Seven Worlds, One Planet (2019) s01e04 Episode Script

Australia

Australia - an island continent cast adrift during the time of the dinosaurs.
Isolated from the rest of life on land for millions of years, the animals cast away here are today like none elsewhere.
This is a land of survivors.
The jungles of northern Australia - the oldest on our planet.
Unchanged for 180 million years.
The animals and plants here are armed built to live alongside dinosaurs.
Now there is just one giant left.
With claws longer than a velociraptor and nearly two metres tall the cassowary rules this forest.
But the key to its success is not its stature it's the male's abilities as a parent.
This one's chicks are six weeks old, and he will raise them by himself.
Every morsel of food is valuable if his chicks are to grow up tall and strong.
But in this forest, most of the fruit is too big for the chicks.
It must be cut up for them.
There is food to be gathered throughout their territory but it's not easy to find.
He shows them how to cross water.
But when your legs are only 20cm long, a stream like this is very deep.
One takes the plunge but for the other, this is too daunting.
He turns and goes back the way he came.
Out of sight and without his father's protection, he's vulnerable.
Only half of cassowary chicks make it to adulthood and for very good reason.
Australia's prehistoric forests are still full of predators.
Many manage to survive here by eating almost anything that's smaller than they are.
He needs to find his father and quickly.
The male hears his cries and answers using a special call that carries well through the thick forest.
And then a glimpse of some reassuring bright colours.
Their bonds are stronger than their fears.
The male will guide and protect his chicks for another eight months before he mates again.
Australia was once part of the vast supercontinent of Gondwanaland covered in forest and full of life.
Dinosaurs dominated.
Mammals had only just appeared.
Then Australia began to break away.
Cast adrift on this new island were reptiles, birds and early mammals that then evolved in isolation from the rest of the world.
None could now leave this giant island, and very few could get here unless they could fly.
A little red flying fox.
Their ancestors flew here, travelling along the chain of volcanic islands that links Asia to Australia.
But their huge wings, which stretch from their fingers to their toes, make it difficult for them to walk or take off from the ground, so, when they want to rest, they hang upside down in trees.
But the bats have to drink every day.
And they do so on the wing.
They swoop just low enough to wet their bellies and then, back in their roosts, they will suck out the water.
Each evening, 10,000 of them come here.
Not all of them return.
Every two metres of river, there is a crocodile.
They were here long before the bats survivors from Australia's prehistoric past.
These dramas have been taking place for millions of years aerial agility versus patience and deadly speed.
Australia's forests are hostile places in which to make your home.
As you move inland, the forest thins, the air cools and the land, as it gets higher, changes dramatically.
The Great Dividing Range, 2,000 metres above the jungle.
To survive here, you must be able to tolerate really harsh conditions.
Kangaroos, like nearly all of the continent's native mammals, are marsupials mammals that rear their young usually in a pouch on the mother's belly.
And the young up here certainly need such shelter.
No kangaroos can survive for long higher than this.
But there is an even tougher marsupial up here.
A wombat.
She usually shelters underground in a burrow, but now that is under a metre of snow, together with all the grass on which she lives.
She weighs as much a big dog and has the legs of a small one - not ideal for deep snow.
Fragments of bark hardly count even as a snack and she's hungry.
She needs grass.
But it's over a mile away, across a frozen river.
Wombats might not be fast, but then they don't need to be up here.
They can survive on next to nothing.
A few mouthfuls will be enough food for over a week.
And there's not much competition for it in this small corner of the continent.
Snowy peaks are hardly typical of Australia, but the Great Dividing Range is a remnant of what were once some of the longest mountain chains on Earth.
They connected Australia and Antarctica.
But then these sister continents broke apart.
Antarctica, drifting southwards, became locked in ice.
Australia drifted northwards towards the equator and became hotter and drier.
Woodlands developed, and in places where rainfall was low - open grasslands.
On these grassy plains, animals had the space to thrive.
These are also eastern grey kangaroos, and this is their true home.
Here, they are well fed and powerful.
Adults can stand over two metres tall and travel as fast as a racehorse.
And on these open plains, you need speed because where there are large herds, there will be predators.
