1. Dwarfed by the vast expanse
of the open ocean,
Copy !req
2. the biggest animal
that has ever lived on our planet.
Copy !req
3. A blue whale, 30 meters long
and weighing over 200 tons.
Copy !req
4. It's far bigger
than even the biggest dinosaur.
Copy !req
5. Its tongue weighs
as much as an elephant.
Copy !req
6. Its heart is the size of a car,
Copy !req
7. and some of its blood vessels
are so wide
Copy !req
8. that you could swim down them.
Copy !req
9. its tail alone
Copy !req
10. is the width
of a small aircraft's wings.
Copy !req
11. Its streamlining,
close to perfection,
Copy !req
12. enables it to cruise at 20 knots.
Copy !req
13. It's one of the fastest animals
in the sea.
Copy !req
14. The ocean's largest inhabitant
Copy !req
15. feeds almost exclusively
on one of the smallest -
Copy !req
16. krill, a crustacean
just a few centimeters long.
Copy !req
17. Gathered in a shoal,
Copy !req
18. krill stain the sea red,
Copy !req
19. and a single blue whale in a day
can consume 40 million of them.
Copy !req
20. Despite the enormous size
of blue whales,
Copy !req
21. we know very little about them.
Copy !req
22. Their migration routes
are still a mystery,
Copy !req
23. and we have absolutely no idea
where they go to breed.
Copy !req
24. They are a dramatic reminder
Copy !req
25. of how much we still have to learn
Copy !req
26. about the ocean and the creatures
that live there.
Copy !req
27. Our planet is a blue planet.
Copy !req
28. Over 70 percent of it
is covered by the sea.
Copy !req
29. The Pacific Ocean alone
covers half the globe.
Copy !req
30. You can fly across it non-stop
for 12 hours
Copy !req
31. and still see nothing more
than a speck of land.
Copy !req
32. This series will reveal
Copy !req
33. the complete natural history
of our ocean planet
Copy !req
34. from its familiar shores to
the mysteries of its deepest seas.
Copy !req
35. By volume, the ocean makes up
Copy !req
36. 97 percent of the earth's
inhabitable space,
Copy !req
37. and the sheer quantity
of its marine life
Copy !req
38. far exceeds that
which inhabits the land.
Copy !req
39. But life in the ocean is not
evenly spread. It's regulated
Copy !req
40. by the path of currents
carrying nutrients,
Copy !req
41. and the varying power of the sun.
Copy !req
42. In this first program, we will
see how these two forces interact
Copy !req
43. to control the distribution of life
Copy !req
44. from the coral seas
to the polar wastes.
Copy !req
45. The sheer physical power
of the ocean
Copy !req
46. dominates our planet.
Copy !req
47. It profoundly influences
the weather of all the world.
Copy !req
48. Water vapor rising from it forms
the clouds and generates the storms
Copy !req
49. that ultimately
will drench the land.
Copy !req
50. The great waves that roar in
towards the shores
Copy !req
51. are dramatic demonstrations
of its power.
Copy !req
52. Waves originate far out at sea.
Copy !req
53. There, even gentle breezes
can cause ripples,
Copy !req
54. and ripples grow into swells.
Copy !req
55. Out in the open ocean,
unimpeded by land,
Copy !req
56. such swells can become gigantic.
Copy !req
57. It's only when an ocean swell
eventually reaches shallow water
Copy !req
58. that it starts to break.
Copy !req
59. As it approaches the coast,
the water at the bottom of the swell
Copy !req
60. is slowed by contact
with the seabed.
Copy !req
61. The top of the swell,
still traveling fast,
Copy !req
62. starts to roll over
and so the wave breaks.
Copy !req
63. The ocean never rests. Huge currents,
such as the Gulf Stream,
Copy !req
64. keep its waters constantly
on the move all round the globe.
Copy !req
65. It's these currents
more than any other factor
Copy !req
66. that control the distribution
of nutrients and life in the seas.
Copy !req
67. A tiny island lost
in the midst of the Pacific.
