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Дикий мир
Саванна
Дикая природа
Эволюция
Природа
Дикие животные
Коралловый риф
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00:00:04
outback areas of Australia
00:00:07
there are no harsher places in these parts
00:00:10
[music]
00:00:17
however, in the very heart of the wasteland,
00:00:20
thousands of cockatoos fly, united in a noisy,
00:00:22
rebellious horde, here they not only
00:00:28
fight for survival, but thrive, populating the
00:00:36
entire continent from the sultry
00:00:39
desert plains to the kingdom of eucalyptus
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forests and snow-capped mountain ranges
00:00:46
of these birds with extremely colorful plumage
00:00:49
and cheeky personalities live against
00:00:52
all odds
00:00:53
making Australia the land of parrots
00:00:56
[music]
00:00:57
australia the land of parrots
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before Australia had a desert
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continent covered with rain forests
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today there are only a few
00:01:15
small remote offices left
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lush green areas preserved
00:01:24
thanks to the tropical monsoons that
00:01:27
sweep along northern coast,
00:01:29
bringing with it heavy rains while
00:01:38
two-colored parrots developed vast
00:01:40
territories; serious changes in another
00:01:42
part of the continent led to the emergence of new
00:01:44
species of this family
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millions of years ago;
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most of the impenetrable rain
00:01:53
forests of Australia gradually dried out and
00:01:55
turned into open forest;
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most parrots managed to
00:02:01
adapt to new,
00:02:02
more complex conditions
00:02:09
in order to survive on this deserted outskirts,
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black red-tailed cockatoos stayed
00:02:14
close to rare rivers on the forest edges, at
00:02:20
sunset birds from all over the surrounding area flocked here
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[applause] it is
00:02:28
very difficult to find a hollow for nesting,
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therefore, for most parrots, the
00:02:33
watering hole became a place for meetings and acquaintances and
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in the evenings here many
00:02:38
parrots gather, young birds flirt with each
00:02:46
other, flaunting their
00:02:47
colored tails and raising their crests, it is the
00:02:50
graceful fan-like crests that
00:02:53
distinguish cockatoos from other parrots
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[music]
00:03:05
as the continent dried out, these cockatoos
00:03:08
managed to adapt to new conditions and
00:03:11
spread everywhere
00:03:13
during the last ice
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age over land strong winds rushed through
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they stranded huge sand dunes
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[music]
00:03:26
gradually the desert lands were covered with
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turf and bushes and seeds appeared
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[music]
00:03:38
pink cockatoo immediately took advantage of the
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new source of food they were
00:03:43
unpretentious in food and ate what they
00:03:45
found today in Australia and there was hardly a
00:03:53
place where these restless parrots are not present,
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but the enterprising pink cockatoos
00:04:02
were not the only ones who adapted
00:04:04
to the new food; the less common
00:04:09
Inca cockatoos recently got a taste of the placenta;
00:04:19
these curious birds quickly
00:04:22
figured out how to get to the juicy
00:04:24
pulp; their rich diet was replenished with
00:04:31
new exotic food; a
00:04:38
hundred and fifty years ago, cattle breeders
00:04:41
went to the most the heart of the desert,
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but even in places less suitable for life,
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parrots found an opportunity
00:04:47
to feed themselves
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[music]
00:04:58
while traveling through the wild regions
00:05:00
of Australia, Afghan merchants fed
00:05:03
camels with kola fruits center
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[music]
00:05:09
