Planet Earth
.
Planet Earth is an Emmy Award-winning BBC nature documentary series narrated by David Attenborough and produced by Alastair Fothergill. It was first broadcast in the UK from 5 March 2006. The American version is narrated by Sigourney Weaver.
The series was co-produced with Discovery
Channel and the NHK in association with the CBC, and was described by its makers
as "the definitive look at the diversity of our planet". It was also
the first of its kind to be filmed almost entirely in high-definition. The series
was nominated for the Pioneer Audience Award for Best Programme at the 2007 BAFTA
TV awards.
The programmes were made over five years by producer Alastair Fothergill and his team, who were responsible for the successful The Blue Planet (2001). The narrator, David Attenborough, worked on them while also embarking on the last in his Life series, Life in Cold Blood. The series' music is composed by George Fenton. Filming involved visiting 62 countries and 204 different locations. Planet Earth had a production budget of around £13 million or $25 million.
There are 11 episodes. The first gives a general overview of the series, by describing each of the environments that are looked at in more detail in later programmes. However, the method used to communicate this, a 'journey' from one end of the Earth to the other, serves to demonstrate the rich variation that exists on the planet as a whole.
Each of the remaining 10 episodes focuses on one of the Earth's natural habitats and examines its indigenous features, together with the breadth of fauna found there. Several animals and locations are shown that have hitherto never been filmed, using innovative camera technology. Previously unseen animal behaviour includes: wolves chasing caribou observed from above; snow leopards pursuing markhor in the Himalayas; grizzly bear cubs leaving their den for the first time; crab-eating macaques that swim underwater; and over a hundred sailfish hunting en masse. CGI is used for some transitional sequences.
Some sequences, particularly in episodes 6 11, are notable for their potentially disturbing content. Examples include a lone elephant being brought down by lions and a polar bear unsuccessfully attacking a walrus colony and subsequently being overcome by hunger, exhaustion and injury. Fothergill confirmed that he asked BBC presentation for an appropriate warning before transmission in such cases:
Episodes
1. From Pole to Pole
Originally transmitted: 5 March 2006 (UK), 25 March 2007
(US)
The first episode illustrates a 'journey' around the globe and reveals
the effect of gradual climatic change and seasonal transitions en route. During
Antarctica's winter, emperor penguins endure four months of darkness, with no
food, in temperatures of 70°C. Meanwhile, as spring arrives in the Arctic,
polar bear cubs take their first steps into a world of rapidly thawing ice. In
northern Canada, the longest overland migration of any animal, over 2000 miles,
is that of three million caribou, which are hunted by wolves, and one such pursuit
is shown. The forests of eastern Russia are home to the Amur leopard: with a population
of just 40 individuals, it is now the world's rarest cat. This is primarily because
of the destruction of its habitat, and Attenborough states that it "symbolises
the fragility of our natural heritage." However, in the tropics, the jungle
that covers 3 % of the planet's surface supports 50% of its animals. Also depicted
is the one-second strike of a great white shark as it pounces on a seal, slowed
down forty times. Other species shown include New Guinea's birds of paradise,
African hunting dogs in their efficient pursuit of impala, elephants in Africa
migrating towards the waters of the Okavango Delta, a seasonal bloom of life in
the otherwise arid Kalahari Desert, and 300,000 migrating Baikal teal, containing
the world's entire population of the species in one flock. The Planet Earth Diaries
segment shows how the wild dog hunt was filmed unobtrusively with the aid of the
Heligimbal: a powerful, gyro-stabilised camera mounted beneath a helicopter.
2.
Mountains
Originally transmitted: 12 March 2006 (UK), 25 March 2007 (US)
The
second instalment focuses on the mountains. All the main ranges are explored with
extensive aerial photography. Ethiopia's Erta Ale is the longest continually erupting
volcano, for over 100 years. On the nearby highlands, geladas (the only primate
whose diet is almost entirely of grass) inhabit precipitous slopes nearly three
miles up, in troops that are 800 strong: the most numerous of their kind. Alongside
them live the critically endangered walia ibex, and both species take turns to
act as lookout for predatory Ethiopian wolves. The Andes have the most volatile
weather and guanacos are shown enduring a flash blizzard, along with an exceptional
group sighting of the normally solitary puma. The Alpine summits are always snow-covered,
apart from that of the Matterhorn, which is too sheer to allow it to settle. Grizzly
bear cubs emerge from their den for the first time in the Rockies, while Himalayan
inhabitants include rutting markhor, golden eagles that hunt migrating demoiselle
cranes, and the rare snow leopard. At the eastern end of the range, the giant
panda cannot hibernate due to its poor nutriment of bamboo and one of them cradles
its week old cub. Also shown is Earth's biggest mountain glacier: the Baltoro
in Pakistan, which is 43 miles long and visible from space. Planet Earth Diaries
demonstrates the difficulty of obtaining the first ever close-up footage of the
snow leopards: a process which took over a year.
