Our Oceans (2024) s01e02 Episode Script

Indian Ocean

[distorted burbling]
[Barack Obama] Bottlenose dolphins.
[echolocation trilling, squeaking]
This pod lives in the warm shallows
off Western Australia,
home to one of the largest
seagrass meadows on Earth.
[quirky, plucky music playing]
[echolocation trilling]
Food here is hard to come by.
There are some fish,
but catching them is difficult,
especially the slippery
and aptly named butterfish.
[echolocation crackles]
Dolphins use sound to hunt,
but the seagrass
interferes with their echolocation.
[sustained trilling]
And if they get too close,
the butterfish just drop down
and hide in the seagrass.
To outsmart the little fish,
the ocean's most intelligent mammals are
going to have to be a lot more inventive.
[slick, groovy spy-fi music playing]
This young female is developing the skills
to turn an empty shell
into something more useful.
Butterfish are curious
and they can use shells for shelter.
Could this work?
Each shell has to be
in just the right spot.
Close to the seagrass,
but out in the open.
She's impatient
and tries to speed things along.
That was close.
[echolocation trilling]
[echolocation intensifies]
Got one.
Removing the butterfish
might appear to be a problem
but for the dolphin, it's easy.
She's figured out that if she holds
the shell above the water,
the little fish will slip out.
Just like butter.
[bold, energetic music playing]
Nowhere else have dolphins been
quite so clever
and combined such complex behavior
with tool use.
It's the quest to eat and not be eaten
that drives ingenuity
in the tropical Indian Ocean.
[sweeping, stately music playing]
The global ocean current surges west,
carrying warm tropical seawater
on what's typically a two-year journey
from Asia to Africa.
It begins by bringing life
to a region of Southeast Asia
known as the Coral Triangle.
A maze of 25,000 tropical islands
through which 15 million tons of water
flow every second
constantly refreshing the sunlit shallows
and supporting
the greatest variety of marine life
found anywhere.
[wondrous, rousing music playing]
With over 80,000 species
living so closely together,
coral reefs don't get any more competitive
or dangerous than these.
[music swells, trails off]
But food is surprisingly scarce.
And with millions of hungry mouths
to feed,
every reef resident is
on someone else's menu.
[delicate, mysterious music playing]
Keeping your babies safe is
an around-the-clock challenge.
One expectant mother is
especially inventive
as she tries to protect her brood.
The peacock mantis shrimp.
[eccentric music playing]
She's a reef engineer
with an unrivaled mind map
of her neighborhood.
Her passion is
for finding fragments of dead coral.
She logs the position
of each one in her memory,
in case she needs it.
And she'll have to be quick,
because the reef's recyclers are busy
turning all the dead coral they can find
into sand.
This piece looks just right.
But why is she so picky?
Because she knows exactly
what shape of coral she needs next
in her construction project.
It's thought she may even remember
the structure of the pieces
she found earlier
slotting them into a retaining wall
so each one fits perfectly with the next.
Might be useful.
Wrong shape.
With her masonry skills,
she's built a fortified nest chamber
where she can protect
her 10,000 eggs until they hatch.
[delicate, wondrous music playing]
And if you want to get in,
you'll have to get past Mom first.
No chance.
Thanks to her engineering prowess,
this clever mom has solved
the biggest problem on the reef.
How to raise the next generation
in safety
amidst all these hungry mouths.
[music trails off]
But there are other ways to make sure
your offspring get the best start in life.
Bumphead parrotfish don't hide their eggs.
They have another way
to outwit the reef's egg eaters.
But before they spawn,
mating rights must be decided
100 feet below the surface.
[somber, uneasy music playing]
Because there's
a perfect time and place to mate.
The place is the drop-off,
where the tide and current
flow away from the reef,
helping sweep eggs to safety.
The time? When the tide reaches its peak.
The contestants each search for an area
where the current will be strongest.
The largest claims the best site.
[fronds rustling unsettlingly]
Whoever can hold that spot
will be chosen by the most females.
And the eggs he fertilizes will be swept
furthest away from the reef and predators.
But how is he going to attract females
still high up on the reef
without leaving his position?
He can send off smaller rivals
with a flick of his tail.
But not this guy.
One hundred pounds of bruising bumphead.
[harsh, menacing music playing]
A rival with his eyes
on the same mating spot.
He's not intimidated.
There's only one thing to do.
