1 00:00:36,453 --> 00:00:40,082 Dwarfed by the vast expanse of the open ocean, 2 00:00:40,249 --> 00:00:43,961 the biggest animal that has ever lived on our planet. 3 00:00:50,550 --> 00:00:56,160 A blue whale, 30 meters long and weighing over 200 tons. 4 00:00:56,320 --> 00:01:00,040 It's far bigger than even the biggest dinosaur. 5 00:01:01,750 --> 00:01:04,540 Its tongue weighs as much as an elephant. 6 00:01:04,710 --> 00:01:07,190 Its heart is the size of a car, 7 00:01:07,610 --> 00:01:10,250 and some of its blood vessels are so wide 8 00:01:10,410 --> 00:01:12,500 that you could swim down them. 9 00:01:14,170 --> 00:01:15,960 Its tail alone 10 00:01:16,130 --> 00:01:19,590 is the width of a small aircraft's wings. 11 00:01:37,570 --> 00:01:40,840 Its streamlining, close to perfection, 12 00:01:41,010 --> 00:01:43,420 enables it to cruise at 20 knots. 13 00:01:43,590 --> 00:01:46,920 It's one of the fastest animals in the sea. 14 00:01:51,390 --> 00:01:53,480 The ocean's largest inhabitant 15 00:01:53,650 --> 00:01:56,990 feeds almost exclusively on one of the smallest - 16 00:01:57,160 --> 00:02:01,050 krill, a crustacean just a few centimeters long. 17 00:02:05,380 --> 00:02:08,720 Gathered in a shoal, krill stain the sea red, 18 00:02:08,890 --> 00:02:13,560 and a single blue Whale in a day can consume 40 million of them. 19 00:02:22,570 --> 00:02:25,700 Despite the enormous size of blue whales, 20 00:02:25,860 --> 00:02:27,950 we know very little about them. 21 00:02:28,120 --> 00:02:30,440 Their migration routes are still a mystery, 22 00:02:30,610 --> 00:02:33,860 and we have absolutely no idea where they go to breed. 23 00:02:38,700 --> 00:02:40,690 They are a dramatic reminder 24 00:02:40,850 --> 00:02:42,840 of how much we still have to learn 25 00:02:43,010 --> 00:02:46,550 about the ocean and the creatures that live there. 26 00:02:49,800 --> 00:02:52,200 Our planet is a blue planet. 27 00:02:52,610 --> 00:02:55,890 Over 70 percent of it is covered by the sea. 28 00:02:58,810 --> 00:03:01,980 The Pacific Ocean alone covers half the globe. 29 00:03:02,150 --> 00:03:04,990 You can fly across it non-stop for 12 hours 30 00:03:05,150 --> 00:03:08,450 and still see nothing more than a speck of land. 31 00:03:10,200 --> 00:03:11,770 This series Will reveal 32 00:03:11,930 --> 00:03:14,870 the complete natural history of our ocean planet 33 00:03:15,040 --> 00:03:19,460 from its familiar shores to the mysteries of its deepest seas. 34 00:03:31,890 --> 00:03:33,710 By volume, the ocean makes up 35 00:03:33,880 --> 00:03:36,890 97 percent of the earth 's inhabitable space, 36 00:03:37,060 --> 00:03:39,810 and the sheer quantity of its marine life it contains 37 00:03:39,980 --> 00:03:42,770 far exceeds that which inhabits the land. 38 00:04:07,090 --> 00:04:11,130 But life in the ocean is not evenly spread. It's regulated 39 00:04:11,300 --> 00:04:13,630 by the path of currents carrying nutrients, 40 00:04:13,800 --> 00:04:16,070 and the varying power of the sun. 41 00:04:18,020 --> 00:04:21,900 In this first program, we will see how these two forces interact 42 00:04:22,060 --> 00:04:24,150 to control the distribution of life 43 00:04:24,320 --> 00:04:28,260 from the coral seas to the polar wastes. 44 00:05:25,280 --> 00:05:28,260 The sheer physical power of the ocean 45 00:05:28,430 --> 00:05:30,310 dominates our planet. 46 00:05:46,780 --> 00:05:50,580 It profoundly influences the weather of all the world. 47 00:05:50,990 --> 00:05:55,630 Water vapor rising from it forms the clouds and generates the storms 48 00:05:55,800 --> 00:05:58,380 that ultimately will drench the land. 49 00:06:18,360 --> 00:06:21,490 The great waves that roar in towards the shores 50 00:06:21,660 --> 00:06:24,790 are dramatic demonstrations of its power. 51 00:06:40,220 --> 00:06:43,050 Waves originate far out at sea. 52 00:06:43,220 --> 00:06:46,810 There, even gentle breezes can cause ripples, 53 00:06:46,970 --> 00:06:49,350 and ripples grow into swells. 54 00:06:59,440 --> 00:07:02,460 Out in the open ocean, unimpeded by land, 55 00:07:02,620 --> 00:07:05,460 such swells can become gigantic. 56 00:07:28,480 --> 00:07:32,450 It's only when an ocean swell eventually reaches shallow water 57 00:07:32,620 --> 00:07:34,710 that it starts to break. 58 00:07:42,250 --> 00:07:45,720 As it approaches the coast, the water at the bottom of the swell 59 00:07:45,890 --> 00:07:48,560 is slowed by contact with the seabed. 60 00:07:48,730 --> 00:07:51,360 The top of the swell, still traveling fast, 61 00:07:51,520 --> 00:07:55,140 starts to roll over and so the wave breaks. 