"Life (Chinese and English switch)" Baidu Netdisk high-definition resources free online viewing:
Link:
"Life"
Director: Martha Holmes, Simon Blakeney, Stephen Lyle
Screenwriter: Paul Spillenger
Starring: David Attenborough, Doug Allen, Jonathan Smith, Opp La Winfrey
Type: Documentary
Country/Region of Production: United Kingdom, Greece
Language: English
Release Date :2009-10-12
Number of episodes: 10
Length: 60 minutes
Also known as: BBC: Life, Pulse of Life
< p>"Life" is a ten-episode documentary series produced by the BBC and has been broadcast on BBC TV since October 12, 2009. The film took four years to make and was all shot in high definition. Each episode is 50 minutes long, plus 10 minutes of filming behind-the-scenes, for a total of 60 minutes. According to the Times, the series cost £10 million, but the BBC has not officially confirmed this figure. 2009 marks the bicentenary of Darwin's birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of "On the Origin of Species." In order to commemorate, this film strives to show the diversity of colorful species in nature and the various magical survival skills they have evolved to adapt to the environment.1. "Challenge of Life" The Challenge of Life
The beginning of this series introduces the audience to various extraordinary foraging, predation, courtship and brood-rearing behaviors in the animal world around the world. In Florida Bay, the leading bottlenose dolphin creates a murky curtain of water in the water with its tail fin, and other dolphins prey on fish as they jump out of the water to try to escape. Other unusual cooperative hunting techniques include three cheetahs working together to hunt an ostrich and Antarctic killer whales attacking seals. Capuchin monkeys in Brazil learned to use rocks to crack open nuts to feed; high-speed cameras reveal how flying fish use the air to avoid predators from sailfish; Venus flytraps set traps for their victims; male hippos compete for riverside territory fight. Some species will go to great lengths to protect their offspring. A female strawberry poison dart frog carried her six tadpoles one by one into the stagnant water in the canopy of a bromeliad tree and fed them with their unfertilized eggs to protect them from the threat of her pond drying up. A female giant Pacific octopus makes the ultimate sacrifice to keep her eggs safe, holding on until she dies of starvation. Little Antarctic penguins are trapped in an ice floe on Puzzle Island. Abandoned by their parents, they are left to reach open water on their own to hunt. A lonely little penguin struggled forward, only to be ambushed by a leopard seal. This episode features a crew working with a French yachtsman and the British Royal Navy to film Antarctica's most ferocious predators.
2. "Reptiles and Amphibians"
The opening shot of this episode is a long shot of the Komodo dragon taken from a distance by a flying camera crew. According to Attenborough, this is the last remaining land in the world. A land informed by reptiles. Although they appear primitive, the reptiles and amphibians here rely on a variety of survival methods to thrive and thrive. Venezuela's pebble toad has escaped predators in a free fall. The double-crested lizard, nicknamed Jesus Lizard, can really walk on water just like the legendary Jesus, while the Brazilian pygmy gecko is so light that it relies on the surface tension of water to not scratch the surface of the water even if it lies on its stomach. Reptiles are cold-blooded, and some of them have evolved unusual ways of keeping warm. Namib chameleons darken the skin on the side facing the sun. A male red garter snake uses fake pheromones to impersonate a female and attract other males to keep him warm, thereby increasing his chances of mating. Madagascar iguanas bury their eggs underground to hide them, but egg-eating hognose snakes find them anyway. Niue's marine kraits lie in a chamber they are only accessed through an underwater tunnel. Egg defenders of other reptiles. Horned lizards fight off predators, but larger opponents such as the whip viper prompt a different response - times the lizard dies. Komodo dragons prey on buffalo during the dry season. They stalked the buffalo for three weeks as it slowly succumbed to a venomous bite, and then carried the carcass away for four hours. In The Place of Life , the monitor's crew recounts the harrowing experience of filming Dragon Hunt.
3.
"Mammals"
Intelligence, hot-bloodedness and strong family bonds have made mammals the most successful group of animals on the planet: they can even survive the Antarctic winter. Here, a Weddell seal makes her pup swim beneath the ice for the first time. In East Africa, a brown sengi used a spiritual map which had allowed him to outsmart a chasing lizard. It takes a young aye-aye four years to learn how to find and extract beetle larvae, a food no other mammal can achieve. Reindeer will travel across the Arctic tundra, making the longest overland migration of any animal. Other mammals have evolved different methods of traveling long distances: Tens of millions of fruit bats in Zambia's Kasanka Swamp flock to the sturdy trees of a canyon. Mammals employ different strategies to find food. At night on the African savanna, coyote Legacy triggers death tolls by the sheer weight of melting Arctic glaciers, dozens of polar bears, and takes advantage of the carcasses of Arctic right whales. Raising juveniles is another important factor for success in mammals. Coatis and meerkats form social groups that share the burden of childcare. A first-time African elephant mother needs the experience of the herd matriarch to get her young calf out of trouble. The largest animals in the ocean are also mammals. The waters off Tonga serve as both nurseries and mating grounds for humpback whales. A female leader chases her potential buyer as the male behind her vie for dominance. On-location life follows a never-before-filmed Hunchback Hot Run.