Copy !req
68. It's the tip of a huge mountain
Copy !req
69. that rises from the sea floor
thousands of meters below.
Copy !req
70. The nearest land is 300 miles away.
Copy !req
71. Isolated sea mounts like this one
Copy !req
72. create oases
where life can flourish
Copy !req
73. in the comparatively empty expanses
of the open ocean.
Copy !req
74. But all the creatures that swim
beside it would not be here
Copy !req
75. were it not for one key factor -
Copy !req
76. the deep ocean currents.
Copy !req
77. Far below the surface,
they collide with the island's flanks
Copy !req
78. and are deflected upwards,
Copy !req
79. bringing with them from the depths
a rich soup of nutrients.
Copy !req
80. Such up-wellings attract
great concentrations of life.
Copy !req
81. Most of the fish here
are permanent residents
Copy !req
82. feeding on plankton -
tiny floating plants and animals
Copy !req
83. nourished by the richness
brought up from the depths,
Copy !req
84. and they attract visitors
from the open ocean.
Copy !req
85. Tuna.
Copy !req
86. The plankton feeders
are easy targets.
Copy !req
87. All this action attracts
even larger predators.
Copy !req
88. Sharks.
Copy !req
89. Hundreds of sharks.
Copy !req
90. These silky sharks
are normally ocean-going species,
Copy !req
91. but the sea mounts
in the eastern Pacific
Copy !req
92. like Cocos, Mapelo
and the Galapagos,
Copy !req
93. attract silkies in huge groups
up to 500 strong.
Copy !req
94. Silkies seem to specialize
in taking injured fish
Copy !req
95. and constantly circle sea mounts
Copy !req
96. on the lookout for the chance
to do so.
Copy !req
97. But silkies are not
the only visitors.
Copy !req
98. Hammerheads gather
in some of the largest shark shoals
Copy !req
99. to be found anywhere in the ocean.
Copy !req
100. Sometimes, thousands will circle
over a single sea mount.
Copy !req
101. But these sharks are not here
for food.
Copy !req
102. They have come for another reason.
Copy !req
103. Some of the locals
provide a cleaning service.
Copy !req
104. Following the last El Niño year,
Copy !req
105. when a rise in water temperatures
gave many sharks fungal infections,
Copy !req
106. the number of hammerheads
visiting the sea mounts
Copy !req
107. reached record levels.
Copy !req
108. Nutrients also well up
to the surface
Copy !req
109. along the coasts of the continents.
Copy !req
110. This is Natal
on South Africa's eastern seaboard.
Copy !req
111. It's June,
Copy !req
112. and just off-shore,
strange black patches have appeared.
Copy !req
113. They look like immense oil slicks
up to a mile long.
Copy !req
114. But this is a living slick:
Copy !req
115. millions and millions of sardines
on a marine migration
Copy !req
116. that in terms of sheer biomass,
Copy !req
117. rivals that of the wildebeest
on the grasslands of Africa.
Copy !req
118. These fish live mostly
in the cold waters south of the Cape,
Copy !req
119. but each year
the coastal currents reverse.
Copy !req
120. The warm Agulhas current
that flows down from the north
Copy !req
121. has been displaced
by cold water from the south,
Copy !req
122. and that has brought up
rich nutrients.
Copy !req
123. They in turn have created
a bloom of plankton,
Copy !req
124. and the sardines
are now feasting on it.
Copy !req
125. As the sardines travel north,
Copy !req
126. a whole caravan of predators
follow them.
Copy !req
127. Thousands of Cape gannets
track the sardines.
Copy !req
128. They nested off the Cape
and timed their breeding
Copy !req
129. so that their newly-fledged chicks
Copy !req
130. can join them
in pursuing the shoals.
Copy !req
131. Below water, hundreds of sharks
have also joined the caravan.
Copy !req
132. These are bronze whaler sharks,
Copy !req
133. a cold water species that
normally lives much further south.
Copy !req
134. These three-meter sharks
Copy !req
135. cut such great swathes
through the sardine shoals
Copy !req
136. that their tracks
are visible from the air.