62 00:08:27,800 --> 00:08:32,390 The ocean never rests. Huge currents, such as the Gulf Stream, 63 00:08:32,550 --> 00:08:36,480 keep its waters constantly on the move all round the globe. 64 00:08:36,640 --> 00:08:39,270 It's these currents more than any other factor 65 00:08:39,440 --> 00:08:43,770 that control the distribution of nutrients and life in the seas. 66 00:08:47,110 --> 00:08:50,480 A tiny island lost in the midst of the Pacific. 67 00:08:50,650 --> 00:08:52,630 It's the tip of a huge mountain 68 00:08:52,800 --> 00:08:57,340 that rises from the sea floor thousands of meters below. 69 00:09:03,050 --> 00:09:06,390 The nearest land is 300 miles away. 70 00:09:10,100 --> 00:09:12,890 Isolated sea mounts like this one 71 00:09:13,060 --> 00:09:15,710 create oases where life can flourish 72 00:09:15,880 --> 00:09:19,590 in the comparatively empty expanses of the open ocean. 73 00:09:29,060 --> 00:09:32,720 But all the creatures that swim beside it would not be here 74 00:09:32,890 --> 00:09:35,140 were it not for one key factor - 75 00:09:36,350 --> 00:09:38,230 the deep ocean currents. 76 00:09:43,820 --> 00:09:47,790 Far below the surface, they collide with the island's flanks 77 00:09:47,950 --> 00:09:49,710 and are deflected upwards, 78 00:09:49,870 --> 00:09:54,000 bringing with them from the depths a rich soup of nutrients. 79 00:09:56,840 --> 00:10:01,340 Such up-wellings attract great concentrations of life. 80 00:10:09,600 --> 00:10:12,530 Most of the fish here are permanent residents 81 00:10:12,700 --> 00:10:15,960 feeding on plankton - tiny floating plants and animals 82 00:10:16,120 --> 00:10:19,250 nourished by the richness brought up from the depths, 83 00:10:19,420 --> 00:10:22,920 and they attract visitors from the open ocean. 84 00:10:24,760 --> 00:10:26,130 Tuna. 85 00:10:52,830 --> 00:10:55,960 The plankton feeders are easy targets. 86 00:11:07,090 --> 00:11:10,930 All this action attracts even larger predators. 87 00:11:13,810 --> 00:11:15,230 Sharks. 88 00:11:20,020 --> 00:11:21,900 Hundreds of sharks. 89 00:11:24,690 --> 00:11:28,720 These silky sharks are normally ocean-going species, 90 00:11:28,890 --> 00:11:31,410 but the sea mounts in the eastern Pacific 91 00:11:31,570 --> 00:11:34,520 like Cocos, Mapelo and the Galapagos, 92 00:11:34,690 --> 00:11:39,020 attract silkies in huge groups up to 500 strong. 93 00:11:42,940 --> 00:11:46,550 Silkies seem to specialize in taking injured fish 94 00:11:46,710 --> 00:11:48,770 and constantly circle sea mounts 95 00:11:48,930 --> 00:11:51,770 on the lookout for the chance to do so. 96 00:11:56,900 --> 00:11:59,490 But silkies are not the only visitors. 97 00:12:03,450 --> 00:12:07,560 Hammerheads gather in some of the largest shark shoals 98 00:12:07,730 --> 00:12:09,980 to be found anywhere in the ocean. 99 00:12:10,150 --> 00:12:14,150 Sometimes, thousands will circle over a single sea mount. 100 00:12:18,910 --> 00:12:21,760 But these sharks are not here for food. 101 00:12:22,180 --> 00:12:24,430 They have come for another reason. 102 00:12:27,930 --> 00:12:32,140 Some of the locals provide a cleaning service. 103 00:12:35,400 --> 00:12:37,670 Following the last El Niño year, 104 00:12:37,840 --> 00:12:42,700 when a rise in water temperatures gave many sharks fungal infections, 105 00:12:42,860 --> 00:12:45,330 the number of hammerheads visiting the sea mounts 106 00:12:45,500 --> 00:12:47,380 reached record levels. 107 00:12:58,760 --> 00:13:01,440 Nutrients also well up to the surface 108 00:13:01,610 --> 00:13:04,030 along the coasts of the continents. 109 00:13:05,400 --> 00:13:09,410 This is Natal on South Africa 's eastern seaboard. 110 00:13:09,820 --> 00:13:10,970 It's June, 111 00:13:11,130 --> 00:13:14,970 and just off-shore, strange black patches have appeared. 112 00:13:18,890 --> 00:13:22,480 They look like immense oil slicks up to a mile long. 113 00:13:25,110 --> 00:13:27,650 But this is a living slick: 114 00:13:27,820 --> 00:13:31,850 millions and millions of sardines on a marine migration 115 00:13:32,020 --> 00:13:34,010 that in terms of sheer biomass, 116 00:13:34,170 --> 00:13:38,090 rivals that of the Wildebeest on the grasslands of Africa. 117 00:13:42,470 --> 00:13:46,830 These fish live mostly in the cold waters south of the Cape, 118 00:13:47,250 --> 00:13:50,160 but each year the coastal currents reverse. 119 00:13:50,330 --> 00:13:54,060 The warm Agulhas current that flows down from the north 120 00:13:54,230 --> 00:13:57,440 has been displaced by cold water from the south, 121 00:13:57,850 --> 00:14:00,340 and that has brought up rich nutrients. 