Dingoes - descendants of wolves that were brought here over 4,000 years ago by human visitors from Asia.
This pack is led by a white female and they are hunting.
Creating panic tests the herd.
Mothers with young in their pouches might be slower but they can still outrun a dingo.
Maybe an ambush will work.
But even young, newly independent kangaroos seem uncatchable.
Across these open, flat plains, the dingoes are just not fast enough.
But what makes the white female their leader is her stamina and, particularly, her intelligence.
She has run 18 miles today, but she still doesn't give up.
A different group of kangaroos, this time on uneven ground.
It's what she's been looking for.
Driving them uphill, she's struggling to keep up with them.
And as they hurtle down the other side, the kangaroos pick up speed.
They will easily outpace her, if they stay in control.
The white dingo has more than one reason to be so relentless.
She's a mother.
This is a rare sight.
Dingo pups are hardly ever seen.
With so much effort for just one meal, the open plains are tough places on which to raise young.
These are gumtrees.
They have leaves that are poisonous to most animals.
But not the koala.
They eat almost nothing else.
There are echidnas in these forests, too - mammals that don't even have pouches but lay eggs, like reptiles.
And there is an assassin here that has only recently been discovered.
A Jotus jumping spider.
She's only 5mm long, but, nonetheless, she's a stealthy and ferocious hunter.
She searches for prey among the grass stems.
She's single-minded and focused on hunting.
But today might be different.
This is something new, something fast and a little trickier.
But what is it? Is it food? It's a male Jotus, looking for a mate.
He needs to catch her attention, but female Jotus only mate once.
If she's mated before, she might kill him.
He will need to seduce her with care.
Waving his arms makes his intentions clear.
He's a friend, not food.
No sign of an attack yet.
But she doesn't seem particularly impressed.
Time to try his best move the double paddle.
That surely will do the trick.
One final wave and he's tamed her.
She stays still for just long enough.
And then he retreats quickly, before she has second thoughts.
If you travel still further towards the centre of Australia, the landscape changes yet again.
Trees and grass disappear.
The continent, throughout prehistory, continued to drift north, and as it entered the tropics, it got hotter and hotter.
Over thousands of years, the grasslands of the centre dried, and lakes and rivers turned dust.
The rocks have been reduced to sand by the hot, blasting winds.
Now Australia's centre is one vast desert.
Its immensity is almost impossible to comprehend.
This train running north is a half a mile long.
Travelling at nearly 50 miles an hour, it takes almost three days to get from one side to another.
Australia today is the driest inhabited continent on Earth.
Rain hardly ever falls in 70% of it.
From space, the continent is seen to be stained red by iron oxide - rust from its disintegrating rocks.
In the surface are lines carved by winds over millennia.
The very bones of the continent are now stripped bare the foundations of what once were mountains.
At its heart stands the great rock mountain of Uluru sacred to the first people to arrive here 60,000 years ago.
There is almost no soil here, few plants, few animals and almost no permanent water.
It's a place where only the toughest can survive.
This is the land of reptiles.
Australia has more species of them than any other continent.
The perentie, two metres long, is the biggest here, and he's thirsty.
It only rains here once or twice a year.
And when there isn't any rain, perenties get their water from eating lizards.
There are several kinds to choose from bearded dragons blue-tongued skinks and thorny devils.
All are on the menu.
The thorny devil also gets its water from its food.
It's only the size of a mouse, but, even so, it must eat hundreds of ants every day to get what it needs.
Most storm clouds pass by without releasing any water.
But just sometimes, there's a brief shower.
Everyone makes the most of the opportunity.
It's so hot the droplets will disappear within minutes.
But the thorny devil has a trick.
He's found a tiny puddle, only a few millimetres deep, and he dips his toe into it.
His skin is like blotting paper.
It collects moisture by capillary action, sucking it up along the inter-connecting grooves until he glistens all over.
When the water reaches his mouth, he can collect it while still keeping his head up, on the lookout for danger.
The perentie is 200 times the size of a thorny devil.
Tiny puddles and droplets are of no use to him.
What he needs is a juicy lizard.