Copy !req
137. Harried by packs of predators
Copy !req
138. and swept in
by the action of the waves,
Copy !req
139. the sardine shoals are penned
close to the shore.
Copy !req
140. Common dolphin are coming in
from the open ocean to join the feast.
Copy !req
141. There are over a thousand of them
Copy !req
142. in this one school.
Copy !req
143. When they catch up with the sardines,
the action really begins.
Copy !req
144. Working together, they drive
the shoal towards the surface.
Copy !req
145. It's easier for the dolphins
to snatch fish up here.
Copy !req
146. Now the sardines have no escape.
Copy !req
147. Thanks to the dolphins,
Copy !req
148. the sardines have come within
the diving range of the gannets.
Copy !req
149. Hundreds of white arrows
shoot into the sea,
Copy !req
150. leaving long trails of bubbles
behind each dive.
Copy !req
151. Next to join the frenzy
are the sharks.
Copy !req
152. Sharks get very excited
when dolphins are around.
Copy !req
153. They can feed particularly well
Copy !req
154. once the dolphins
have driven the sardines
Copy !req
155. into more compact groups
near the surface.
Copy !req
156. As the frenzy continues,
walls of bubbles drift upwards.
Copy !req
157. They are being released
by the dolphins
Copy !req
158. working together in teams.
Copy !req
159. They use the bubbles
Copy !req
160. to corral the sardines
into ever tighter groups.
Copy !req
161. The sardines seldom cross
the wall of bubbles
Copy !req
162. and crowd closer together.
Copy !req
163. Bubble netting in this way,
Copy !req
164. enables the dolphins to grab
every last trapped sardine.
Copy !req
165. Just when the feasting
seems to be almost over,
Copy !req
166. a Bryde's whale.
Copy !req
167. The survivors head on northwards,
Copy !req
168. and the caravan of predators
follows them.
Copy !req
169. Nutrients can also be brought up,
though less predictably,
Copy !req
170. by rough weather.
Copy !req
171. Particularly near the poles,
huge storms stir the depths
Copy !req
172. and enrich the surface waters,
Copy !req
173. and here, in the South Atlantic,
Copy !req
174. the seas are the roughest
on the planet.
Copy !req
175. And very rich seas they are, too,
Copy !req
176. for here, the cold Falklands
current from the south
Copy !req
177. meets the warm Brazil current
from the north,
Copy !req
178. and at their junction
is food in abundance.
Copy !req
179. These black-browed albatross
are duck-diving for krill
Copy !req
180. that has been driven up
to the surface.
Copy !req
181. Like all albatross,
Copy !req
182. black-brows are wanderers
across the face of the open ocean.
Copy !req
183. A feeding assembly on this scale
is a rare sight.
Copy !req
184. Most of the time, the birds
of the open sea are widely dispersed,
Copy !req
185. but these feeding grounds are close
to an albatross breeding colony,
Copy !req
186. and a very special one.
Copy !req
187. This is Steeple Jason,
Copy !req
188. a remote island
in the far west of the Falklands.
Copy !req
189. It has the largest albatross colony
in the world.
Copy !req
190. There are almost
half a million albatross here,
Copy !req
191. an astonishing demonstration
of how fertile the ocean can be
Copy !req
192. and how much food it can give
Copy !req
193. even to creatures
that do not actually live in it.
Copy !req
194. Nutrients by themselves
Copy !req
195. are not enough to generate
these vast assemblies.
Copy !req
196. The heat and light from the sun
is also essential
Copy !req
197. for the growth of the microscopic
floating plants -
Copy !req
198. the phytoplankton.
Copy !req
199. And it's the phytoplankton that is
the basis of all life in the ocean.
Copy !req
200. Every evening, the disappearance
of the sun below the horizon
Copy !req
201. triggers the largest
migration of life
Copy !req
202. that takes place on our planet.
Copy !req
203. One thousand million tons
of sea creatures
Copy !req
204. ascend from the deep ocean to
search for food near the surface.
Copy !req
205. They graze on the phytoplankton
under cover of darkness.