122 00:14:00,510 --> 00:14:03,770 They in turn have created a bloom of plankton, 123 00:14:03,850 --> 00:14:06,610 and the sardines are now feasting on it. 124 00:14:16,490 --> 00:14:18,480 As the sardines travel north, 125 00:14:18,640 --> 00:14:21,600 a whole caravan of predators follow them. 126 00:14:25,690 --> 00:14:29,020 Thousands of Cape gannets track the sardines. 127 00:14:29,190 --> 00:14:31,640 They nested off the Cape and timed their breeding 128 00:14:31,810 --> 00:14:33,680 so that their newly-fledged chicks 129 00:14:33,850 --> 00:14:36,440 can join them in pursuing the shoals. 130 00:14:44,280 --> 00:14:49,030 Below water, hundreds of sharks have also joined the caravan. 131 00:14:52,240 --> 00:14:54,700 These are bronze Whaler sharks, 132 00:14:54,870 --> 00:14:58,660 a cold water species that normally lives much further south. 133 00:15:04,410 --> 00:15:06,390 These three-meter sharks 134 00:15:06,560 --> 00:15:09,930 cut such great swathes through the sardine shoals 135 00:15:10,100 --> 00:15:12,900 that their tracks are visible from the air. 136 00:15:14,060 --> 00:15:16,050 Harried by packs of predators 137 00:15:16,220 --> 00:15:18,640 and swept in by the action of the waves, 138 00:15:18,810 --> 00:15:22,110 the sardine shoals are penned close to the shore. 139 00:15:40,830 --> 00:15:45,340 Common dolphin are coming in from the open ocean to join the feast. 140 00:16:00,730 --> 00:16:02,320 There are over a thousand of them 141 00:16:02,490 --> 00:16:04,570 in this one school. 142 00:16:12,710 --> 00:16:17,750 When they catch up with the sardines, the action really begins. 143 00:16:21,460 --> 00:16:25,590 Working together, they drive the shoal towards the surface. 144 00:16:34,230 --> 00:16:38,520 It's easier for the dolphins to snatch fish up here. 145 00:16:52,830 --> 00:16:56,190 Now the sardines have no escape. 146 00:17:07,950 --> 00:17:09,340 Thanks to the dolphins, 147 00:17:09,500 --> 00:17:13,360 the sardines have come within the diving range of the gannets. 148 00:17:25,790 --> 00:17:28,910 Hundreds of white arrows shoot into the sea, 149 00:17:29,070 --> 00:17:32,700 leaving long trails of bubbles behind each dive. 150 00:17:44,920 --> 00:17:48,130 Next to join the frenzy are the sharks. 151 00:18:01,020 --> 00:18:04,220 Sharks get very excited when dolphins are around. 152 00:18:04,380 --> 00:18:07,050 They can feed particularly well 153 00:18:07,220 --> 00:18:09,300 once the dolphins have driven the sardines 154 00:18:09,460 --> 00:18:12,340 into more compact groups near the surface. 155 00:18:16,510 --> 00:18:20,470 As the frenzy continues, walls of bubbles drift upwards. 156 00:18:23,310 --> 00:18:25,680 They are being released by the dolphins 157 00:18:25,850 --> 00:18:27,930 working together in teams. 158 00:18:30,890 --> 00:18:32,090 They use the bubbles 159 00:18:32,250 --> 00:18:35,510 to corral the sardines into ever tighter groups. 160 00:18:38,970 --> 00:18:41,810 The sardines seldom cross the wall of bubbles 161 00:18:41,980 --> 00:18:44,070 and crowd closer together. 162 00:18:47,820 --> 00:18:49,500 Bubble netting in this way, 163 00:18:49,660 --> 00:18:53,880 enables the dolphins to grab every last trapped sardine. 164 00:19:06,300 --> 00:19:09,130 Just when the feasting seems to be almost over, 165 00:19:09,300 --> 00:19:11,180 a Bryde's Whale. 166 00:19:15,680 --> 00:19:18,100 The survivors head on northwards, 167 00:19:18,270 --> 00:19:21,190 and the caravan of predators follows them. 168 00:19:30,110 --> 00:19:33,790 Nutrients can also be brought up, though less predictably, 169 00:19:33,960 --> 00:19:36,040 by rough weather. 170 00:19:40,920 --> 00:19:45,320 Particularly near the poles, huge storms stir the depths 171 00:19:45,480 --> 00:19:47,200 and enrich the surface waters, 172 00:19:47,370 --> 00:19:49,160 and here, in the South Atlantic, 173 00:19:49,320 --> 00:19:52,070 the seas are the roughest on the planet. 174 00:19:55,540 --> 00:19:57,820 And very rich seas they are, too, 175 00:19:57,990 --> 00:20:00,950 for here, the cold Falklands current from the south 176 00:20:01,120 --> 00:20:03,860 meets the warm Brazil current from the north, 177 00:20:04,030 --> 00:20:07,120 and at their junction is food in abundance. 178 00:20:09,960 --> 00:20:13,850 These black-brewed albatross are duck-diving for krill 179 00:20:14,020 --> 00:20:16,820 that has been driven up to the surface. 180 00:20:20,280 --> 00:20:21,450 Like all albatross, 181 00:20:21,620 --> 00:20:25,710 black-brows are wanderers across the face of the open ocean. 182 00:20:41,100 --> 00:20:44,540 A feeding assembly on this scale is a rare sight. 