1. The frozen seas are worlds
unto themselves
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2. Beneath their ceiling of ice
they have an eerie,
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3. almost magical stillness, cut off
from the storms that rage above
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4. In the winter, the feeble slanting
rays of the sun bring little warmth
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5. and the temperature seldom rises
above minus fifty degrees Centigrade
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6. For much of the year,
it is dark and cripplingly cold
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7. Yet, there is life here
- at both ends of the earth...
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8. the Arctic and the Antarctic
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9. For most animals, whether they
live in or out of water,
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10. the winters, when much of the sea
is frozen, bring the greatest challenge
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11. The Northern hemisphere
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12. It's February, and as the Earth
tilts on its axis,
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13. the sun's rays creep
slowly northwards
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14. and the Arctic emerges
from its harsh winter
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15. The Arctic is a frozen ocean
surrounded by continents
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16. - and when the surface of the sea
between the continents freezes
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17. from shore to shore, land predators
walk out onto it - to hunt
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18. It's early March and the sea
is still covered with ice
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19. But there are patches of open water
- polynyas - that never freeze over
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20. Here, where tidal currents
are squeezed between islands,
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21. the water movement is so strong
that ice cannot form
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22. Walruses spend the
winter in polynyas
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23. Here they have permanent
access to the air,
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24. but they can also retreat to
the sea to shelter to hunt
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25. Other sea mammals overwinter
in the polynyas as well
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26. - in this one, a young bowhead whale
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27. Here the current is really fast
and the shifting ice is dangerous
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28. This whale became trapped when
ice encircled it last autumn
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29. There is no food here, but a whale
must breathe and the only place
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30. that it can do so, for miles around,
is in this tiny hole
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31. It's living entirely on its reserves
of fat, but now they are dangerously low
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32. It will be some months yet,
before it can escape
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33. Elsewhere, other whales
have also been trapped
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34. These are belugas
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35. Their tiny hole in the ice
has been kept open,
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36. not by currents but by
the belugas' continuous movements
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37. as they rise to breathe
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38. Open water is now some
twenty miles away
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39. It will be two months yet
before the ice melts
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40. The belugas are extremely thin
- and most of them are horribly scarred
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41. But their wounds were not
inflicted by the ice
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42. A whale would be a huge prize for
any meat-eating hunter and these belugas,
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43. trapped by the ice,
are within reach of polar bears
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44. Well aware of the danger, the belugas
stay submerged as long as they can
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45. But they can only hold their breath
for about twenty minutes
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46. Catching a four-metre long whale
that weighs one ton is no easy task
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47. - even if that whale is
weakened by starvation
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48. But a beluga is well
worth waiting for
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49. Day by day, as the hole
gets bigger,
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50. it becomes increasingly difficult
for the bear to land a whale
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51. Keeping its fur in good condition and
free from salt is important for warmth
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52. - and the bear uses snow
like blotting paper
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53. These belugas have been attacked by many
bears over the last six months
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54. - and some have been caught
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55. It may have taken a long time and
a lot of patience, but a catch,
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56. when it's made, brings abundant
rewards of energy rich blubber
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57. Gulls rely on bear-kills
at this time of the year
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58. - and the colour of blood staining the
ice attracts them from a long way away
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59. The remaining belugas still have
a long wait before they are released
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60. from their prison and
the threat of slaughter
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61. Arctic foxes also rely on the
polar bears to hunt on their behalf
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62. They're the jackals of the north and
scavenge from bear kills whenever they can
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63. In winter and early spring,
they are wholly dependent on bears
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64. Only in the summer,
when the sea ice melts,
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65. will they regularly
catch prey for themselves
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66. They are not strong enough
to tackle adult seals,
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67. but can certainly take
new-born pups or birds
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68. This canny individual
is going to bury its prize
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69. - it may need it during
the uncertain times ahead
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70. The presence of bears
affects the behaviour of almost
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71. all the animals here
- big and small
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72. The bears tend to avoid the fringe of
fragmented ice bordering open water
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73. - where travelling can
be very laborious
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74. But that very fact makes
this area - the pack ice
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75. - a particularly good place
for seals to pup
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76. Harp seals breed here
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77. Their pups are born with white
coats which camouflage them
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78. very effectively against the snow
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79. Harp seals have a very
short nursing period
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80. - a necessity on this
unstable pack ice
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81. But suckling is intensive
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82. The pup feeds for just twelve days
on milk that is 45 percent fat
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83. Then it is abandoned
and has to fend for itself
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84. A male hooded seal
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85. This impressive nasal display is used
to warn away other males...
