The Hunt

The Hunt

BBC-EarthUnd wieder gibt es eine neue Serie der BBC mit Alastair Fothergill als Produzent und Sir David Attenborough​ als Sprecher. BBC, 2015

Aus all den wunderbaren Naturdokumentationen der BBC von und mit David Attenborough kennt man den Wettbewerb zwischen Raubtieren und ihren Opfern. Dass es sich dabei nicht um einen Sonntagsspaziergang handelt, sondern um knochenharte und meist erfolglose Arbeit für die Raubtiere, ist Thema dieser 7-teiligen Serie.

  1. The Hardest Challenge (1. November 2015)
  2. In the Grip of the Seasons (Arctic, 8. November 2015)
  3. Hide and Seek (Forests, 15. November 2015)
  4. Hunger at Sea (Oceans, 22. November 2015)
  5. Nowhere to Hide (Plains, 29. November 2015)
  6. Race Against Time (Coasts,  6. Dezember 2015)
  7. Living With Predators (Conservation, 13. Dezember 2015)

Links


Trailer


1 · The Hardest Challenge

This episode reveals the extraordinary range of techniques predators use to catch their prey – from a leopard using all its powers of stealth to stalk impala in broad daylight to wild dogs, whose tactic is to wear down their prey over long distances; from Nile crocodiles, perhaps the planet’s most patient predators, to killer whales who use teamwork and intelligence to take on humpback whales. But even with these finely tuned strategies, the outcome is far from certain. Most predators fail most of the time.


2 · In the Grip of the Seasons (Arctic)

This episode looks at the challenges of hunting in the Arctic, the most seasonal place on Earth. To a predator, seasonal change is a problem. It means that all the parameters of the hunt – the conditions, the strategies, the prey – change too. The only option for the Arctic’s top predators, the wolf, the Arctic fox and the polar bear, is to continually adapt to their changing world, exploiting the good times and enduring the bad.


3 · Hide and Seek (Forests)

This episode follows tigers, harpy eagles, chimpanzees, army ants and other predators as they rise to the challenge of hunting within the forest – a dense, confusing, three-dimensional world, one in which even finding prey is a maddening task. The prize for succeeding at nature’s great game of hide-and-seek is one worth winning. Forests cover one third of the land surface, and concealed within are over half of the species on Earth.


4 · Hunger at Sea (Oceans)

This episode follows blue whales, sharks, sea lions, frigatebirds, dolphins and albatrosses to reveal the strategies they use to hunt for prey in the big blue. The open ocean is an immense wilderness that covers more than half the surface of our planet, yet for the most part it’s a watery desert, largely devoid of life. Predators face an endless search to find and catch food, yet these great tracks of ocean are home to some of the most remarkable hunters on the planet.


5 · Nowhere to Hide (Plains)

Half of all land is desert or grassland. In these, the most exposed habitats on our planet, predators like cheetahs, bald eagles and lions can usually see their prey. But it works both ways: the prey can see them too. With nothing but open vistas the element of surprise is hard-won, and predators must make their own opportunities. Nowhere to Hide explores the strategies of predator and prey in the open arena.


6 · Race Against Time (Coasts)

The coast is the dynamic border between land and sea. Powered by the tides and thrashed by waves, this is a world of continuous change. Opportunities never last long here, so hunters are always in a race against time. The coast is the only place on the planet where predators from air, land and sea come together. Dolphins that leave the safety of the sea to fish, walking octopuses, ingenious monkeys, fishing wolves and the greatest gathering of feeding humpback whales come to the coast to hunt. For all, timing is everything.


7 · Living with Predators (Conservation)

This final episode of the series visits the frontline of the conflict with the world’s top predators, meeting the scientists fighting to save them. Crossing five continents and combining landmark natural history footage with real-life human drama, it checks the pulse of the earth’s iconic animals, including lions, tigers, polar bears and blue whales. With three-quarters of the planet’s carnivores now in decline, can people find ways to live with predators before they disappear forever?

 

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