183 00:20:44,950 --> 00:20:49,010 Most of the time, the birds of the open see are widely dispersed, 184 00:20:49,170 --> 00:20:53,440 but these feeding grounds are close to an albatross breeding colony, 185 00:20:53,610 --> 00:20:55,530 and a very special one. 186 00:21:05,750 --> 00:21:08,130 This is Steeple Jason, 187 00:21:08,300 --> 00:21:11,310 a remote island in the far west of the Falklands. 188 00:21:11,480 --> 00:21:14,990 It has the largest albatross colony in the world. 189 00:21:23,370 --> 00:21:26,630 There are almost half a million albatross here, 190 00:21:26,790 --> 00:21:30,970 an astonishing demonstration of how fertile the ocean can be 191 00:21:31,380 --> 00:21:32,770 and how much food it can give 192 00:21:32,930 --> 00:21:36,230 even to creatures that do not actually live in it. 193 00:22:03,090 --> 00:22:04,770 Nutrients by themselves 194 00:22:04,940 --> 00:22:08,320 are not enough to generate these vast assemblies. 195 00:22:08,490 --> 00:22:12,500 The heat and light from the sun is also essential 196 00:22:12,660 --> 00:22:15,530 for the growth of the microscopic floating plants - 197 00:22:15,690 --> 00:22:17,950 the phytoplankton. 198 00:22:22,320 --> 00:22:27,290 And it's the phytoplankton that is the basis of all life in the ocean. 199 00:22:33,710 --> 00:22:37,680 Every evening, the disappearance of the sun below the horizon 200 00:22:37,850 --> 00:22:40,370 triggers the largest migration of life 201 00:22:40,540 --> 00:22:42,620 that takes place on our planet. 202 00:22:50,590 --> 00:22:54,050 One thousand million tons of sea creatures 203 00:22:54,220 --> 00:22:58,590 ascend from the deep ocean to search for food near the surface. 204 00:23:05,840 --> 00:23:10,010 They graze on the phytoplankton under cover of darkness. 205 00:23:10,180 --> 00:23:12,890 Even so, they are far from safe. 206 00:23:13,560 --> 00:23:15,390 Other marine hunters follow them, 207 00:23:15,560 --> 00:23:18,940 some traveling up from hundreds of meters below. 208 00:24:20,540 --> 00:24:21,630 At dawn, 209 00:24:21,790 --> 00:24:26,310 the whole procession returns to the safety of the dark depths. 210 00:24:32,980 --> 00:24:37,620 The moon, too, has a great influence on life in the oceans. 211 00:24:39,040 --> 00:24:40,830 Its gravitational pull 212 00:24:41,000 --> 00:24:44,780 creates the daily advances and retreats of the tide. 213 00:24:56,960 --> 00:25:00,090 But the moon has more than a daily cycle. 214 00:25:00,510 --> 00:25:04,730 Each month, it waxes and wanes as it travels round the earth, 215 00:25:04,900 --> 00:25:09,600 and this monthly cycle also triggers events in the ocean. 216 00:25:13,230 --> 00:25:15,460 The Pacific coast of Costa Rica 217 00:25:15,620 --> 00:25:17,710 on a very special night. 218 00:25:18,120 --> 00:25:21,900 It's just after midnight and the tide is coming in. 219 00:25:26,280 --> 00:25:28,610 The moon is in its last quarter, 220 00:25:28,780 --> 00:25:31,990 exactly half way between full and new. 221 00:25:34,990 --> 00:25:37,290 For weeks, the beach has been empty, 222 00:25:37,450 --> 00:25:39,540 but that is about to change. 223 00:25:39,710 --> 00:25:43,960 At high tide, turtles start to emerge from the surf. 224 00:25:49,880 --> 00:25:53,010 At first, they come in ones and twos, 225 00:25:53,180 --> 00:25:54,680 but Within an hour, 226 00:25:54,850 --> 00:25:57,970 they are appearing all along the beach. 227 00:26:04,230 --> 00:26:07,320 They are all female Ridley's turtles, 228 00:26:07,480 --> 00:26:09,570 and over the next six days or so, 229 00:26:09,730 --> 00:26:12,640 400,000 will visit this one beach 230 00:26:12,810 --> 00:26:14,890 to lay their eggs in the sand. 231 00:26:23,320 --> 00:26:28,030 At the peak time, 5,000 are coming and going every hour. 232 00:26:28,450 --> 00:26:30,720 The top of the beach gets so crowded 233 00:26:30,890 --> 00:26:34,340 that they have to clamber over one another to find a patch 234 00:26:34,510 --> 00:26:36,600 where they can dig a nest hole. 235 00:26:41,890 --> 00:26:45,930 A quarter of the world 's population of Ridley's turtles 236 00:26:46,100 --> 00:26:49,810 come to this one beach on a few key nights each year. 237 00:26:50,480 --> 00:26:51,760 The rest of the time, 238 00:26:51,930 --> 00:26:55,140 they are widely distributed through the ocean, 239 00:26:55,520 --> 00:26:57,600 most, hundreds of miles away. 240 00:26:58,520 --> 00:27:01,460 This mass nesting is called an arribada. 241 00:27:01,900 --> 00:27:04,360 How it's coordinated is a mystery, 242 00:27:04,660 --> 00:27:06,950 but we do know that arribadas start 243 00:27:07,120 --> 00:27:10,660 when the moon is either in its first or last quarter. 