Episodes 18
Octopus: Making Contact
A look at at various octopuses and the scientist that are trying to learn more about them.
Read MoreThe Serengeti Rules
Travel back in time, from the Arctic Ocean to Pacific tide pools, with a pioneering group of scientists who make surprising discoveries that transform human understanding of nature and ecology. Based on a book of the same name, The Serengeti Rules had its theatrical premiere at Tribeca Film Festival and has won awards at the 2018 Wildscreen Panda Awards and Jackson Hole Science Media Awards.
Read MoreUndercover in the Jungle
An ambitious new natural history format following a film crew on a mission into the most biodiverse region of the Amazon rainforest. Meet some amazing creatures, from howler monkeys to pumas, as the wild secrets of the jungle are revealed.
Read MoreOkavango: River of Dreams: Paradise
Paradise presents the landscape and wildlife of the Upper Okavango River. A lioness severely injured by a buffalo is left for dead by her pride. Now handicapped, she has to survive in the swamp alone, hunting to feed her little cubs.
Read MoreOkavango: River of Dreams: Limbo
Limbo presents the landscape and wildlife of the "Middle World," the delta of the Okavango River. A hyena and a warthog family share neighboring dens, helping each other by keeping an eye on threatening predators such as lions and leopards.
Read MoreOkavango: River of Dreams: Inferno
Inferno presents the landscape and wildlife of the Lower Okavango River. The landscape is baked dry by the scorching sun, and large herds of zebra and wildebeest migrate to the dry plains in search of precious salt that these animals need.
Read MoreNature's Biggest Beasts
Discover the ingenious strategies that nature’s biggest beasts employ to conquer their environments, from the Komodo dragon with a deadly bite to the tallest giraffe to the bird-eating Armored ground cricket. These are their epic survival stories.
Read MoreThe Whale Detective
A filmmaker investigates his traumatic encounter with a 30-ton humpback whale that breached and just missed landing on him while he was kayaking. What he discovers raises far bigger questions about humans’ relationship with whales and their future.
Read MoreHipopótamos: los gigantes de los ríos
El hipopótamo pasa la mayor parte de su existencia en el agua pero no puede nadar. Aunque pesa más de dos toneladas es capaz de correr más rápido que un ser humano y a pesar de ser vegetariano está considerado como el animal más peligroso del continente africano. Gracias a la última tecnología de grabación conseguiremos acercarnos a estos grandes desconocidos. El Okavango es un largo río africano, que nace en Angola y que tras un recorrido de unos 1.600 km penetra en una cuenca en Botsuana, donde ha formado una extensa región aluvial denominada y conocida como el delta del Okavango. En este ecosistema de aguas poco profundas los hipopótamos se abren camino entre la vegetación acuática construyendo auténticos canales de agua fresca. Ellos son los arquitectos del delta. Los hipopótamos son naturalmente sociables y suelen vivir en grupos dominados por un macho alfa.
Read MoreWild Florida
Florida's wildlife is under threats from nature, such as hurricanes and fire, human development and invasive species.
Read MoreThe Mighty Weasel
An intimate look into the weasel family which includes the adventures of a first-time weasel mom, a tiny orphan weasel and the fearless honey badger.
Read MoreCuba's Wild Revolution
An exploration of how changing international relationships may affect Cuba and Cuba's vast natural resources and unique species.
Read MoreRemarkable Rabbits
There are more than 100 types of rabbits and hares. Despite their extraordinary ability to reproduce, wild rabbits are in danger of being eradicated. This show separates the facts from the stereotypes.
Read MoreSpy in The Wild 2: The Tropics
The spy creatures investigate the wildlife that thrives in the tropics. They infiltrate a hippo pod, a nursery of red flying foxes, a gorilla sanctuary and the secret world of pygmy forest elephants.
Read MoreSpy in The Wild 2: The North
Travel to the Northern Hemisphere, where the spy creatures learn how animals move, feed and fight. A spy hummingbird films millions of butterflies, and a spy squirrel winds up in a battle. A spy beaver observes other beavers building dams.
Read MoreSpy in The Wild 2: The Islands
Explore the islands of the South Pacific with creatures like the spy koala, who captures breeding behavior in Australia, or the spy crab, who joins an army of red crabs on their march to the sea to deposit their eggs.
Read MoreSpy in The Wild 2: The Poles
From penguin chicks to elephant seals and wolf cubs to polar bears, the spy creatures meet and observe the hardiest and most charismatic animals in the Arctic and Antarctic circles.
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