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86. and to win a mate
Hooded seals also breed on pack ice
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87. Their pups suckle for only four days
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88. - the shortest nursing period
known for any mammal
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89. - and all because the
threat of polar bears
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90. caused them to breed
on the unstable ice
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91. Another Arctic seal opts
for the solid ice further north
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92. Because it's easy for
bears to hunt here,
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93. these ringed seals must be particularly
vigilant and have to hide their pups
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94. Ringed seals are comparatively small,
so they can give birth
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95. to their pups in little caves,
or lairs, under the snow
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96. Here, a pup is out of sight
and protected from bad weather
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97. In late March and into April,
female bears emerge from winter
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98. dens with their new cubs
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99. The mother has not eaten for at least
five months and she's hungry - very hungry
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100. If she doesn't succeed in catching
a regular supply of seals,
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101. her milk will fail and
her cub will die
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102. Bears have an extraordinarily
sensitive sense of smell
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103. and can detect seal pups hidden in
the snow from two kilometres away
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104. But a female ringed seal
uses several lairs
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105. and a bear will almost certainly
have to break into a number
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106. before it finds one
that is occupied
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107. This is a crucial time
for the cub
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108. By watching its mother hunt
and by copying her actions,
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109. it's beginning to acquire the
rudiments of its own hunting skills
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110. Play is also important for developing
muscles and improving co-ordination
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111. As the days go by,
the sun rises higher
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112. and remains above the
horizon even at night
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113. The female bear continues to hunt
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114. until her cub is too tired
and can't keep up
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115. She has smelt something
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116. The pup escapes through a hole in
its lair that leads to the sea below
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117. Only one in twenty hunts
is successful
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118. But this mother must find a seal pup soon
if her cub is not to starve to death
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119. As spring turns into summer, the sun's
heat begins to melt the sea ice
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120. Now the ocean is accessible and
the Arctic's summer visitors return
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121. Migrating birds arrive
from the south to nest
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122. and feed on the seafood
that's now within their reach
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123. Brunnich's guillemots are the
northern equivalent of penguins
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124. But they have retained
the power of flight,
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125. for they need to
reach cliff ledges
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126. where their nests will be safe
from predatory bears and foxes
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127. Nonetheless, they are as at home
in the water as in the air
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128. They dive down to a depth of fifty
metres or more to catch fish
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129. In June, the ice begins
to fracture
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130. The cracks - or leads
- form useful corridors
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131. of open water for
air-breathing animals
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132. Belugas, migrating to
their feeding grounds,
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133. use these leads to penetrate
the ice-covered seas
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134. and reach areas where
their preferred food,
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135. Arctic cod, has spent the winter
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136. The males regularly dive to about
five hundred metres to find fish
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137. The females and young, which have
smaller lungs, only go to about 350
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138. In late June and July,
narwhals arrive
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139. The females, who usually lack tusks,
come first with their new calves
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140. The males follow a little later
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141. They also move up the leads in
search of fresh feeding grounds
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142. Bowheads. Up to 18 metres long
and weighing a hundred tonnes,
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143. these are the only large whales
that stay in the Arctic all year round
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144. They are not after fish
They are seeking smaller prey
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145. Despite having the largest mouths
in the animal kingdom,
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146. the size of a small garage,
they eat tiny crustaceans
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147. - copepods - straining them from the
water with the four-metre long strips
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148. of baleen that hang from
their upper jaws
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149. In the summer they store
enough energy to last them
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150. through the following winter,
when food will be less abundant
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151. As the ice melts away, the polar
bears are forced to head for land
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152. They are excellent swimmers
and can cover a hundred miles
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153. of continuous open water
if need be
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154. Off east Greenland,
there is little ice left by August,
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155. so walruses haul out
to rest on land
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156. At this time of the year
they are moulting,
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157. getting rid of their old scarred
and parasite-ridden skin
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158. A bathe in the cold water brings
some relief from the itching
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159. But even there,
the odd scratch is irresistible
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160. They make daily excursions
out to deeper water
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161. Down at 20 metres, they root
around in the sediment,
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162. using their sensitive bristles
to search out soft-shelled clams
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163. Once they find a clam,
they suck its flesh from the shell
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164. with their powerful,
muscular mouths
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165. Walruses can feed for about
five minutes at this depth
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166. before they have to return
to the surface to breathe
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167. Elsewhere in the Arctic, belugas are
gathering in their thousands
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168. They congregate in just