For the first time,
we have a ring-side seat
at this heavyweight battle.
[collision booms]
Their collision is so violent that water
trapped between their bumps is vaporized.
Their head guards are cupped
to focus the force of the collision.
[thud booms]
It creates bubbles of steam
that, at this depth, implode
[collision reverberates]
sending shockwaves across the reef,
announcing to the audience
that the fight is on.
Their heads aren't their only weapon.
That coral-crunching beak
now comes into play.
[thud booms]
Their technique is crash and slash.
Slicing scales off each other.
As the current builds,
more females arrive.
[music intensifies]
At last, they've drawn a crowd.
Final round.
[thud booms]
As the current peaks,
there's nothing to separate them.
[forceful '80s rock music playing]
Exactly what they both wanted.
Because only with
such a well-matched adversary
can they create
the loudest sound on the reef.
[thud booms]
[booms echoing]
Signaling they're the strongest.
After this bout, they're both winners.
[music trails off]
Their performance has won them
dozens of eager admirers.
Now, they're ready to spawn
in the right place
and at the right time
for the tide and current
to work their magic
[bright, rousing music playing]
and transport the next generation
of bumpheads to safety,
far away from the reef.
[music trails off]
The global ocean current winds its way
between the islands of Southeast Asia.
As it goes, it collects evidence
of the throwaway lifestyle
of the world above,
before sweeping off the coral reefs
and into sandy wastelands.
[measured, downcast music playing]
Up to two million tons of plastic waste
enter the Indian Ocean every year.
Some of the highest levels
of plastic pollution found in any ocean.
Each piece will take
hundreds of years to break down.
Eventually becoming microplastics
damaging ocean health
and even making their way
into our food chain.
But there is one resident here who tries
her best to make the most of this mess.
[music subsides]
The veined octopus.
She's looking for a place
from which she can ambush her prey.
[delicate, quirky music playing]
And items discarded by humans
offer a wealth of possibilities.
As they say, one person's trash is
another's treasure.
A bottle could be a perfect hideout.
It just needs a bit of rearranging.
Here we go.
Whoa.
Let's try that again.
Got it.
There we go.
This will work. Much more roomy.
Yeah.
But if she can see out
maybe her prey can see in.
Hmm, not gonna work.
Can nature offer a better solution?
With two of these
and a little digging
enough room to peek out
and for her siphon to breathe
the octopus can disguise herself
as a clam.
Perfect for setting her ambush.
[suspenseful music playing]
[eccentric music playing]
She'll just eat the flesh
and discard the leftovers.
But leaving scraps lying around
is not a good idea.
It attracts scavengers.
Fish that will scare away the crabs.
She needs to work out how to make them
leave without blowing her cover.
[pellet zings]
[old-timey Western
stand-off music playing]
So she turns her siphon into a gun.
Reload.
Until now, we didn't know an octopus
could arm itself like this.
Genius.
Perhaps the only creature
in all the oceans
clever enough to use a projectile
as a weapon.
[stand-off music subsides]
With the coast clear,
she can return to the hunt.
[eccentric music playing]
And she's quick
to learn from her mistakes.
This time she takes out her trash
and tips it far enough away
that her hideout remains a secret.
At least someone here has learned
how to take care of their waste.
[lilting, melodious music playing]
The global ocean current leaves
the Coral Triangle and flows west,
into the open ocean.
But it carries little life,
as food here is sparse.
It's a marine desert.
And yet, it hides giants.
[serene, understated music building]
Great travelers of the current,
who are just waking up.
Sperm whales.
[echolocation trilling]
A tight-knit family group
[delicate, enchanting music playing]
with a baby just weeks old,
but growing fast.
He's hungry and persistent.
[echolocation ticking]
To produce the rich milk he needs,
Mom must eat hundreds of pounds
of seafood every day.
[drawn-out lowing]
And that means leaving these barren,
sunlit waters and diving into the abyss.
However much he might want to,
Baby can't tag along
on her 45-minute dives.
It might be three years
until he is able to hold his breath
long enough to join her.
But he can hear her.
[echolocation trilling echoes]
Hunting for giant squid over a mile below.
[sustained, steady lowing]
He knows he hasn't been abandoned.
His sisters and aunties gather around,
all taking the chance to play with him.
[overlapping, excited trilling]
Smothering him with love and affection.