Copy !req
206. Even so, they are far from safe.
Copy !req
207. Other marine hunters follow them,
Copy !req
208. some traveling up
from hundreds of meters below.
Copy !req
209. At dawn,
Copy !req
210. the whole procession returns
to the safety of the dark depths.
Copy !req
211. The moon, too, has a great
influence on life in the oceans.
Copy !req
212. Its gravitational pull
Copy !req
213. creates the daily advances
and retreats of the tide.
Copy !req
214. But the moon has more
than a daily cycle.
Copy !req
215. Each month, it waxes and wanes
as it travels round the earth,
Copy !req
216. and this monthly cycle
also triggers events in the ocean.
Copy !req
217. The Pacific coast of Costa Rica
Copy !req
218. on a very special night.
Copy !req
219. It's just after midnight
and the tide is coming in.
Copy !req
220. The moon is in its last quarter,
Copy !req
221. exactly half way
between full and new.
Copy !req
222. For weeks,
the beach has been empty,
Copy !req
223. but that is about to change.
Copy !req
224. At high tide, turtles
start to emerge from the surf.
Copy !req
225. At first, they come
in ones and twos,
Copy !req
226. but within an hour,
Copy !req
227. they are appearing
all along the beach.
Copy !req
228. They are all female
Ridley's turtles,
Copy !req
229. and over the next six days or so,
Copy !req
230. 400,000 will visit this one beach
Copy !req
231. to lay their eggs in the sand.
Copy !req
232. At the peak time, 5,000
are coming and going every hour.
Copy !req
233. The top of the beach
gets so crowded
Copy !req
234. that they have to clamber
over one another to find a patch
Copy !req
235. where they can dig a nest hole.
Copy !req
236. A quarter of the world's population
of Ridley's turtles
Copy !req
237. come to this one beach
on a few key nights each year.
Copy !req
238. The rest of the time,
Copy !req
239. they are widely distributed
through the ocean,
Copy !req
240. most, hundreds of miles away.
Copy !req
241. This mass nesting is called
an arribada. How it's coordinated
Copy !req
242. is a mystery,
Copy !req
243. but we do know that arribadas start
Copy !req
244. when the moon is either
in its first or last quarter.
Copy !req
245. Forty million eggs are laid
in just a few days.
Copy !req
246. By synchronizing their nesting,
the females ensure
Copy !req
247. that six weeks later,
their hatchlings will emerge
Copy !req
248. in such enormous numbers
Copy !req
249. that predators are overwhelmed,
Copy !req
250. and a significant proportion of baby
turtles will make it to the water.
Copy !req
251. But why do the females
use a cue from the moon
Copy !req
252. to help synchronize their nesting?
Copy !req
253. Part of the answer to that
Copy !req
254. becomes clear at dawn
on the following morning.
Copy !req
255. The day shift of predators
are arriving for their first meals.
Copy !req
256. Vultures have learnt
Copy !req
257. that the returning tide can wash
freshly laid eggs out of the sand.
Copy !req
258. The risk of eggs being exposed
by the surf
Copy !req
259. may be partly why
turtle arribadas tend to occur
Copy !req
260. around the last or first quarter
of the moon.
Copy !req
261. It's on such days as this when
the moon is neither full nor new,
Copy !req
262. that the tides are weakest
and the sea is likely to be calmer.
Copy !req
263. So it's easier for the female turtles
to make their way through the surf,
Copy !req
264. and harder for eggs
to be washed out of the sand
Copy !req
265. and taken by vultures.
Copy !req
266. The moon's monthly cycle
and its influence on the tides
Copy !req
267. triggers many events in the ocean,
Copy !req
268. from the spawning of the corals
on the Great Barrier reef
Copy !req
269. to the breeding cycles of fish,
Copy !req
270. but there's an even longer rhythm
Copy !req
271. that has the most profound effect
of all -
Copy !req
272. The sun's position
relative to the earth
Copy !req
273. changes through the year,
Copy !req
274. and it's this
that produces the seasons.
Copy !req
275. In the north, spring comes
Copy !req
276. as the sun begins to rise
higher in the sky.