244 00:27:19,590 --> 00:27:23,680 Forty million eggs are laid in just a few days. 245 00:27:23,840 --> 00:27:27,840 By synchronizing their nesting, the females ensure 246 00:27:28,010 --> 00:27:31,040 that six weeks later, their hatchlings will emerge 247 00:27:31,210 --> 00:27:32,990 in such enormous numbers 248 00:27:33,160 --> 00:27:35,660 that predators are overwhelmed, 249 00:27:35,830 --> 00:27:42,000 and a significant proportion of baby turtles will get past them and make it to the water. 250 00:27:44,250 --> 00:27:47,170 But Why do the females use a cue from the moon 251 00:27:47,330 --> 00:27:49,750 to help synchronize their nesting? 252 00:27:50,170 --> 00:27:51,650 Part of the answer to that 253 00:27:51,820 --> 00:27:55,160 becomes clear at dawn on the following morning. 254 00:28:17,100 --> 00:28:21,600 The day shift of predators are arriving for their first meals. 255 00:28:26,730 --> 00:28:28,720 Vultures have learnt 256 00:28:28,880 --> 00:28:33,300 that the returning tide can wash freshly laid eggs out of the send. 257 00:28:36,310 --> 00:28:39,080 The risk of eggs being exposed by the surf 258 00:28:39,240 --> 00:28:42,750 may be partly why turtle arribadas tend to occur 259 00:28:42,920 --> 00:28:46,050 around the last or first quarter of the moon. 260 00:28:50,260 --> 00:28:54,530 It's on such days as this when the moon is neither full nor new, 261 00:28:54,690 --> 00:28:58,700 that the tides are weakest and the sea is likely to be calmer. 262 00:29:13,710 --> 00:29:19,180 So it's easier for the female turtles to make their way through the surf, 263 00:29:19,350 --> 00:29:22,580 and there's less chance of their eggs being washed out of the sand 264 00:29:22,740 --> 00:29:24,660 and taken by vultures. 265 00:29:36,680 --> 00:29:40,850 The moon '3 monthly cycle and its influence on the tides 266 00:29:41,010 --> 00:29:43,250 triggers many events in the ocean, 267 00:29:43,420 --> 00:29:46,170 from the spawning of the corals on the Great Barrier reef 268 00:29:46,340 --> 00:29:48,420 to the breeding cycles of fish, 269 00:29:48,840 --> 00:29:50,790 but there '3 an even longer rhythm 270 00:29:50,960 --> 00:29:53,670 that has the most profound effect of all - 271 00:29:53,840 --> 00:29:56,120 the annual cycle of the sun. 272 00:29:59,830 --> 00:30:02,040 The sun '3 position relative to the earth 273 00:30:02,210 --> 00:30:03,690 changes through the year, 274 00:30:03,860 --> 00:30:06,570 and it's this that produces the seasons. 275 00:30:06,990 --> 00:30:09,270 In the north, spring comes 276 00:30:09,430 --> 00:30:12,390 as the sun begins to rise higher in the sky. 277 00:30:13,980 --> 00:30:16,020 Off the coast of north west America, 278 00:30:16,190 --> 00:30:20,850 the seas are transformed by the increasing strength of the sunshine. 279 00:30:25,230 --> 00:30:28,940 Here in Alaska, the coastal waters turn green 280 00:30:29,100 --> 00:30:31,690 with a sudden bloom of phytoplankton. 281 00:30:35,570 --> 00:30:38,480 Herring that have spent the winter far out to sea 282 00:30:38,650 --> 00:30:42,600 time their return to the shallow waters to coincide with this bloom. 283 00:30:42,770 --> 00:30:44,790 They come in vast numbers 284 00:30:44,960 --> 00:30:49,560 and initiate one of the most productive food chains in all the oceans. 285 00:31:05,360 --> 00:31:08,980 Humpback whales are at the top of that food chain. 286 00:31:09,140 --> 00:31:10,430 They have spent the Winter 287 00:31:10,600 --> 00:31:13,660 breeding in the warmer tropical waters off Hawaii, 288 00:31:13,820 --> 00:31:15,910 but there was little food there. 289 00:31:16,080 --> 00:31:18,060 This herring bonanza 290 00:31:18,230 --> 00:31:21,850 provides the majority of their food for the year. 291 00:31:43,790 --> 00:31:46,490 Stellar and Californian sea lions 292 00:31:46,660 --> 00:31:51,370 also return from the open ocean each year to feast off the herring. 293 00:32:02,170 --> 00:32:06,090 The herring, however, have not come here for food. 294 00:32:06,260 --> 00:32:09,630 They are about to breed. Nothing deters them 295 00:32:09,790 --> 00:32:13,090 as they head for even shallower waters. 296 00:32:14,800 --> 00:32:16,690 Now the waters are so shallow that 297 00:32:16,850 --> 00:32:18,610 glaucous-winged gulls are able to 298 00:32:18,780 --> 00:32:21,950 snatch live fish from just below the surface. 299 00:32:33,790 --> 00:32:37,610 In spite of these attacks, the herring swim on 300 00:32:37,780 --> 00:32:39,390 until they reach the vegetation 301 00:32:39,560 --> 00:32:42,310 that the females need if they are to lay. 302 00:32:48,690 --> 00:32:52,590 Each female produces around 20,000 eggs, 303 00:32:52,750 --> 00:32:55,170 and they're very sticky. 304 00:32:58,720 --> 00:33:01,880 The males arrived soon after the females have spawned 305 00:33:01,880 --> 00:33:05,330 and release their sperm in vast, milky clouds. 