[enchanting music continues]
Sperm whales have
the largest brains on the planet,
six times the size of ours.
And it's thought
with three times more devoted to empathy.
It's their close family bonds
and emotional intelligence
that helps sperm whales
survive in this wilderness.
Finally, full of squid, Mom returns
with rich milk for her baby.
On her way up,
she has stirred up the water column
and brought deep-sea nutrients
to the surface,
enriching this marine desert
and the ocean current
as it continues its journey
across the central Indian Ocean.
[wind rushing]
[tranquil, contemplative music playing]
Past tiny specks of land
the Maldives.
Chagos.
The Seychelles.
Each an oasis in the marine desert.
A magnet for sea life.
And holding, for some,
the promise of plunder.
The giant trevally, or GT for short.
At 30 pounds, he's still a youngster.
He's a hunter and might one day become
one of the atoll's apex predators.
[adventurous, spirited music playing]
His arrival has coincided
with an important event
in the island's calendar.
[flock squawking]
The week the ground-nesting terns
learn to fly.
The chicks need to build their stamina,
but they tire quickly
and need frequent rest.
For a small G
who needs to grow big and strong
it's an opportunity to change his diet.
At first, he's cautious.
He's lost out.
No match for these ferocious adults.
[tense, aggressive music playing]
At up to 170 pounds,
mature GTs can reach
speeds of 40 miles an hour.
And they've honed their technique.
[music intensifies]
Some of the adults have been returning
for this annual feast for over a decade.
He must learn to hunt just like them.
To approach from behind if he can,
then accelerate.
[flock cawing]
Here's one.
[tense music continuing]
The chick is tired.
It's the best chance he'll get.
[music sputters awkwardly]
[music trails off]
But birds are hard to catch.
Especially in flight.
Within the week,
the chicks behave more like the adults
[flock squawking]
able to stay in the air longer
and rarely sitting on the water anymore.
He now needs to assess
airspeed and altitude.
[tense music playing]
He can't see well above water.
So, it's all about
perfecting his trajectory.
[spirited music rising]
[tern squawks]
[determined, spirited music intensifies]
[music subsides]
This season,
the more experienced GTs get there first.
It may be years
until he masters the skills
and grows big enough to join the ranks
of the truly giant trevallies.
[rousing, stately music playing]
After two years flowing through
the emptiness of the big blue,
the global ocean current
collides headlong with East Africa,
mixing with food-rich coastal waters.
And here, the current splits.
The majority heads south.
But during the summer months,
some of it flows north
towards the Arabian Gulf.
Where, under the tropical sun
the rapid rates of evaporation
have created
one of the saltiest seas in any ocean.
[intriguing music playing]
It's home to a rarely seen inhabitant.
Once mistaken for a mermaid.
Today, dugongs are still
creatures of mystery.
These gentle sea cows were once common
along the coasts of the Indian Ocean,
from Australia to Africa.
In some areas,
they've been hunted almost to extinction.
[delicate, gentle music playing]
Their quest for lush grazing
ties them to seagrass meadows.
But it's recently been discovered
that dugongs will make
long-distance migrations
to take part in great gatherings.
Exactly why they do this is a mystery.
Today, it's a rare privilege
to see a sight like this.
One that may only be possible because of
the refreshing influence of the current.
Around the world, seagrass meadows,
and the animals that depend on them,
are declining as they are threatened
by rising sea temperatures.
[distorted whooshing]
This building heat
causes more and more water
to evaporate from the current,
intensifying the greatest weather system
on our planet.
[wind whipping jarringly]
The monsoon.
[thunder rolling]
Every year, it sweeps through
the northern Indian Ocean.
And today, it's more powerful
and unpredictable than ever.
The monsoon has always fed
the Indian Ocean
with nutrients from the land.
But these days,
it brings something much less welcome.
Pollution.
[haunting, hushed music playing]
Trillions of pieces of plastic
end up here every year.
Manta rays are wanderers
that have been riding
the global ocean current
for more than 20 million years.
But today,
as they filter feed on plankton,
they can't avoid ingesting these plastics.
And for every piece they can see,
there's a blizzard
of plankton-sized particles they cannot.
One manta ray caught
in discarded fishing gear
has no way to remove it.
The plastic line
will eventually cut through its flesh.
Ingesting plastics
or becoming entangled in them
is a modern risk for these ancient rays.
But it doesn't have to be this way.