Copy !req
277. Off the coast
of north west America,
Copy !req
278. the seas are transformed by
the increasing strength of the sun.
Copy !req
279. Here in Alaska,
the coastal waters turn green
Copy !req
280. with a sudden bloom
of phytoplankton.
Copy !req
281. Herring that have spent the winter
far out to sea
Copy !req
282. time their return to the shallow
waters to coincide with this bloom.
Copy !req
283. They come in vast numbers
Copy !req
284. and initiate one of the most productive
food chains in all the oceans.
Copy !req
285. Humpback whales
are at the top of that food chain.
Copy !req
286. They have spent the winter
Copy !req
287. breeding in the warmer
tropical waters off Hawaii,
Copy !req
288. but there was little food there.
Copy !req
289. This herring bonanza
Copy !req
290. provides the majority of their food
for the year.
Copy !req
291. Stellar and Californian sea lions
Copy !req
292. also return from the open ocean
each year to feast off the herring.
Copy !req
293. The herring, however,
have not come here for food.
Copy !req
294. They are about to breed.
Nothing deters them
Copy !req
295. as they head
for even shallower waters.
Copy !req
296. Now the waters are so shallow
Copy !req
297. that glaucous-winged gulls
Copy !req
298. can snatch live fish
from just below the surface.
Copy !req
299. In spite of these attacks,
the herring swim on
Copy !req
300. until they reach the vegetation
Copy !req
301. that the females need
if they are to lay.
Copy !req
302. Each female produces
around 20,000 eggs,
Copy !req
303. and they're very sticky.
Copy !req
304. After the females have spawned,
the males release their sperm
Copy !req
305. in vast, milky clouds.
Copy !req
306. Soon, the excesses
of the herrings' sexual spree
Copy !req
307. creates a thick white scum
on the surface.
Copy !req
308. Through the season,
Copy !req
309. curds of sperm clog the shores
for hundreds of miles
Copy !req
310. from British Columbia in the south
to Alaska in the north.
Copy !req
311. After a few days, this gigantic
spawning comes to an end,
Copy !req
312. and the herring
head back out to deeper waters,
Copy !req
313. leaving behind them fertilized eggs
Copy !req
314. plastered on every rock
and strand of vegetation.
Copy !req
315. They time the spawning so that two
weeks later, when the eggs hatch,
Copy !req
316. the annual plankton bloom will be
at its height, and the fish fry
Copy !req
317. will have plenty to eat.
Copy !req
318. In the meantime,
these eggs provide food
Copy !req
319. for armies of different animals
below and above the surface.
Copy !req
320. Millions of birds arrive to collect
a share of the herrings' bounty.
Copy !req
321. Some of it is easily gathered,
Copy !req
322. for millions of eggs have been
washed up onto the shore.
Copy !req
323. This encapsulated energy
Copy !req
324. is particularly valuable
to migrating birds.
Copy !req
325. These surfbirds are on their way
Copy !req
326. to their breeding grounds in
the Arctic and come down to refuel.
Copy !req
327. Stranded herring eggs
are just what they need.
Copy !req
328. Bonaparte gulls collect the eggs
Copy !req
329. just below the surface
of the water.
Copy !req
330. Further out in the bay,
huge flocks of ducks have gathered.
Copy !req
331. They're mostly surf scoters -
Copy !req
332. diving ducks that can feed
off the bottom several meters down.
Copy !req
333. There are such huge quantities
of eggs,
Copy !req
334. that even a big animal like a bear
Copy !req
335. finds it worthwhile
to collect them.
Copy !req
336. The spawning of the herring
is a crucial event
Copy !req
337. in the lives of many animals
all along the coast.
Copy !req
338. The whole event coincides
with the plankton bloom,
Copy !req
339. and within three short weeks,
it's all over.
Copy !req
340. The migratory birds leave
to continue their journey north.
Copy !req
341. They will not come back until
the herring also return next year.
Copy !req
342. As the herring spawning finishes,
Copy !req
343. other migrants
are starting to arrive offshore.
