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Iguana vs Snakes - Planet Earth II

AdultsAnimalsNature
This behaviour has never been filmed before! Hatchling marine iguanas are attacked by snakes hunting on mass. This clip was taken from the Islands episode of Planet Earth II.

Why Do Animals Eat Their Babies?

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience
Sometimes, it makes sense for critters across the animal kingdom to chow down on their own young.

How much of human history is on the bottom of the ocean?

AdultsEcologyHistoryNature...
Sunken relics, ghostly shipwrecks, and lost cities aren't just wonders found in fictional adventures. Beneath the ocean's surface, there are ruins where people once roamed and shipwrecks loaded with artifacts from another time.

Planet Earth II

AdultsFilmNature
10 years ago Planet Earth changed our view of the world. Now we take you closer than ever before. This is life in all its wonder. This is Planet Earth II.

Can a chicken raise a duck?

AdultsAnimalsNaturePets
Hello everyone, we're back! We have a lot of new videos coming up and we will try to stick to the weekly schedule.

How sparrowhawks catch garden birds

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience
This bird's incredible acceleration and agility enable it to to sneak up on its prey.

Do Plants Think?

AdultsBiologyEcologyNature...
What a Plant Knows?

How smart are orangutans?

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience
Along with humans, orangutans belong to the Hominidae family tree, which stretches back 14 million years.

Incredible footage of hermit crab changing shells

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience
In this exciting excerpt from the third season of Jonathan Bird's Blue World, Jonathan films a hermit crab changing shells and then also transferring its anemones from one shell to the other.

Enter the Deadliest Garden in the World

AdultsEcologyNatureScience
Locked behind black steel doors in Northumberland, England, the Poison Garden at Alnwick Castle grows around 100 infamous killers.

Real life sunken cities

AdultsCitiesHistoryScience...
Though people are most familiar with Plato's fictional Atlantis, many real underwater cities actually exist. Peter Campbell explains how sunken cities are studied by scientists to help us understand the lives of our ancestors, the dynamic nature of our planet, and the impact of each on the other.

The Death Of Bees Explained

AdultsAnimalsLifeNature...
In 2015 the bees are still dying in masses. Which at first seems not very important until you realize that one third of all food humans consume would disappear with them. Millions could starve.

Can You Start a Fire with a Sandwich Bag?

AdultsCreativityLifeNature...
Did you know you can start a fire with a ziploc bag, a bit of water, and the power of the sun? Here's how to do it step-by-step.

Why is Mt. Everest so Deadly? | Mashable Explains

AdultsLifeNatureSports...
Here's a rundown of the most common ways people have died attempting to summit Mt. Everest.

Are You More Forgetful Than A Fish?

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience...
How smart can fish actually be?

Should You Be Worried About Zika?

AdultsHealthNatureScience
Zika virus is a mosquito-borne flavivirus that was first identified in Uganda in 1947 in monkeys through a network that monitored yellow fever.

GoPro: Cristian Dimitrius and the Gelada Monkeys

AdultsAnimalsFilmNature...
In this adventure, Cristian Dimirtius heads to the Simian Mountains of Ethiopia to teach us about the Gelada Monkeys in their natural habitat.

Mimic Octopus

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience
Most Intelligent Mimic Octopus In The World

Orchids: The Masters Of Lying, Cheating & Stealing

AdultsEnvironmentNature
Thanks to Curtin University and the University of Western Australia for sponsoring this video. Also, special thanks to Kingsley Dixon and the Orchid Specialist Group of the IUCN's Species Survival Commission.

The Real Reason Leaves Change Color In the Fall

AdultsEnvironmentNature
The chlorophyll breaks down, the green color disappears, and the yellow to orange colors become visible and give the leaves part of their fall splendor.

Inside the Svalbard Seed Vault

AdultsFoodNatureWorld
A rare look inside the Svalbard Global Seed Vault which is closed ~350 days a year