306 00:33:10,210 --> 00:33:14,220 Soon, the excesses of the herrings' sexual spree 307 00:33:14,380 --> 00:33:18,010 creates a thick white scum on the surface. 308 00:33:19,720 --> 00:33:20,810 Through the season, 309 00:33:20,980 --> 00:33:24,520 curds of sperm clog the shares for hundreds of miles 310 00:33:24,690 --> 00:33:28,720 from British Columbia in the south to Alaska in the north. 311 00:33:36,150 --> 00:33:40,110 After a few days, this gigantic spawning comes to an end, 312 00:33:40,280 --> 00:33:42,810 and the herring head back out to deeper waters, 313 00:33:42,970 --> 00:33:45,170 leaving behind them fertilized eggs 314 00:33:45,340 --> 00:33:48,720 plastered on every rock and strand of vegetation. 315 00:34:01,270 --> 00:34:05,890 They time the spawning so that two weeks later, when these eggs start to hatch, 316 00:34:06,060 --> 00:34:10,360 the annual plankton bloom will be at its height, and the fish fry 317 00:34:10,520 --> 00:34:12,110 will have plenty to eat. 318 00:34:12,280 --> 00:34:15,000 But in the meantime, all these eggs provide food 319 00:34:15,160 --> 00:34:19,920 for armies of different animals both below and above the surface. 320 00:34:27,680 --> 00:34:32,270 Millions of birds arrive to collect a share of the herrings' bounty. 321 00:34:32,440 --> 00:34:34,020 Some of it is easily gathered, 322 00:34:34,190 --> 00:34:37,900 for millions of eggs have been washed up onto the shore. 323 00:34:39,070 --> 00:34:41,150 This encapsulated energy 324 00:34:41,320 --> 00:34:45,120 is particularly valuable to migrating birds. 325 00:34:45,780 --> 00:34:47,850 These surfbirds are on their way 326 00:34:48,020 --> 00:34:52,390 to their breeding grounds in the Arctic and come down to refuel. 327 00:34:52,560 --> 00:34:55,770 Stranded herring eggs are just What they need. 328 00:34:57,400 --> 00:34:59,520 Bonaparte gulls collect the eggs 329 00:34:59,690 --> 00:35:01,980 just below the surface of the water. 330 00:35:05,570 --> 00:35:09,330 Further out in the bay, huge flocks of ducks have gathered. 331 00:35:09,500 --> 00:35:11,240 They're mostly surf scoters - 332 00:35:11,410 --> 00:35:15,580 diving ducks that can feed off the bottom several meters down. 333 00:35:20,330 --> 00:35:22,560 There are such huge quantities of eggs, 334 00:35:22,730 --> 00:35:25,120 that even a big animal like a bear 335 00:35:25,280 --> 00:35:27,740 finds it worthwhile to collect them. 336 00:35:31,450 --> 00:35:34,120 The spawning of the herring is a crucial event 337 00:35:34,280 --> 00:35:37,490 in the lives of many animals all along the coast. 338 00:35:37,660 --> 00:35:40,820 The whole event coincides with the plankton bloom, 339 00:35:40,990 --> 00:35:44,570 and within three short weeks, it's all over. 340 00:35:50,320 --> 00:35:54,790 The migratory birds leave to continue their journey north. 341 00:36:02,380 --> 00:36:06,550 They will not come back until the herring also return next year. 342 00:36:13,260 --> 00:36:15,600 As the herring spawning finishes, 343 00:36:15,770 --> 00:36:19,200 other migrants are starting to arrive offshore. 344 00:36:21,450 --> 00:36:23,330 Gray Whales. 345 00:36:28,000 --> 00:36:29,960 They have followed the sun north, 346 00:36:30,120 --> 00:36:32,260 and they too are seeking the food 347 00:36:32,420 --> 00:36:35,550 generated by the bloom of the phytoplankton. 348 00:36:38,600 --> 00:36:43,100 Krill are feeding off it, and these Whales are feeding on the krill, 349 00:36:43,270 --> 00:36:46,860 skimming it from the surface with the filter plates of baleen 350 00:36:47,020 --> 00:36:49,190 that hang from their upper jaws. 351 00:36:52,440 --> 00:36:54,970 Gray whales make one of the longest migrations 352 00:36:55,140 --> 00:36:57,180 undertaken by any marine mammal - 353 00:36:57,350 --> 00:37:00,220 a round trip of 12,000 miles or so 354 00:37:00,630 --> 00:37:02,660 from their breeding grounds off Mexico 355 00:37:02,830 --> 00:37:07,270 along the entire coast of North America, right up to the Arctic Ocean. 356 00:37:10,100 --> 00:37:12,290 They travel close to the coast, 357 00:37:12,460 --> 00:37:16,290 with the males and non-breeding females leading the way. 358 00:37:16,460 --> 00:37:19,960 The last to start are cows that have just given birth. 359 00:37:20,120 --> 00:37:23,990 They have to wait until their calves are sufficiently big and strong 360 00:37:24,160 --> 00:37:26,290 to tackle such an immense journey. 361 00:37:29,290 --> 00:37:32,010 Their progress is necessarily slow. 362 00:37:32,180 --> 00:37:34,640 The mothers stay with their young, 363 00:37:34,810 --> 00:37:38,440 and even a strong calf only travels at a couple of knots. 