for the pioneers these were difficult
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times due to the constant drought, life
00:05:15
seemed unbearable
00:05:20
in addition to all the misfortunes, the cockatoos soon
00:05:24
learned where the food was stored
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[music]
00:05:30
livestock feed free feeders
00:05:34
provided an easy life for several
00:05:36
generations of cockatoos
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and the number of birds increased sharply
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[music]
00:05:48
good times continued for cockatoos
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and other parrots when the settlers
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reached the groundwater and began to
00:05:56
pump it out surface
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[music]
00:06:08
thanks to an artificial pond, parrots
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were able to live and reproduce where
00:06:13
before it was impossible barnard you
00:06:17
parrot
00:06:19
budgerigars pale heads and
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connectors whole families flock to vw
00:06:30
[music]
00:06:33
colorful song parrot with the latter
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live in areas where there is no water but no one in
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this the arid wilderness will
00:06:40
not refuse smoothly life-giving moisture
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[music]
00:06:49
rains are a rare phenomenon in the Australian
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deserts
00:06:54
drought can last a very long time
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[music]
00:07:06
small bodies of water turn into swamps
00:07:09
and freshwater crayfish are deprived of their
00:07:12
habitat, becoming easy prey for
00:07:18
predators
00:07:19
[music]
00:07:38
the inhabitants of the wild have already
00:07:40
adapted survive when the rivers
00:07:42
disappear turning into a puddle of mud
00:07:45
and the dams are covered with dry dense
00:07:51
crusts
00:07:52
[music]
00:08:00
the air is melting from the heat the harvest has already
00:08:06
been harvested [music]
00:08:13
and the parched earth is waiting for rains that
00:08:16
look like they will never come the
00:08:23
first sign of the end of the drought
00:08:26
warming in the western part of the Pacific
00:08:28
Ocean cyclones are formed absorbing
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heat and moisture from the surface of the ocean when
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heading towards the coast of the mainland,
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winds reach 250 kilometers per hour and
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tear the coastal landscape to shreds
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as the cyclone moves
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inland its strength fades and it
00:08:57
turns into a huge thunderstorm front the
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flood floods thousands of kilometers in the
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center of the continent Australian parrots
00:09:15
come to life, performing the dance of rain in
00:09:21
a matter of hours, the beds of dried up rivers are
00:09:23
filled with life-giving moisture,
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streams of water rush through narrow gullies
00:09:33
that
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cut the dry lands into lines
00:09:39
[music]
00:09:44
a stream saturated with nutrients
00:09:46
across the entire continent rushes to the
00:09:48
sun-scorched earth
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[music]
00:09:53
[applause]
00:10:04
in a region called the edge canals,
00:10:07
small rivulets branch in the
00:10:08
once barren floodplains of rivers
00:10:11
[music]
00:10:13
and the desert wishes for a short time
00:10:17
[music]
00:10:28
overnight shrubs and plants generously
00:10:31
scatter seeds
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[music]
00:10:39
waterfowl feel a wonderful
00:10:41
metamorphosis
00:10:42
and rush to these lands, covering
00:10:44
vast distances,
00:10:49
fish quickly breed in new lakes and the
00:10:52
growing cormorants are in for a feast
00:10:56
[music]
00:11:33
sandhill cranes come here in search of water chestnut roots and asoke [music] and when the native plants begin to produce seeds the stage is set for the stars to emerge in the Australian desert [music] budgerigars we keep them in
00:11:37
cages but they roam free across the
00:11:40
