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Face to Face with Polar Bears
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26:11
Extinction Sucks: Asiatic Black Bears
In many South East Asian countries, bears are kept in horrific, cramped conditions for a shocking, painful purpose: They are milked for their bile. It is believed the bile alleviates fevers. Such is the demand, bears are virtually extinct from the jungles of Vietnam. The practice has recently been made illegal, which means the authorities have confiscated bears they have no idea what to do with, as they cannot be released back into the wild. A charity called Free the Bears tries to provide sanctuaries for these bears, so they can lead a semblance of a normal life. The Extinction Sucks team, Aleisha Caruso and Ashleigh Young, are asked if they can raise some money for a new enclosure in Cat Tien National Park in Vietnam. They come up with a crazy idea: Enter an Afro-Caribbean dance contest as a ‘dare-for-a-bear’ fundraiser. The only trouble is, Aleisha can’t dance, and it’s her that loses a coin-toss to enter the contest, dressed as a bear. Find out more at Babelgum’s Extinction Sucks
51:14
Animal Language
An Indonesian legend claims that monkeys can speak but they prefer to stay quiet. Do animals have languages that we don't understand? Is it just a question of getting the right dictionary or is language the one thing that separates humans from the rest of the animal kingdom? Birds sing, lions roar and chimpanzees chatter but do these noises mean anything? This one-hour documentary takes viewers into the wild to listen to nature's noisemakers and meet some of the scientists who spend their days trying to have conversations with animals. From parrots to killer whales we find out who is saying what to whom and explore whether there is such a thing as animal language. www.saint-thomas.net.
51:36
Animal Adoption
Altruism, an act that bestows a benefit on the recipient while conferring a cost to the actor, is one of the central paradoxes of evolution. In the wild, where only the fittest survive, adopting other animals’ offspring is not really in line with Darwin’s theory of evolution. And yet, amongst bees, dolphins, lions and several primate species, altruism may go as far as adoption. In the case of social insects, parent substitution was a flaw in Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection: the biologist noticed that non-reproductive insects who adopted and helped young ones, brought a large portion of genetic baggage from their parents. Darwin had to broaden his theory to the family group. For mammals, including men, what advantage is there in the act of adoption? In the years following the adoption, does the adopted individual contribute to the foster parents’ survival and vice versa? The controversy at the heart of this documentary continues to be debated in today’s scientific world. While raising these different questions, this documentary will study each case separately because each adoption behaviour has evolved independently forming its own pattern, its own benefit and even…its own disadvantages. www.saint-thomas.net
50:18
Animal Politics
Man is not the only social animal. At the beginning of 2001, Franz de Waal published his work on a group of chimpanzees in the Arnhem zoo, in the Netherlands. He showed the existence of elaborate and subtle rites, which, according to him, revealed a political organization. This fuelled the foundation of an argument much debated in today’s scientific world. Man would therefore no longer stand as the only «political animal » as defined by Aristotle. Schemes, coalitions, and mediation are all aspects of chimpanzee behaviour. Long before man took hold of the political domain, nature had provided other animal species with a whole array of political stratagems, from the most cunning to the most egalitarian: polyergus ants have been practicing slavery for millions of years, hamadryas baboons have a right of veto and deer on the Isle of Rum have established their own democracy. Biologists have even realized that some traits of character used by politicians to fulfill their ambitions (and reach their goals) can be found in other animal species. Domination, alliance-building, seduction and manipulation are forms of intelligence no longer monopolized by man. Barriers continue to fall as discoveries on animal societies throughout the world progress. www.saint-thomas.net.
04:05
Life in the slipknot
Biodiversity is the sum of every living thing around us. It is us. By letting it die we are killing ourselves. Habitat destruction and invasive alien species are considered undesirable side effects of development. That will no longer do. They are unacceptable side effects and they must stop.
For more content from this Branded Channel, check out Babelgum’s Green TV
02:52
Healthy environments - healthy people: blood and...
Human health and biodiversity; the two are fundamentally inseparable. The food we eat, the multitude of pills we swallow for anything from the common cold to cancer all stem from living matter, the sum of which makes up biodiversity. Even oil and gas are nothing more than ancient biodiversity.
For more content from this Branded Channel, check out Babelgum’s Green TV
03:07
Conservation of Thailand's Elephants
Whitley Award donated by The Friends of The WFN to Jittin Ritthirat for Community-led conservation of Thailand's Elephants in populated monsoon forest, West Thailand. Jittin Ritthirat (Thailand) is leading efforts in Salakpra (a backdrop for the De Niro film, The Deer Hunter) to reduce conflicts between wild elephants and domestic cattle over access to water and grazing, and restore Thailand's oldest nature reserve as a national treasure, tourist magnet and example to others. For more content from this Branded Channel, check out Babelgum’s Green TV
03:34
Making good neighbours - India
Whitley Award donated by HSBC Private Bank. M. D. 'Madhu' Madhusudan (India) is Director of the Nature Conservation Foundation, working to reduce conflict between people and wildlife, including tigers, in the Western Ghats, the world's most densely populated biodiversity hotspot, by showing farmers how to reduce crop raids, improve their incomes and avoid park encroachment.
03:06
Protecting critical migratory corridors for globally...
Whitley Award donated by Paula and Mario Frering. Emil Todorov (Bulgaria) is leader of a Bulgarian Society for the Protection of Birds initiative seeking to safeguard the many thousands of wild migratory and breeding birds that depend on the river Danube and its wetlands, including by influencing planners and by recruiting local people as guardians. For more content from this Branded Channel, check out Babelgum’s Green TV
08:00
David Hasselhoff's Sharkwatch Part 3
Part 3: Indiscriminate Killers? In the final part of David Hasselhoff's Sharkwatch, David reflects upon his ‘journey of a lifetime’. Who exactly is it that most deserves the title ‘indiscriminate killers’. The truth becomes devastatingly apparent.

Watch David Hasselhoff's Sharkwatch Part 1:Shark Infested Waters

Watch David Hasselhoff's Sharkwatch Part 2:Dare I Feed a Shark?

Watch David Hasselhoff's Sharkwatch Part 3:Indiscriminate Killers?

 

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