That was a bearded dragon that wasn't quite quick enough.
Even the perentie sometimes gets a chance to quench his thirst.
There is one species that has truly conquered the Australian desert.
They don't wait for water to come to them.
They sometimes travel over 300 miles in a single day to find it.
Australia's hardiest animal the wild budgerigar the most accomplished of all desert nomads.
These have been travelling together for weeks and that has evidently caused a few domestic arguments.
This is truly an immense community.
There are over 10,000 budgies in this flock.
Every one of them is thirsty.
But although they've found this billabong they must be wary.
A hawk - and one that eats budgies.
As long as it remains on the ground, the budgies will risk taking a drink.
Once it takes to the air, however, the budgies are in danger.
And it's not the only bird of prey here.
The budgies have a simple but very effective defence - they all take to the wing at once.
An aerial hunter needs to lock on to a single target for a few seconds if it is to catch it, but in this swirl, that's very hard to do.
Flying in a flock keeps the budgies safe, but they're still desperate to drink.
As soon as a particularly brave one takes the plunge, they all do.
But once on the water, they are easier to target.
They must drink quickly and stick together.
The last ones to leave will be the ones in most danger.
Only one has been taken from a flock of 10,000.
In a few days, they will leave the area, on their never-ending search for the next brief opportunity to feed and drink.
As the continent continued to drift north, it eventually entered warm, tropical seas.
And here, in the crystal-clear, sunlit water, just a metre or two beneath the surface, life proliferated.
Coral grows into reefs in these shallow seas.
This is Ningaloo today one of the richest anywhere in the world.
Thousands of species of fish and all kinds of other organisms thrive in these coral cities.
And they have attracted the most ancient of living predators.
Sharks.
They were around 200 million years before the dinosaurs.
They're fast and agile, well able to pick off the small reef fish.
But they come here for bigger rewards.
These are fish from the open ocean, and every so often, for some reason, they swim over the reef.
The small fish swirl like the budgies, and for the same reason.
It makes it harder for a hunter to single out a particular target.
But, in fact, the sharks aren't trying to catch them individually.
They're driving them closer to the shore, penning them against the beach.
Slowly, the sharks drive each new wave of fish into shallow water, and the bait ball grows.
More sharks arrive, some from many miles away.
And still the sharks don't attack.
They're waiting for the right moment.
Millions of fish are now trapped in these shallow waters.
It only happens like this once in every decade or so.
The time has come to strike.
For the sharks, this is a bonanza.
They work together.
Each shark now fills its stomach.
These shallow seas are exceptionally rich in sharks.
There are more species here than anywhere else on Earth.
Australia is not only fringed by rich reefs but girdled with islands - some big, some small.
Off the south coast lies by far the biggest of them.
Tasmania.
And that has its own special marsupial one that seldom appears until after dark.
The Tasmanian devil.
Many predators inhabit a territory packed with prey.
But here, there's nothing like that for them.
Each may travel for miles night after night, prepared to eat anything it can find, dead or alive.
The shoreline is a good place to search.
There might be some small creatures to catch here, or maybe something that the tide has brought in.
The carcass of a wallaby has been washed ashore.
Tasmanian devils can eat 40% of their body weight in one session, and they have hugely powerful jaws.
They tackle everything - even bones.
Back at the den, there are other hungry mouths.
Her two youngsters are six months old.
They still rely on their mother's milk, but they're feeling peckish! There must be something solid they could find for themselves while they're waiting for a drink.
Is this food? That possum smells tasty but it's a little high up.
This looks more promising.
At last, a giant stick! Not bad for a first go.
Their mother will protect and feed these youngsters for another three months.
Their survival is important to her, but also for us because these are one of the last devil families in the world.
Tasmanian devils are now endangered found in only a few places, such as this remote islet off the coast of Tasmania.
But they once lived across the whole of Australia.
Evidence that this was so can be seen nearly 2,500 miles away from the devils' family den, on Australia's northern coast.
This great stretch of boulders is covered by the largest concentration of prehistoric images anywhere in the world.
Over one million pictures of wildlife and among them a Tasmanian devil.