364 00:37:40,320 --> 00:37:42,240 They stick even closer to the shore, 365 00:37:42,400 --> 00:37:44,890 often Within just 200 meters. 366 00:37:49,390 --> 00:37:50,890 Killer Whales. 367 00:37:51,050 --> 00:37:55,220 They have learnt that gray whales follow traditional routes. 368 00:37:56,140 --> 00:37:57,630 The killers have no trouble 369 00:37:57,790 --> 00:38:01,550 in overtaking the calf and its devoted mother. 370 00:38:05,340 --> 00:38:08,340 Normally, they continually call to one another, 371 00:38:08,500 --> 00:38:10,880 but now they have fallen silent. 372 00:38:11,300 --> 00:38:13,180 The gray Whale and her calf 373 00:38:13,350 --> 00:38:16,480 have no idea that they've been targeted. 374 00:38:38,290 --> 00:38:41,760 Catching up with the gray whales is the easy part for the killers. 375 00:38:41,930 --> 00:38:43,300 They have to be cautious 376 00:38:43,460 --> 00:38:46,800 for they are only about half the size of the grey whale mother. 377 00:38:50,930 --> 00:38:54,270 She can inflict real damage with her tail. 378 00:39:03,110 --> 00:39:05,540 But the killers are after her calf. 379 00:39:05,960 --> 00:39:10,910 As long as the mother can keep it on the move, it will be safe, 380 00:39:11,070 --> 00:39:14,030 and she does her best to hurry it along. 381 00:39:16,780 --> 00:39:22,030 At first, the killers avoid getting too close but just keep pace alongside. 382 00:39:22,440 --> 00:39:27,450 They know that the calf, going at this speed, will eventually tire. 383 00:39:37,130 --> 00:39:39,520 After three hours of being harried in this way, 384 00:39:39,690 --> 00:39:43,050 the calf becomes too exhausted to swim any further. 385 00:39:43,210 --> 00:39:45,300 The mother has to stop. 386 00:39:45,970 --> 00:39:48,810 This is the moment the killers have been waiting for. 387 00:39:48,810 --> 00:39:53,480 They start to try and force themselves between mother and calf. 388 00:40:15,130 --> 00:40:19,550 A calf separated from its mother will not be able to defend itself. 389 00:40:19,720 --> 00:40:22,450 Time and again, the black fins of the killers 390 00:40:22,610 --> 00:40:25,710 appear between the mottle backs of the gray Whales. 391 00:40:36,930 --> 00:40:39,410 At last the killers succeed, 392 00:40:39,580 --> 00:40:42,010 and now they've got the calf on its own, 393 00:40:42,170 --> 00:40:43,860 they change their tactics. 394 00:40:44,030 --> 00:40:48,070 They leap right onto the calf, and try to push it under. 395 00:40:59,960 --> 00:41:02,040 They are trying to drown it. 396 00:41:11,640 --> 00:41:14,770 The calf snatches a desperate breath. 397 00:41:28,860 --> 00:41:31,390 The mother becomes increasingly agitated. 398 00:41:31,560 --> 00:41:34,780 Frantically, she tries to push her calf back to the surface 399 00:41:34,940 --> 00:41:37,030 so that it can breathe. 400 00:41:40,450 --> 00:41:42,450 But now it's so exhausted 401 00:41:42,620 --> 00:41:45,830 that it has to be supported by its mother's body. 402 00:42:03,390 --> 00:42:05,370 The killers won't give up. 403 00:42:05,540 --> 00:42:09,710 Like a pack of wolves, they take turns in harassing the whales. 404 00:42:31,320 --> 00:42:34,290 Now, the Whole pod is involved. 405 00:42:45,380 --> 00:42:48,130 One of them takes a bite. 406 00:43:00,480 --> 00:43:03,800 Soon, the sea is reddened with the calf's blood, 407 00:43:03,970 --> 00:43:07,090 and the killers close in for the final act. 408 00:43:29,320 --> 00:43:31,200 The calf is dead. 409 00:43:35,910 --> 00:43:38,000 After a six-hour hunt, 410 00:43:38,170 --> 00:43:41,500 the killer whales have finally won their prize. 411 00:43:47,680 --> 00:43:49,640 The mother, bereft, 412 00:43:49,810 --> 00:43:53,400 has to continue her migration north on her own. 413 00:43:57,740 --> 00:44:00,460 She leaves behind the carcass of a calf 414 00:44:00,630 --> 00:44:04,130 that she cherished for 13 months in her womb, 415 00:44:04,290 --> 00:44:07,840 for which she delayed her own journey to find food. 416 00:44:11,380 --> 00:44:16,420 The 15 killer whales spent over six hours trying to kill the calf, 417 00:44:16,840 --> 00:44:18,850 but having succeeded, 418 00:44:19,010 --> 00:44:23,380 they've eaten nothing more than its lower jaw and its tongue. 419 00:44:31,430 --> 00:44:35,680 Valuable food like this will not go to waste in the ocean. 420 00:44:36,100 --> 00:44:39,440 Before long, the carcass will sink to the very bottom 421 00:44:39,610 --> 00:44:41,260 of this deep sea, 422 00:44:41,430 --> 00:44:44,960 but even there its flesh will not be wasted. 423 00:44:47,380 --> 00:44:51,680 Over a mile down, in the total darkness of the deep ocean, 424 00:44:51,850 --> 00:44:53,840 the body of another gray Whale, 425 00:44:54,010 --> 00:44:55,550 a 30-tonne adult. 