3. Fresh Water
Originally
transmitted: 19 March 2006 (UK), 15 April 2007 (US)
Broadcast 19 March 2006,
this programme describes the course taken by rivers and some of the species that
take advantage of such a habitat. Only 3% of the world's water is fresh, yet all
life is ultimately dependent on it. Its journey begins as a stream in the mountains,
illustrated by Venezuela's Tepui, where there is a tropical downpour almost every
day. It then travels hundreds of miles before forming rapids. With the aid of
some expansive helicopter photography, one sequence demonstrates the vastness
of Angel Falls, the world's highest free flowing waterfall. Its waters drop unbroken
for nearly 1,000 metres and are blown away as a mist before they reach the bottom.
The erosive nature of rivers is shown by the Grand Canyon, created over five million
years by the Colorado River. In Japan, the water is inhabited by the biggest amphibian,
the two metre long giant salamander, while in the northern hemisphere, salmon
undertake the largest freshwater migration, and are hunted en route by grizzly
bears. Also featured are smooth coated otters repelling mugger crocodiles and
the latter's Nile cousin ambushing wildebeest as they cross the Mara River. Roseate
spoonbills are numerous in the Pantanal and are prey to spectacled caiman. In
addition, there are cichlids, piranhas, river dolphins and swimming crab eating
macaques. Planet Earth Diaries shows how a camera crew filmed a piranha feeding
frenzy in Brazil, after a two week search for the opportunity.
4. Caves
The Lechuguilla CaveOriginally transmitted: 26 March 2006 (UK), 22 April
2007 (US)
This episode explores "planet earth's final frontier":
the world of caves. At a depth of 400 metres, Mexico's Cave of Swallows is Earth's
deepest pit cave freefall drop, allowing entry by skydivers. Its volume could
contain New York City's Empire State Building. Also featured is Borneo's Deer
Cave and Gomantong Cave. Inhabitants of the former include three million wrinkle-lipped
bats, which have deposited guano on to an enormous mound. In Gomantong Cave, guano
is many metres high and is blanketed with hundreds of thousands of cockroaches
and other invertebrates. Also depicted are eyeless, subterranean creatures, such
as the Texas blind salamander and (bizarrely) a species of crab. Mexico's Cueva
de Villa Luz is also featured, with its flowing stream of sulphuric acid and snottite
formations made of living bacteria. A fish species, the Shortfin Molly (Poecilia
mexicana), has adapted to this habitat. The programme ends in New Mexico's Lechuguilla
Cave (discovered 1986) where sulphuric acid has produced unusually ornate, gypsum
crystal formations. Planet Earth Diaries reveals how a camera team spent a month
among the cockroaches on the guano mound in Gomantong Cave and describes the logistics
required to photograph Lechuguilla. Permission for the latter took two years and
local authorities are unlikely to allow another visit.
5. Deserts
Originally
transmitted: 2 April 2006 (UK), 1 April 2007 (US)
This instalment features
the harsh environment that covers one third of the Earth: the deserts. Due to
Siberian winds, Mongolia's Gobi Desert reaches extremes of temperature like no
other, ranging from 40°C to +50°C. It is home to the rare Bactrian
camel, which eats snow to maintain its fluid level and must limit itself to 10
litres a day if it is not to prove fatal. Africa's Sahara is the size of the USA,
and just one of its severe dust storms could cover the whole of Great Britain.