a few large estuaries
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169. Belugas of all ages
and sizes come here
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170. There are even young calves
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171. Some are so young - born only a week or
so ago - that they need help
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172. They swim on their mothers' backs so
that they can breathe more easily
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173. As the tide moves up the estuary,
the belugas follow,
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174. swimming into surprisingly
shallow water
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175. Like walruses,
they also need to moult
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176. A combination of warm fresh water
and vigorous rubbing
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177. against the gravel does the trick
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178. They remain here for days,
or even weeks,
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179. so it's likely that socialising
is also important to them
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180. After moulting, they head back
out to sea to feed
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181. It's now autumn and the sea
begins to freeze over, once again
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182. Thin sheets of ice form at
the surface and pile up,
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183. layer upon layer, gradually
creating an impenetrable barrier
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184. By late November, the Arctic Ocean
is sealed once again by ice
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185. The lights of the aurora play
in the winter sky
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186. At the other end of the planet
- in the Antarctic
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187. - there is the southern aurora
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188. Antarctica is now emerging
from winter
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189. This is the coldest,
windiest place in the world
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190. Temperatures are still hovering
at a numbing minus 50
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191. and the returning sun has
virtually no warmth
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192. Very few animals can survive
such extreme conditions
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193. But emperor penguins can
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194. Standing on the frozen sea, they endure
the full force of the Antarctic storms
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195. Only by huddling together can they can
survive the appalling winter months
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196. They take it in turns to bear
the brunt of the gales
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197. They can only live here at all because
Antarctica is surrounded
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198. by the Great Southern Ocean and no land
predators have been able to reach it,
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199. so unlike Arctic animals,
they're not threatened by polar bears
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200. The sea is still frozen
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201. But one seal, nonetheless,
manages to stay here,
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202. even throughout the winter...
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203. the Weddell seal
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204. Underwater, it's protected
from the storms above
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205. But it must have access to the air
all year - in order to breathe
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206. And they keep their breathing holes open
- with their teeth
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207. Only by continually scraping away at the
ice can they maintain access to the air
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208. But that means that their teeth
get badly worn down
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209. Then they can no longer hunt
and eat effectively
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210. Weddell seals die young
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211. The continent of Antarctica
is so isolated
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212. and so high - almost five
thousand metres in places
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213. - that it's considerably colder
than the Arctic
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214. Ice slides slowly down from its centre
towards its rim in immense glaciers
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215. During winter, the continent effectively
doubles in size as the sea freezes over
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216. Ice forms around its shores
and extends outwards
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217. for hundreds of miles around
the entire land mass
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218. Under the sea-ice live small
shrimp-like creatures - krill
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219. They have been here all winter
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220. During these dark months, they feed by
scraping algae from the ice
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221. Remarkably, they also
shrink in size
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222. and revert to their juvenile
form to save energy
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223. As the temperature
rises in spring,
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224. the ice begins to melt and little air
bubbles trapped within it are released
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225. Microscopic algae grow around these
bubbles and the krill now graze on them,
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226. gathering them up with
their beating legs
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227. As the sun's rays grow stronger
and penetrate deeper into the water,
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228. floating algae begin to
flourish and krill leave
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229. the dwindling ice and gather in swarms
as they harvest this new crop
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230. Far to the north, beyond the
blanket of sea ice,
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231. chinstrap penguins have been
overwintering in the open ocean
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232. The occasional iceberg gives
them the chance of a rest
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233. - if they can get onto it
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234. But at this time of year, where they
really want to be is on land
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235. It's just getting there
that's tricky
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236. It's spring and the penguins
are returning to breed
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237. Their need to get ashore is now
urgent and imperative
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238. Doing so is all a matter of timing
- and picking the right wave
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239. But their journey has
only just begun
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240. Most of them will have to walk many miles
before they can find a nest site
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241. This is Zavodovski Island, which has the
largest penguin colony in the world
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242. About two million chinstraps
breed here
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243. - and they come to this island
for a good reason
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244. It's an active volcano
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245. The heat from the crater
and the fumeroles
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246. keeps the slopes free from
the ice and snow,
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247. allowing these chinstraps to start
breeding earlier than those further south
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248. But then again, living on an active
volcano is not without its risks
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249. Unlike the emperors, these penguins are
able to lay their eggs on the bare ground
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250. Little wonder so many
of them choose to brave