vast Australian wilderness before the
00:11:43
rain, flocks flock from everywhere no one
00:11:48
knows how the birds feel it when
00:11:50
moving, perhaps they
00:11:52
recognize low-frequency
00:11:54
sounds from thousands of kilometers away gnawing their goal to quickly breed
00:12:02
while conditions are favorable
00:12:06
along the narrow gorges of the central ridges in the
00:12:10
double of each tree passions are boiling the
00:12:17
river bank is an excellent place for dinner parties and
00:12:19
mating,
00:12:30
budgerigars must be well
00:12:31
camouflaged while feeding and at the same
00:12:34
time noticeable enough to
00:12:35
attract the attention of a potential
00:12:37
partner, but birds perceive the
00:12:40
plumage of their relatives differently than humans
00:12:43
[music]
00:12:46
we distinguish between red and green and blue
00:12:49
colors and in budgerigars have a
00:12:52
wider range of color perception, so
00:12:54
they see everything in ultraviolet
00:12:57
radiation because of this plumage of their relatives seems
00:13:00
radiant and even brighter, without a doubt the
00:13:07
female will choose the most attractive
00:13:13
[music]
00:13:16
especially if he knows how to stand up for himself
00:13:20
[music]
00:13:45
giving his opponent a good beating male
00:13:48
starts courting the lady
00:13:55
thanks to the ultraviolet spectrum of the plumage of
00:13:58
budgerigars and in
00:14:00
fact shimmers especially on the neck
00:14:06
and head
00:14:12
of the plumage you will not be deceived by
00:14:14
its attractiveness depends on the
00:14:16
health of the male the
00:14:19
absence of parasites also indicates
00:14:21
good genes so the choice of the female
00:14:24
is obvious
00:14:30
[music]
00:14:38
and if at home the suitor agrees will present
00:14:41
her with a tasty treat in a few days
00:14:53
the female will lay about 6 eggs
00:14:56
and after a couple of weeks the chicks will hatch from them
00:14:58
she feeds the blind without feathers on
00:15:03
airplanes with a nutritious liquid the
00:15:06
babies look like milk are growing by leaps and
00:15:11
bounds after 12 days the
00:15:20
first feathers will appear on their wings
00:15:29
it will only take four weeks and they
00:15:32
will leave their native nest, amazingly,
00:15:41
these babies are able to feed themselves
00:15:43
just two months after birth, an
00:15:46
incredibly fast growing cycle, so far
00:15:51
everything is going well, however, it is important not to lose and in
00:15:58
Pinsk,
00:16:02
two meters from the nest, Terenty is prowling
00:16:05
the largest Australian yashica
00:16:17
[music]
00:16:27
[music ] a
00:16:29
tireless predator in search of food
00:16:31
covers a huge distance
00:16:33
[music]
00:16:47
go tracks down its prey
00:16:49
thanks to good eyesight, in addition,
00:16:52
the tongue and through it catches molecules of
00:16:54
smell
00:16:55
[music]
00:17:05
misc
00:17:09
[music]
00:17:25
in the sky parrots are not like that, you have ulcers we are
00:17:37
very much
00:17:42
with him
00:17:45
[music]
00:18:03
squadrons birds flutter among the acacia
00:18:07
green backs make them invisible against the
00:18:10
background of grass
00:18:14
[music]
00:18:21
[applause]
00:18:24
wherever you go
00:18:25
budgies are pursued by birds of prey
00:18:28
[music]
00:18:45
and
00:18:53
the hunter knows their weaknesses
00:18:56
[music]
00:19:08
[applause]
00:19:09
[music] [
00:19:12
applause] [ music]
00:19:20
[applause]
00:19:28
my parrots are not
00:19:31
always a matter of life and death;
00:19:33
pink cockatoos have plenty of time to
00:19:36
fool around;
00:20:03
there are years when budgerigars
00:20:06
breed in such numbers that for
00:20:08
a time they become the most
00:20:10
numerous species of birds in Australia,
00:20:24
according to the description of the first settlers the
00:20:27
flocks of parrots were so huge that
00:20:30
they covered the sky
00:20:56
but good times cannot last
00:20:59
forever and when this region is covered by
00:21:02
drought
00:21:03
the birds stop breeding after growing
00:21:09
several generations
00:21:10
budgerigars scatter throughout the country
00:21:13
their nomadic life in the desert is coming to an
00:21:15
end and they will again wait for the arrival of
00:21:17
heavy rains
00:21:20
no matter how long had to
00:21:24
[music]
00:21:33
unlike the unpredictable climate in the
00:21:35
center of the continent,
00:21:36
the weather along the southern coast of Australia is
00:21:38
much more stable in winter, strong winds
00:21:44
bring snow from the Antarctic that
00:21:47
covers the highest Australian
00:21:49
mountains,
00:21:55
wombats can find food in any
00:21:57
weather,
00:22:01
but for parrots this is not the best time of year,
00:22:05
however there is a parrot that manages