While some creatures, such as the dromedary, take them in their stride, for others
the only escape from such bombardments is to bury themselves in the sand. Few
rocks can resist them either and the outcrops shown in Egypt's White Desert are
being inexorably eroded. The biggest dunes (300 metres high) are to be found in
Namibia, while other deserts featured are the Atacama in Chile, the Sonoran in
Arizona, and areas of the Australian outback and Utah. Animals shown surviving
in such an unforgiving habitat include elephants, lions (hunting oryx), red kangaroos
(which moisten their forelegs with saliva to keep cool), nocturnal fennec foxes,
acrobatic flat lizards feeding on black flies, and duelling Nubian ibex. The final
sequence illustrates one of nature's most fearsome spectacles: a billion strong
plague of desert locusts, destroying all vegetation in its path. Planet Earth
Diaries explains how the hunt for the elusive Bactrian camels necessitated a two
month trek in Mongolia.
6. Ice Worlds
Originally transmitted: 5
November 2006 (UK), 1 April 2007 (US)
The sixth programme looks at the regions
of the Arctic and Antarctica. The latter contains 90% of the world's ice, and
stays largely deserted until the spring, when visitors arrive to harvest its waters.
Snow petrels take their place on nunataks and begin to court, but are preyed on
by South Polar skuas. During summer, a pod of humpback whales hunt krill by creating
a spiralling net of bubbles. The onset of winter sees the journey of emperor penguins
to their breeding grounds, 100 miles inland. Their eggs transferred to the males
for safekeeping, the females return to the ocean while their partners huddle into
large groups to endure the extreme cold. At the northern end of the planet, Arctic
residents include musk oxen, who are hunted by Arctic foxes and wolves. A female
polar bear and her two cubs head off across the ice to look for food. As the sun
melts the ice, a glimpse of the Earth's potential future reveals a male polar
bear that is unable to find a firm footing anywhere and has to resort to swimming,
which it cannot do indefinitely. Its desperate need to eat brings it to a colony
of walrus. Although it attacks repeatedly, the herd is successful in evading it
by returning to the sea. Wounded and unable to feed, the bear will not survive.
Meanwhile, back in Antarctica, the eggs of the emperor penguins finally hatch.
Planet Earth Diaries tells of the battle with the elements to obtain the penguin
footage and of unwelcome visits from polar bears.
7. Great Plains
Originally
transmitted: 12 November 2006 (UK), 8 April 2007 (US)
This episode deals with
savanna, steppe, tundra, prairie, and looks at the importance and resilience of
grasses in such treeless ecosystems. Their vast expanses contain the largest concentration
of animal life. In Outer Mongolia, a herd of Mongolian gazelle flee a bush fire
and has to move on to new grazing, but grass can repair itself rapidly and soon
reappears. On the Arctic tundra during spring, millions of migratory snow geese
arrive to breed and their young are preyed on by Arctic foxes. Meanwhile, time-lapse
photography depicts moving herds of caribou as a calf is brought down by a chasing
wolf. On the North American prairie, bison engage in the ritual to establish the
dominant males. The Tibetan Plateau is the highest of the plains and despite its
relative lack of grass, animals do survive there, including yak and wild ass.
However, the area's most numerous resident is the pika, whose nemesis is the Tibetan
fox. In tropical India, the tall grasses hide some of the largest creatures and
also the smallest, such as the pygmy hog. The final sequence depicts the African
savannah and elephants that are forced to share a waterhole with a pride of thirty
lions. The insufficient water makes it an uneasy alliance and the latter gain
the upper hand during the night when their hunger drives them to hunt and eventually
kill one of the pachyderms. Planet Earth Diaries explains how the lion hunt was
filmed in darkness using infrared light.
8. Jungles
Originally transmitted:
19 November 2006 (UK), 15 April 2007 (US)
The next instalment examines jungles
and tropical rainforests. These environments occupy only 3% of the land yet are
home to over half of the world's species. New Guinea is inhabited by almost 40
kinds of birds of paradise, which avoid conflict with each other by living in
different parts of the island. Some of their elaborate courtship displays are
shown. Within the dense forest canopy, sunlight is prized, and the death of a
tree triggers a race by saplings to fill the vacant space. Figs are a widespread
and popular food, and as many as 44 types of bird and monkey have been observed
picking from a single tree. The sounds of the jungle throughout the day are explored,
from the early morning calls of siamangs and orangutans to the nocturnal cacophony
of courting tree frogs. The importance of fungi to the rainforest is illustrated
by a sequence of them fruiting, including a parasite called cordyceps. The mutual
benefits of the relationship between carnivorous pitcher plants and red crab spiders
is also discussed. In the Congo, roaming forest elephants are shown reaching a
clearing to feed on essential clay minerals within the mud. Finally, chimpanzees
are one of the few jungle animals able to traverse both the forest floor and the
canopy in search of food. In Uganda, members of a 150-strong community of the
primates mount a raid into neighbouring territory in order to gain control of
it. Planet Earth Diaries looks at filming displaying birds of paradise.