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251. the mountainous waves
in order to get here
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252. Further south, near the continent,
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253. the blanket of sea ice
is beginning to break up
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254. Icebergs are gigantic fragments
of ice that have broken away
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255. into the sea from the
front of glaciers
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256. During the winter they
were frozen into the sea ice,
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257. but now they are set
adrift once more
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258. As the bergs break up,
they form brash ice
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259. It litters the backwaters
of the Antarctic Peninsula
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260. Minke whales make their way into
these placid waters in summer
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261. This is the most abundant whale
in the Southern Ocean
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262. Minkes are one of the smallest
of all the baleen whales
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263. And like all others,
they come here to feed
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264. The majestic humpback whales
are also summer visitors
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265. They have travelled thousands of miles
from their winter
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266. breeding grounds in the
tropics to gather the food
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267. that becomes available
here in summer
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268. In just four months,
they accumulate enough fat
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269. to provide them with energy for
the whole of the rest of the year
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270. All these animals have come here
in search of one thing - the krill
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271. Krill is the mainstay of
the Antarctic food web
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272. It occurs in phenomenal quantity
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273. - billions of individuals
in a single swarm,
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274. and swarms can stretch for miles
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275. Fur seals also collect this
rich superabundant food
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276. Krill swarms are very patchy,
but once found, feeding is easy
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277. Humpbacks engulf hundreds of thousands of
them in a single gargantuan mouthful
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278. When the going is good,
the whales feed continuously,
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279. each eating up to two tonnes
of krill in twenty-four hours
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280. Further south, near the continent,
the sea ice is still sound
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281. Here, where the ice remains
for most of the summer,
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282. emperor penguins make their home
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283. These have been feeding out
at sea and are now ready
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284. to make their way back to the
colony to feed their chicks
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285. Instead of heading straight
for the ice edge,
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286. the penguins hesitate
some distance from it
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287. They're nervous
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288. They dive down and
investigate the ice edge
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289. And for good reason
Leopard seals patrol this border
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290. Leopard seals are the Antarctic's
equivalent of polar bears
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291. They are the top predators
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292. But they hunt most successfully
in the water,
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293. so by and large, the animals they prey
on are safer out on the ice
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294. They have a lazy grace that belies
their ferocious nature
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295. Confident that the coast is clear,
the emperor penguins head for the ice
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296. But they certainly don't linger
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297. Now they have a long walk
back to the colony
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298. Emperor penguin colonies are some
way back from the ice edge
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299. In winter they may be as much as
a hundred miles from it,
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300. but as the summer progresses
and the ice melts,
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301. the edge comes ever
closer to the colony
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302. So by the time the chicks are fledged
and ready to take their first swim,
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303. the water is close by
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304. This colony is in the lee
of a headland
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305. and that prevents the ice from
being broken up by ocean currents
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306. The returning adults are so full
of food that they can barely walk
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307. But with no predator to threaten
them now, they can take their time
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308. Somehow, in this melee of sixty
thousand or so penguins,
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309. a parent has to find its chick
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310. It returns to the place where it last
left its chick in the hope that
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311. it might still be close by
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312. But chicks tend to wander,
so the adult has to call to it
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313. The chick responds - and they slowly
home in on one another
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314. The plaintive entreaties
of the chick stimulates
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315. the adult to regurgitate
a mouthful of fish
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316. With the return of one parent,
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317. the other is free to go
to sea to feed for itself
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318. Aware of the leopard
seal's presence,
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319. the penguins press
together at the ice edge,
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320. unwilling to be the
first to risk diving in
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321. Occasionally, the seal comes out
onto the ice and attempts to grab one
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322. But its most successful strategy
by far is to lie in wait
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323. It hides behind a corner of ice
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324. The emperors gain confidence
and make a dash for it
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325. The first wave of penguins escape
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326. Once in open water,
they will be safe
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327. But the seal is alerted by the noise,
and through the mass of bubbles,
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328. it makes its attack
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329. Almost invariably,
it makes a kill
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330. Encouraged by the absence
of the seal,
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331. the remaining penguins
make a break for the open sea
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332. In time, their chicks will fledge
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333. And when the Antarctic
autumn is near its end,
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334. these adults will walk across
the newly formed ice,
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335. to endure yet another winter
on the frozen sea
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