00:22:07
to survive in a snowy region despite
00:22:12
winter snowstorms green rosella feeds
00:22:14
in the highlands i harbors
00:22:27
closer to sea level cold fronts
00:22:29
bring stormy winds
00:22:31
joy for surfers
00:22:34
but danger for everyone else the
00:22:41
rock grass parrot had to
00:22:43
get used to the taste of salty plants
00:22:52
living near salty water is not so- it’s simple, but
00:22:55
these brave parrots are real fighters
00:23:04
in the coastal heath, things are
00:23:06
a little better here, nature is
00:23:08
richer
00:23:09
what is needed for the red-headed one, like
00:23:16
most cockatoos, this parrot is left-handed,
00:23:19
grabbing a branch swaying
00:23:21
in the wind on the left with its right paw, it holds a pod with
00:23:24
jaundice seeds, a mourning cockatoo too
00:23:40
prefers to get seeds from large
00:23:42
cones of the bank with his left paw, a very
00:23:49
difficult task, you have to contrive
00:23:51
to separate the scales and then carefully
00:23:54
pull out the seeds hidden inside,
00:24:04
but it is precisely those plants that help the
00:24:07
parrot survive that will have to burn
00:24:10
in order to be reborn again;
00:24:12
for this, an ordinary thunderstorm is needed; the
00:24:25
Australian bush quickly ignites so that the
00:24:31
fruits of the bank are released, the
00:24:34
seeds need high temperature,
00:24:38
the scales of the hockey cones split
00:24:41
and the resinous nuts fall into the forest soil,
00:24:54
the oil of eucalyptus trees
00:24:56
ignites no worse than gasoline,
00:25:08
on no continent there are such
00:25:10
strong forest fires as in Australia
00:25:13
[music] the
00:25:17
flames cover millions of hectares
00:25:20
[music]
00:25:23
but in just a couple of hours the
00:25:26
flute crows are raking the hall and the ashes
00:25:32
and red rosellas who survived the terrible
00:25:35
fire
00:25:36
enjoying the roasted eucalyptus seeds
00:25:39
[music]
00:25:47
only a few days will pass and
00:25:50
new green sprouts will appear on the eucalyptus trees
00:26:01
and in a couple of years the
00:26:04
fox lives there will be enough food for everyone in the red
00:26:19
section the time has come again
00:26:20
breeding with its bright plumage, the
00:26:27
parrot seems to attract predators easy
00:26:30
money I swoop in but the two-colored
00:26:38
roselli parrot or any other bird
00:26:40
has to take risks in order to win in the
00:26:42
mating game, however, sometimes you can
00:26:45
benefit from two extremes
00:26:47
despite the bright plumage the birds are perfectly
00:26:49
camouflaged due to the fact that their
00:26:51
green backs merge with foliage
00:26:54
[music]
00:27:03
however, on the outskirts of Australian
00:27:06
cities, camouflage is unlikely to be useful to them
00:27:09
since the Australians began planting their
00:27:12
favorite trees in the cities; birds in food
00:27:14
became more than enough
00:27:17
parrots and gladly accepted the invitation
00:27:20
[music]
00:27:26
some overstayed their welcome
00:27:28
ointment for idleness this cockatoo is fiddling around with
00:27:31
electrical insulation and curious
00:27:40
Karelians cling to everything that comes
00:27:42
in their way first asphalt and then the
00:27:50
neighbor's lawn
00:27:53
but this passion for destruction does not compare
00:27:57
with the damage they cause to farmers cockatoos
00:28:01
like new ways of harvesting
00:28:05
[music] a
00:28:14
generation ago Lakeland was opened to
00:28:16
farming
00:28:22
the local lands were perfect for
00:28:24
growing corn and peanuts, and when the
00:28:27
crops were ripe, large yellowtails and cockatoos flocked to these areas
00:28:32
[music]
00:28:47
in just a week, the birds can cause
00:28:49
damage that will cost the farmer, well,
00:28:52
Hoskins, tens of thousands of dollars,
00:28:56
every year the number of parrots is growing,
00:28:59
the main reason lies in their
00:29:01
habitat for 12 months the birds
00:29:04
need something to feed on and here in Auckland
00:29:07
even in the driest months of August
00:29:09
and September
00:29:10
when the heat is terrible on the ground you can
00:29:12
find leftover crops in our area
00:29:16
the birds have enough food all year round so
00:29:19
they breed here continuously there is
00:29:22
food and water so they have plenty of everything
00:29:24
for them this is paradise duck livov
00:29:28
leftover corn and cockatoos
00:29:30
will go to the peanut fields and begin to
00:29:33
take away the haystacks
00:29:36
[applause]
00:29:42
black red-tailed cockatoos
00:29:44
join in with the hands of how the
00:29:54
farmers deal with the parrots
00:29:58
we drive around all over the area and shoot from
00:30:00
large-caliber rifles, the noise from