Copy !req
344. Gray whales.
Copy !req
345. They have followed the sun north,
Copy !req
346. and they too are seeking the food
Copy !req
347. generated by the bloom
of the phytoplankton.
Copy !req
348. Krill are feeding off it, and these
whales are feeding on the krill,
Copy !req
349. skimming it from the surface
with the filter plates of baleen
Copy !req
350. that hang from their upper jaws.
Copy !req
351. Gray whales make
one of the longest migrations
Copy !req
352. of any marine mammal -
Copy !req
353. a round trip of 12,000 miles or so
Copy !req
354. from their breeding grounds
off Mexico
Copy !req
355. along the entire coast of North
America up to the Arctic Ocean.
Copy !req
356. They travel close to the coast,
Copy !req
357. with the males and non-breeding
females leading the way.
Copy !req
358. The last to start are cows
that have just given birth.
Copy !req
359. They have to wait until their calves
are sufficiently strong
Copy !req
360. to tackle such an immense journey.
Copy !req
361. Their progress is necessarily slow.
Copy !req
362. The mothers stay with their young,
Copy !req
363. and even a strong calf
only travels at a couple of knots.
Copy !req
364. They stick even closer
to the shore,
Copy !req
365. often within just 200 meters.
Copy !req
366. Killer whales.
Copy !req
367. They have learnt that gray whales
follow traditional routes.
Copy !req
368. The killers have no trouble
Copy !req
369. in overtaking the calf
and its devoted mother.
Copy !req
370. Normally, they continually call
to one another,
Copy !req
371. but now they have fallen silent.
Copy !req
372. The gray whale and her calf
Copy !req
373. have no idea
that they've been targeted.
Copy !req
374. Catching up with the gray whales
is the easy part for the killers.
Copy !req
375. They have to be cautious
Copy !req
376. for they are only
about half the size of the mother.
Copy !req
377. She can inflict real damage
with her tail.
Copy !req
378. But the killers are after her calf.
Copy !req
379. As long as the mother can keep it
on the move, it will be safe,
Copy !req
380. and she does her best
to hurry it along.
Copy !req
381. At first, the killers avoid getting
too close but just stay alongside.
Copy !req
382. They know that the calf, going at
this speed, will eventually tire.
Copy !req
383. After three hours of being harried,
Copy !req
384. the calf becomes too exhausted
to swim any further.
Copy !req
385. The mother has to stop.
Copy !req
386. This is the moment the killers
have been waiting for.
Copy !req
387. They start to try and force
themselves between mother and calf.
Copy !req
388. A calf separated from its mother
will not be able to defend itself.
Copy !req
389. Time and again,
the black fins of the killers
Copy !req
390. appear between the gray whales.
Copy !req
391. At last the killers succeed,
Copy !req
392. and now they've got the calf
on its own,
Copy !req
393. they change their tactics.
Copy !req
394. They leap right onto the calf,
and try to push it under.
Copy !req
395. They are trying to drown it.
Copy !req
396. The calf snatches
a desperate breath.
Copy !req
397. The mother becomes
increasingly agitated.
Copy !req
398. Frantically, she tries to push
her calf back to the surface
Copy !req
399. so that it can breathe.
Copy !req
400. But now it's so exhausted
Copy !req
401. that it has to be supported
by its mother's body.
Copy !req
402. The killers won't give up.
Copy !req
403. Like a pack of wolves, they take
turns in harassing the whales.
Copy !req
404. Now, the whole pod is involved.
Copy !req
405. One of them takes a bite.
Copy !req
406. Soon, the sea is reddened
with the calf's blood,
Copy !req
407. and the killers close in
for the final act.
Copy !req
408. The calf is dead.
Copy !req
409. After a six-hour hunt,
Copy !req
410. the killer whales
have finally won their prize.
Copy !req
411. The mother, bereft,
Copy !req
412. has to continue her migration north
on her own.
Copy !req
413. She leaves behind
the carcass of a calf
Copy !req
414. that she cherished for 13 months
in her womb,
Copy !req
415. for which she delayed
her own journey to find food.