It was engraved on stone 60,000 years ago by some of the first human beings to reach the continent.
Then, just 200 years ago, European settlers arrived with guns and dogs, foxes and cats.
Together, they decimated Australia's unique wildlife.
This was one of the continent's biggest animal predators - a marsupial wolf, or thylacine.
The last-known remaining one was filmed in 1936 in a zoo just before it died and so brought the final extinction of its species.
These rocks are now its memorial.
And they may become that for the Tasmanian devil as well.
Mammals in Australia are disappearing faster than anywhere else on Earth.
They succeeded in adapting to life as their home changed around them.
But now they face their greatest challenge - the change to their world brought by humanity.
Which of its unique species will survive the coming decades now depends on us.
The most ambitious shoot for the Australia team was filming the continent's top predator - the dingo - hunting.
Elusive and shy, they're rarely seen.
The crew journeyed to the high plains of Australia, where park rangers had reported sightings of a white dingo and her pack.
In their first week, the team confirm the sightings There she is.
and begin to catch glimpses.
But with the dingoes constantly on the move, keeping track of them is a challenge.
They teleport around, because you just lose them in the grass.
It's madness.
Each time the crew arrive to set up they're too late.
I couldn't believe how far she'd gone.
By the time we managed to drive over the brow of the hill, she was a kilometre away.
If they lose them, it could take days to find them again.
And searching in outback Australia can be dangerous work.
Brown snakes are one of the world's most venomous.
And it's not only the snakes that have a nasty bite.
Dear! Look at that.
Sorry.
Turns out I just stood in an ants' nest.
Over the coming weeks, the dingoes continue to give the crew the runaround.
With such a large area to search, they enlist the help of two additional cameramen.
Dan is a dingo expert and studied them for five years, and even he struggled to follow them.
Dingoes are Australia's most heavily persecuted native animal and that makes them so incredibly elusive and hard to film.
They're very scared of humans.
Dingoes have lived in Australia for over 4,000 years, but when Europeans arrived with livestock, they were seen as a threat.
Today, they continue to be shot, poisoned and trapped, which explains why they avoid the crew.
So Dan suggests a new approach.
From the air, they have a better view.
Now they can track the dingoes and follow their trails.
And they notice the white dingo repeatedly returning to the same patch of forest.
Ben, the park ranger, goes to explore Dog's had a scratch in here.
- Old roo leg.
- and unearths a den site.
Den site in here.
Look at it.
Jeez.
Only a handful of wild dingo dens have ever been filmed, so the team set up a stakeout.
And after a few days waiting To the best of my knowledge, this is some of the first footage of wild dingo pups at the den.
Being able to capture this really intimate, up-close footage is amazing.
Really, really special.
The den site is a major breakthrough.
Now the team can find the white dingo each morning Yeah, I've got her.
and begin to understand her hunting patterns.
At this point, she's just testing the water to see which which ones are weaker, or if there are any joeys around that she can hunt easily.
But her chases cover such vast distances that filming them from start to finish is impossible.
Time for the final crew members.
With the filming helicopter, the team can stay airborne for long enough to capture her marathon hunts.
But to be successful, the ground and aerial team will need to work together.
So we've got spotters all around the valley, and if anything happens, if anything moves, we can run to the helicopter and we can be up in the air in about three minutes and filming.
We're just on standby all morning and all afternoon.
With nine people monitoring the white dingo's every move, all they can do is wait.
Until one morning She really looks like she's eyeing up those roos over there.
She's just stopped and just looking at them.
Yeah, she's definitely looking for some roos.
Over.
With the dingo on the move, the hunt seems imminent.
As the helicopter prepares to launch, the ground team keep track of her.
Yep, she's running, she's running, she's running.
She looks good.
Finally able to keep up, the team film these dingoes hunting kangaroos for the first time, adding to the little we know about these remarkable predators.
After five weeks following the white dingo, the team are left in awe of her.
She's worked so hard, catching roos and looking after her babies, and it's been just amazing.
I'll never forget it.
Next time - a world transformed by mankind where extraordinary animals are found in surprising places.
Europe.

Previous EpisodeNext Episode