9.
Shallow Seas
Originally transmitted: 26 November 2006 (UK), 8 April 2007 (US)
This programme is devoted to the shallow seas that fringe the world's continents.
Although they constitute 8% of the oceans, they contain most marine life. As humpback
whales return to breeding grounds in the tropics, a mother and its calf are followed.
While the latter takes in up to 500 litres of milk a day, its parent will starve
until it travels back to the poles to feed, and it must do this while it still
has sufficient energy left for the journey. The coral reefs of Indonesia are home
to the biggest variety of ocean dwellers. Examples include banded sea kraits,
which ally themselves with goatfish and trevally in order to hunt. In Western
Australia, dolphins hydroplane in the shallowest waters to catch a meal, while
in Bahrain, 100,000 Socotra cormorants rely on shamals that blow sand grains into
the nearby Persian Gulf, transforming it into a rich fishing ground. The appearance
of algae in the spring starts a food chain that leads to an abundant harvest,
and sea lions and dusky dolphins are among those taking advantage of it. In Southern
Africa, as chokka squid are preyed on by short-tail stingray, the Cape fur seals
that share the waters are hunted by the world's largest predatory fish: the great
white shark. On Marion Island in the Indian Ocean, a group of king penguins must
cross a beach occupied by fur seals that do not hesitate to attack them. Planet
Earth Diaries shows the difficulties of filming the one second strike of a great
white shark.
10. Seasonal Forests
Originally transmitted: 3 December
2006 (UK), 22 April 2007 (US)
The penultimate episode surveys the coniferous
and deciduous seasonal woodland habitats, the most extensive forests on Earth.
Conifers begin sparsely in the Arctic but soon dominate the land, and the taiga
circles the globe, containing a third of all the Earth's trees. Few creatures
can survive the Arctic climate all year round, but the moose and wolverine are
exceptions. 1600 kilometres to the south, on the Pacific coast of North America,
conifers have reached their full potential. These include some of the world's
tallest trees: the redwoods. Here, a pine marten is shown stalking a squirrel,
and great grey owl chicks take their first flight. Further south still, in the
Valdivian forests of Chile, a population of smaller animals exist, including the
pudú and the kodkod. During spring in a European broad-leaved forest, a
mandarin duck leads its day-old family to leap from its tree trunk nest to the
leaf litter below. On a summer night on North America's east coast, periodical
cicadas emerge en masse to mate, an event that occurs every seventeen years. After
revisiting Russia's Amur leopards in winter, a timelapse sequence illustrates
the effect of the ensuing spring on the deciduous forest floor. In India's teak
forests, a langur monkey strays too far from the chital that act as its sentinels
and falls prey to a tiger. Planet Earth Diaries explains how aerial shots of the
baobab were achieved by the use of a cinebulle, an adapted hot air balloon.
11. Ocean Deep
Originally transmitted: 10 December 2006 (UK), 25 March 2007
(US)
The final instalment concentrates on the most unexplored area of the
planet: the deep ocean. It begins with a whale shark used as a shield by a shoal
of bait fish to protect themselves from yellowfin tuna. Also shown is an oceanic
whitetip shark trailing rainbow runners. Meanwhile, a 500-strong school of dolphins
head for the Azores, where they work together to feast on scad mackerel. Down
in the ocean's furthest reaches, some creatures defy classification. On the sea
floor, scavengers such as the spider crab bide their time, awaiting carrion from
above. The volcanic mountain chain at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean also sustains
life through the bacteria that surround its sulphide vents. There are thought
to be around 30,000 undersea volcanoes, some of them taller than Mount Everest.
Their sheer cliffs provide anchorage for several corals and sponges. Nearer the
surface, the currents that surround these seamounts force nutrients up from below
and thus marine life around them is abundant. Off the Mexican coast, a large group
of sailfish encircle another shoal of bait fish. The hunters change colour as
a message of their intentions, since an attack could also be fatal to others of
their number. The last sequence depicts the largest animal on Earth: the blue
whale, of which 300,000 once roamed the world's oceans. Now fewer than 3 % remain.
Planet Earth Diaries shows the search in the Bahamas for oceanic whitetip sharks.
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