We may have damaged our oceans,
but if we choose
to manage our waste better,
we can help heal them too.
[delicate, pensive music playing]
Off southern Mozambique,
there's a special place
where manta rays come
to seek treatment
for their infected wounds.
And they're not alone.
Many species of ray seek help here,
including a rare wedgefish,
a ray we've barely gotten to know,
but that's already critically endangered,
targeted by humans
for its high-value fins.
But it's the mantas
that need the most help healing.
This female is a shark attack survivor.
The bite damage to her wings
risks infection.
So, she's visiting her infirmary.
The medical team goes to work.
They remove infected tissue,
which promotes new growth.
Her injuries are their food.
Hundreds of manta rays
ride the current here for emergency care.
But there are risks.
Bull sharks patrol these waters.
[menacing undercurrent plays]
So, these intelligent rays
watch each other's backs
allowing all of them
to get the essential care they need.
With the right treatment, their bodies
have incredible powers of regeneration.
[bright, hopeful music playing]
These patients have been given
a second chance
thanks to the care they've received
at this special sanctuary.
A stronghold for so many rays,
the gentle wanderers
of the global ocean current.
Now, heading south, the great current
picks up speed and a new name,
becoming the Agulhas Current,
carrying equatorial heat
toward the tip of Africa,
where it begins to mix with the cooler,
richer waters of the Atlantic Ocean.
[dramatic, majestic music playing]
Ideal conditions
for the great white shark.
[measured, foreboding music playing]
It's one of the few warm-blooded sharks,
which improves muscle performance
and sharpens its mind.
To survive here,
in waters ruled by the great whites,
you have to be smarter.
[seal brays]
A young seal pup, just eight weeks old.
Born into a colony of Cape fur seals.
She'll need to learn how to survive
with great whites on her doorstep.
It's time for this new student
to enroll at seal school
where her classmates
are already being taught
the most important lessons of all.
Rule one, keep away from the sharp end.
[taut, suspenseful music playing]
Rule two, never let your guard down.
[seal brays in alarm]
Wise seals don't get caught napping.
[menacing music intensifies]
You can learn from others' mistakes.
The most important lesson of all,
though, is to work together.
[riveting music playing]
Their ability to act as one
makes a group of fur seals
stronger than any individual shark.
Against the mob
even a great white will back down.
[brays confidently]
But the real battle of wits
is yet to come.
[huffs]
A southern elephant seal.
A raider from Antarctic waters,
looking for new opportunities.
At first, the fur seals don't know
what to make of this stranger.
He looks like a seal
but he's even bigger than the shark.
[sudden, jarring music playing]
[guttural bellow]
And, to their surprise, just as deadly.
[threatening snuff]
The pup knows that land is
a fur seal's refuge.
[guttural bellowing]
[foreboding music intensifies]
But this predator doesn't stop
at the water's edge.
[distressed mewling]
[bellowing]
She's cornered.
[elephant seal snarls]
[rattly, jarring growling]
But in this group, she's never alone.
[brave, resolute music building]
She just has to stand her ground
until backup arrives.
[resolute music intensifying]
[mewls]
[brays]
[mewls]
They've already sent off a great white.
Together, they'll send
this elephant seal packing too.
It's their strength in numbers
and collective intelligence
that has allowed these fur seals
to survive here at the Cape.
And the effort is worth it
because once a year,
as the warmer Indian Ocean current
traps the cooler Atlantic waters
against the coast,
it forces together
shoals of fish in vast numbers.
It's known locally as the sardine run.
Hundreds of millions of sardines
form shoals up to five miles long.
Right on the fur seal's doorstep.
[bold, sweeping music playing]
But they won't have it
to themselves for long.
Here come plunge-diving gannets.
And up to 20,000 dolphins.
[echolocation trills]
Along with thousands of sharks.
And even
great whales.
It's an unrivaled bounty,
only made possible by the current
transforming what was a marine desert
into one of the greatest feasts
in all our oceans,
right at the very end of its journey
through the Indian Ocean.
Next, the global ocean current
continues its journey.
Flowing from the Indian
to the Atlantic Ocean,
where its fast-heating waters
are growing in power.
[majestic, soaring music playing]
The Atlantic is getting wilder than ever.
[brays]
And if you run into trouble,
you'll need a team to help you out.
[music subsides]
[sparkling, quirky outro music playing]
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