
			  
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182.  creating great mounds 
			  
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183.  nearly a hundred metres long. 
			  
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184.  They're not seeking mates 
			  
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185.  neither are they laying eggs. 
			  
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186.  They have come here in order 
			  
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187.  to grow. 
			  
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188.  Like all crabs, their bodies
are enclosed in a hard 
			  
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189.  unexpandable shell. 
			  
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190.  So to grow,
they have to break out of it. 
			  
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191.  And that allows the soft one
that has developed beneath 
			  
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192.  to expand. 
			  
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193.  It will take days
for the new shell to harden. 
			  
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194.  Its legs are so limp, 
			  
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195.  that they won't work properly. 
			  
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196.  The crab is unprotected 
			  
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197.  and in great danger. 
			  
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198.  A smooth stingray. 
			  
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199.  It's huge, about four metres long. 
			  
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200.  It wants a soft, freshly moulted crab 
			  
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201.  that will be easier to eat. 
			  
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202.  The crabs try to stick together. 
			  
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203.  But now, disturbed by the ray, 
			  
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204.  they're scattering. 
			  
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205.  A newly moulted crab 
			  
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206.  is too weak to keep up with the crowd. 
			  
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207.  The safest place is right
in the middle of the pile. 
			  
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208.  That is why they have
all assembled here. 
			  
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209.  There is safety in numbers. 
			  
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210.  But the vast majority
of the crabs escape. 
			  
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211.  And within the next few days, 
			  
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212.  they will be ready to return
to the depths, 
			  
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213.  and resume their lonely wanderings 
			  
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214.  in search of food. 
			  
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215.  This is no graveyard. 
			  
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216.  But the triumph
of a hundred thousand crabs, 
			  
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217.  successfully moulted. 
			  
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218.  The green seas of Southern Australia, 
			  
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219.  are particularly rich in such
spectacular assemblies. 
			  
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220.  But most of the creatures come together
for a very different reason, 
			  
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221.  to breed. 
			  
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222.  The giant cuttlefish. 
			  
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223.  The largest of all cuttlefish. 
			  
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224.  They live for just one or two years. 
			  
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225.  Now, as the Australian summer
draws to an end, 
			  
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226.  they have one last act to complete. 
			  
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227.  To find a mate. 
			  
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228.  But there are
over one hundred thousand males 
			  
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229.  competing for the arriving females 
			  
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230.  in this one bay. 
			  
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231.  Among them, a giant, a true goliath. 
			  
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232.  He probably weighs about ten kilos. 
			  
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233.  Bands of colour sweep across his skin. 
			  
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234.  That's how cuttlefish communicate. 
			  
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235.  This smaller male couldn't
possibly take him on. 
			  
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236.  Beside Goliath and under his protection, 
			  
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237.  a female who has just mated with him. 
			  
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238.  But other rivals are still interested. 
			  
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239.  It seems a small male
wouldn't stand a chance. 
			  
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240.  The female is now displaying
a white stripe 
			  
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241.  along her side nearest Goliath. 
			  
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242.  It's a clear signal that she no longer
wants to mate with him. 
			  
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243.  It's all the encouragement
that the little male needs. 
			  
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244.  He's going to have to use trickery. 
			  
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245.  He tones down his colours, 
			  
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246.  and tucks in his arms. 
			  
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247.  He's just the right size to mimic
a female. 
			  
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248.  Goliath is deceived. 
			  
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249.  The small male now
displays a white stripe, 
			  
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250.  just like the real female 
			  
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251.  to deter his advances. 
			  
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252.  He slips beside her. 
			  
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253.  And they mate. 
			  
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254.  By mating with multiple partners, 
			  
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255.  the female ensures
the greatest genetic diversity 
			  
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256.  for her young. 
			  
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257.  The sneaky male leaves, 
			  
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258.  his final act complete. 
			  
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259.  So even among giant cuttlefish,
it seems, 
			  
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260.  it's not all about size. 
			  
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261.  Other males
in these Australian green pastures, 
			  
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262.  take greater responsibility
for their young. 
			  
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263.  A Weedy Sea Dragon. 
			  
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264.  This is a male 
			  
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265.  and he's carrying a precious cargo. 
			  
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266.  While mating with the female, 
			  
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267.  he collected the eggs 
			  
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268.  and attached them to his underside. 
			  
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269.  Now, he's leaving the seaweed thickets 
			  
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270.  and travelling into more open waters 
			  
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271.  where elaborate camouflage
is less effective. 
			  
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272.  And there are many predators out here. 
			  
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273.  And this is what the fathers
risk their lives for. 
			  
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274.  Dense clouds of minute shrimp. 
			  
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275.  Mysids. 
			  
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276.  One of a sea dragon's favourite foods. 
			  
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277.  They're drawing other sea dragons
out here too. 
			  