Copy !req
416. The 15 killer whales spent over
six hours trying to kill the calf,
Copy !req
417. but having succeeded,
Copy !req
418. they've eaten nothing more
than its lower jaw and its tongue.
Copy !req
419. Valuable food like this
will not go to waste in the ocean.
Copy !req
420. Before long, the carcass
will sink to the very bottom
Copy !req
421. of this deep sea,
Copy !req
422. but even there its flesh
will not be wasted.
Copy !req
423. Over a mile down, in the total
darkness of the deep ocean,
Copy !req
424. the body of another gray whale,
Copy !req
425. a 30-tonne adult.
Copy !req
426. It settled here
only a few weeks ago.
Copy !req
427. Already, it has attracted
hundreds of hagfish.
Copy !req
428. These scavengers, over half a meter
long and as thick as your arm,
Copy !req
429. are only found in the deep sea.
Copy !req
430. They have been attracted
by the faint whiff of decay
Copy !req
431. suffusing through the water
for miles around.
Copy !req
432. With their heads buried
in the whale's flesh,
Copy !req
433. they breathe through gill openings
along their sides.
Copy !req
434. They're very primitive creatures -
Copy !req
435. not even true fish
for they lack jaws.
Copy !req
436. They feed, not by biting,
Copy !req
437. but by rasping off flesh
with two rows of horny teeth.
Copy !req
438. In just a few hours,
Copy !req
439. a hagfish can eat several times
its own weight of rotting flesh.
Copy !req
440. Next to arrive,
Copy !req
441. a sleeper shark.
Copy !req
442. It moves so slowly
to conserve energy -
Copy !req
443. an important strategy
for so large an animal
Copy !req
444. surviving in such a poor habitat.
Copy !req
445. Sleeper sharks live
over a mile down,
Copy !req
446. and grow to over seven meters long.
Copy !req
447. They can go for months
without food, slowly cruising along,
Copy !req
448. waiting for rare bonanzas
Copy !req
449. such as this one
Copy !req
450. to arrive from above.
Copy !req
451. A whole range of different
deep-sea scavengers
Copy !req
452. will feast on this carcass
for a long time
Copy !req
453. before all its nutriment
has been consumed.
Copy !req
454. 18 months later,
Copy !req
455. all that is left is a perfect
skeleton stripped bare.
Copy !req
456. The sun's energy, that was captured
and turned into living tissue
Copy !req
457. by the floating phytoplankton,
Copy !req
458. has been transferred
to another link in the food chain,
Copy !req
459. and has ended up as far away from
the sun as it is possible to be -
Copy !req
460. at the bottom of the deep sea.
Copy !req
461. But some energy
also returns from the deep.
Copy !req
462. Millions of opalescent squid
are on their way to the shallows.
Copy !req
463. They've come up here to mate.
Copy !req
464. As the males grab the females,
their tentacles flush red.
Copy !req
465. For most of the year,
Copy !req
466. these squid live
at a depth of around 500 meters.
Copy !req
467. They are part of these breeding
schools for a few weeks.
Copy !req
468. Just one school was estimated
to contain animals
Copy !req
469. that weigh around 4,000 tons.
Copy !req
470. Wave after wave
rise from the depths,
Copy !req
471. and soon the seabed
in the shallows
Copy !req
472. is strewn with dense patches of
egg capsules several meters across.
Copy !req
473. As each female
adds another capsule to the pile,
Copy !req
474. the males fight
to fertilize its contents.
Copy !req
475. The squid make their huge journey
into the shallows
Copy !req
476. because their eggs will develop
faster in the warmer water here,
Copy !req
477. and when the young emerge,
they will find more food
Copy !req
478. more easily than they would
in the ocean depths.
Copy !req
479. Dawn the next morning,
Copy !req
480. and the seabed for miles around
is covered in egg capsules.
Copy !req
481. The squid have all gone.
Many have died,
Copy !req
482. but some will have returned
to their home in the deep.
Copy !req
483. They will not return
to the light of the sun
Copy !req
484. until the next time they are
driven up by the urge to spawn.
Copy !req