426 00:44:55,970 --> 00:44:59,140 It settled here only a few weeks ago. 427 00:45:01,140 --> 00:45:04,480 Already, it has attracted hundreds of hagfish. 428 00:45:11,320 --> 00:45:15,550 These scavengers, over half a meter long and as thick as your arm, 429 00:45:15,720 --> 00:45:18,250 are only found in the deep sea. 430 00:45:18,420 --> 00:45:21,500 They have been attracted by the faint whiff of decay 431 00:45:21,670 --> 00:45:25,010 suffusing through the water for miles around. 432 00:45:28,930 --> 00:45:31,880 With their heads buried in the Whale's flesh, 433 00:45:32,050 --> 00:45:35,880 they breathe through gill openings along their sides. 434 00:45:36,800 --> 00:45:38,520 They're very primitive creatures - 435 00:45:38,690 --> 00:45:41,810 not even true fish for they lack jaws. 436 00:45:42,230 --> 00:45:44,220 They feed, not by biting, 437 00:45:44,380 --> 00:45:48,340 but by rasping off flesh with two rows of horny teeth. 438 00:45:50,260 --> 00:45:51,860 In just a few hours, 439 00:45:52,020 --> 00:45:56,280 a hagfish can eat several times its own weight of rotting flesh. 440 00:46:00,280 --> 00:46:01,880 Next to arrive, 441 00:46:02,040 --> 00:46:04,130 a sleeper shark. 442 00:46:10,050 --> 00:46:13,290 It moves so slowly to conserve energy - 443 00:46:13,450 --> 00:46:16,150 an important strategy for so large an animal 444 00:46:16,320 --> 00:46:18,570 surviving in such a poor habitat. 445 00:46:26,080 --> 00:46:29,000 Sleeper sharks live over a mile down, 446 00:46:29,160 --> 00:46:31,620 and grow to over seven meters long. 447 00:46:34,500 --> 00:46:39,500 They can go for months without food, slowly cruising along the bottom, 448 00:46:39,670 --> 00:46:41,470 waiting for rare bonanzas 449 00:46:41,640 --> 00:46:42,720 such as this one 450 00:46:42,880 --> 00:46:44,760 to arrive from above. 451 00:46:51,930 --> 00:46:55,470 A whole range of different deep-sea scavengers 452 00:46:55,640 --> 00:46:58,070 will feast on this carcass for a long time 453 00:46:58,230 --> 00:47:01,570 before all its nutriment has been consumed. 454 00:47:03,650 --> 00:47:05,020 18 months later, 455 00:47:05,190 --> 00:47:09,530 all that is left is a perfect skeleton stripped bare. 456 00:47:12,320 --> 00:47:15,960 The sun's energy, that was captured and turned into living tissue 457 00:47:16,130 --> 00:47:17,910 by the floating phytoplankton, 458 00:47:18,080 --> 00:47:21,390 has been transferred to another link in the food chain, 459 00:47:21,560 --> 00:47:26,240 and has ended up as far away from the sun as it is possible to be on this planet - 460 00:47:26,410 --> 00:47:28,500 at the bottom of the deep sea. 461 00:47:29,910 --> 00:47:34,000 But some energy also returns from the deep. 462 00:47:39,550 --> 00:47:44,390 Millions of opalescent squid are on their way to the shallows. 463 00:47:45,800 --> 00:47:47,850 They've come up here to mate. 464 00:47:48,010 --> 00:47:52,390 As the males grab the females, their tentacles flush red. 465 00:47:54,230 --> 00:47:55,240 For most of the year, 466 00:47:55,410 --> 00:47:58,560 these squid live at a depth of around 500 meters. 467 00:47:58,730 --> 00:48:02,610 They are part of these breeding schools for a few weeks. 468 00:48:03,020 --> 00:48:06,360 Just one school was estimated to contain animals 469 00:48:06,530 --> 00:48:09,250 that weigh around 4,000 tons. 470 00:48:21,260 --> 00:48:23,510 Wave after wave rise from the depths, 471 00:48:23,680 --> 00:48:25,410 and soon the seabed in the shallows 472 00:48:25,580 --> 00:48:30,170 is strewn with dense patches of egg capsules several meters across. 473 00:48:36,460 --> 00:48:39,680 As each female adds another capsule to the pile, 474 00:48:39,840 --> 00:48:43,180 the males fight to fertilize its contents. 475 00:48:59,650 --> 00:49:02,450 The squid make their huge journey into the shallows 476 00:49:02,620 --> 00:49:06,540 because their eggs will develop faster in the warmer water here, 477 00:49:06,700 --> 00:49:09,380 and when the young emerge, they will find more food 478 00:49:09,550 --> 00:49:12,890 more easily than they would in the ocean depths. 479 00:49:18,390 --> 00:49:20,270 Dawn the next morning, 480 00:49:20,440 --> 00:49:24,900 and the seabed for miles around is covered in egg capsules. 481 00:49:25,070 --> 00:49:28,890 The squid have all gone. Many have died, 482 00:49:29,060 --> 00:49:32,400 but some will have returned to their home in the deep. 483 00:49:32,570 --> 00:49:35,000 They will not return to the light of the sun 484 00:49:35,160 --> 00:49:39,990 until the next time they are driven up by the urge to spawn.