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278.  Finally, it's time for the young
to break free. 
			  
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279.  But algae has grown over
these developing eggs. 
			  
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280.  And it risks smothering them. 
			  
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281.  Nonetheless, the babies are emerging. 
			  
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282.  They've hatched successfully. 
			  
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283.  The fathers return to the tangle of kelp 
			  
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284.  where they're virtually invisible. 
			  
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285.  While the young remain out here. 
			  
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286.  But they will grow quickly, 
			  
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287.  surrounded as they are
by their ideal food. 
			  
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288.  Vast numbers of the ocean's young fish, 
			  
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289.  start their lives in the green seas. 
			  
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290.  One of the richest nurseries of all,
are the mangrove forests. 
			  
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291.  Fringing the coastline of the Tropics, 
			  
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292.  they form a natural protective barrier
between land and sea, 
			  
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293.  and are some of the world's most
productive forests. 
			  
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294.  Below the water,
their arching aerial roots 
			  
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295.  give them a firm footing. 
			  
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296.  Here there's abundant food
for baby fish. 
			  
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297.  While the tangled roots protect them
from bigger fish, 
			  
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298.  and other predators that haunt
the channels. 
			  
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299.  But in Northern Australia 
			  
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300.  with the receding tide, 
			  
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301.  the little fish are forced
to leave their shelter. 
			  
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302.  And now, they're vulnerable. 
			  
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303.  It's the most deadly assassin
in the green seas. 
			  
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304.  The Zebra Mantis Shrimp. 
			  
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305.  A male, almost 40 centimetres long. 
			  
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306.  But he's not hunting just for himself. 
			  
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307.  He's collecting food for his mate. 
			  
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308.  She may have been his partner
for 20 years. 
			  
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309.  She relies on him to bring her food. 
			  
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310.  And puts her energy
into her eggs instead. 
			  
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311.  In a world so full of food, 
			  
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312.  this would seem a sensible strategy. 
			  
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313.  But it's also a risky one. 
			  
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314.  Were her male to disappear,
she could starve. 
			  
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315.  Something has caught
this mate's attention. 
			  
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316.  Perhaps an irresistible odour 
			  
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317.  or a distant call. 
			  
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318.  Whatever the reason,
a male will leave his burrow 
			  
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319.  and his lifelong mate. 
			  
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320.  An even larger hole. 
			  
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321.  Females who have lost their mates 
			  
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322.  appear to send out distress signals 
			  
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323.  to call in a new male. 
			  
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324.  A larger female will produce more eggs. 
			  
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325.  So by mating with her, 
			  
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326.  he will father more offspring. 
			  
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327.  But infidelity comes at a price. 
			  
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328.  A larger partner demands more food. 
			  
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329.  The richer a sea,
the greater the competition. 
			  
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330.  And there is one green sea 
			  
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331.  that supports more life
than all the rest combined. 
			  
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332.  Unlike the mangrove forests
and the sea grass prairies, 
			  
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333.  its location is in the open seas, 
			  
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334.  and only temporary and unpredictable. 
			  
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335.  This greenness comes
not from rooted plants, 
			  
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336.  but from clouds of floating ones. 
			  
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337.  Billions of microscopic phytoplankton 
			  
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338.  are proliferating. 
			  
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339.  And in such numbers, 
			  
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340.  that they fuel one
of the greatest feasts of all. 
			  
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341.  Off America's Pacific Coast, 
			  
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342.  hundreds of common dolphins
are rushing to a banquet. 
			  
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343.  They're not the only ones homing in. 
			  
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344.  So are sea lions. 
			  
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345.  They're heading
for Monterey Bay, California, 
			  
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346.  where algal blooms have caused
an explosion, 
			  
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347.  in plankton feeders. 
			  
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348.  Anchovies, 
			  
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349.  millions of them. 
			  
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350.  The dolphins herd the anchovies
towards the surface. 
			  
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351.  Sea birds and sea lions
take advantage of the shoals appearance. 
			  
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352.  It's a race to grab a share
before others arrive. 
			  
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353.  Hump Back Whales, 
			  
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354.  hundreds of them. 
			  
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355.  With every upward lunge, they sieve
out up to a 100 kilos of fish. 
			  
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356.  They're claiming the biggest share
of one of the biggest feasts on earth. 
			  
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357.  So crucial are these tiny plankton, 
			  
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358.  that almost all marine life ultimately
depends upon them. 
			  
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359.  It's the green seas, not the blue 
			  
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360.  that are the basis of almost all life 
			  
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361.  in the world's oceans. 
			  
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362.  Next time on Blue Planet II, 
			  
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363.  we meet the creatures
that live where two worlds collide. 
			  
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364.  And discover how they cope with the
demands of the ever-changing coasts. 
			  
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