00:30:03
the shot is enough to scare away the bird
00:30:05
and we also blow the rock and so on all the time
00:30:08
every year for two or three
00:30:10
months we try to stop them, in
00:30:14
fact the most effective everywhere is to follow the
00:30:16
cockatoo from one field to another until
00:30:18
it starts the heat
00:30:19
during the day gets too hot so the
00:30:22
parrot hides in the leaves
00:30:23
then they come back and start
00:30:26
eating everything and we go again and drive it all away it's
00:30:28
damn annoying
00:30:51
further south in the area where wheat is grown there are
00:30:54
other cockatoos
00:30:56
but here it's the same story in small
00:31:02
quantities bare eyes and
00:31:04
beautiful funny cockatoos birds, but when 30,000
00:31:13
on E100 and marauders occupy the field, it’s quite
00:31:15
understandable why this upsets
00:31:18
farmers. The grain is stored in huge
00:31:23
piles covered with thick canvas, but the
00:31:26
tarpaulin doesn’t save from Astafyev
00:31:31
[applause] having eaten enough of the
00:31:44
main dish, the cockatoos
00:31:47
headed to the nearest vineyard
00:31:49
to taste dessert for the farmers
00:32:02
growing
00:32:03
rainbow lychees parrots and sworn enemies people
00:32:07
patrol orchards for days on end to
00:32:09
keep the birds at a distance
00:32:15
parrots, like children with cupcakes,
00:32:17
bite into the fruits and spoil them don’t crush them
00:32:20
For farmers, harvesting
00:32:32
turns into a competition of who will be the first
00:32:35
to collect ripe fruits and the birds win
00:32:44
but not all farmers are at war with parrots
00:32:49
[music] a
00:32:51
cattle loading station in the state of
00:32:54
Queensland
00:32:55
has turned into a refuge for a turquoise
00:32:56
bird with the rare beauty of the
00:32:58
golden shoulders of its singing parrots in the last
00:33:07
century, poachers caught them and
00:33:09
destroyed their nests, which led to the fact that the
00:33:14
whole species was on the verge of extinction,
00:33:20
to top it all off these capricious
00:33:22
parrots needs certain
00:33:24
conditions to begin with, couples wishing
00:33:30
to have offspring will need a
00:33:31
termite mound for nesting. The
00:33:38
birds have settled on the lands
00:33:39
belonging to the Sheppard forces
00:33:46
for thirty years. With the
00:33:48
onset of the breeding season, she
00:33:49
travels hundreds of kilometers and inspects
00:33:52
every termite mound in search of chicks.
00:34:03
Every second termite mound is occupied by golden-
00:34:05
shouldered song parrots of Zion.
00:34:08
walks at the bottom of a nest of identical caterpillars
00:34:14
the transformation of moth larvae into caterpillars and the
00:34:17
hatching of chicks from eggs occurs
00:34:19
simultaneously the caterpillars feed on the droppings of
00:34:23
chicks similar to their taste
00:34:33
meanwhile the parents go in search of
00:34:35
food when they return the father of the
00:34:41
family flies up to the termite mound to
00:34:43
check if everything is in order and serve a sign
00:34:53
to the chicks that it’s time for dinner, he
00:34:58
stands guard while the mother takes care of
00:35:00
her babies, a grueling schedule
00:35:08
when you need to feed the family 5 times a day,
00:35:26
the father will have to make a lot of effort
00:35:29
so that out of five week-old chicks leave
00:35:31
the nest and go to a big place full of
00:35:34
danger, the world is now a drought season, which
00:35:52
means that it will be difficult for him
00:35:54
to find food for himself in the thick grass of the force
00:35:58
helps the birds by burning bushes to
00:36:01
facilitate the search for food the
00:36:21
land of the force is a real paradise for the
00:36:24
benefit of parrots, and
00:36:26
perhaps thanks to her efforts these birds
00:36:29
will not disappear
00:36:31
[music]
00:36:38
in the north of the country in the open forest their
00:36:40
cape york peninsula
00:36:41
is home to parrots that
00:36:44
have attracted the attention of scientists for a century
00:36:46
[music]
00:36:51
steve murphy came to these parts 10 years
00:36:54
ago as a young biologist,
00:36:56
he set out to unravel the secrets of the
00:36:59
world's most amazing parrot, the black cockatoo,
00:37:02
only a few people have seen
00:37:24
these birds, look there he is flying
00:37:32
black the cockatoo appeared tens of millions of
00:37:35
years ago when Australia was covered in
00:37:37
rainforests he is the ancestor of all
00:37:40
cockatoos
00:37:41
[music]
00:37:42
little was known about this mysterious bird
00:37:45
until Steve Murphy began his
00:37:48
research the only way
00:37:54
to find them in these rain forests is
00:37:56
to imitate the coaching rhythm
00:38:05
[music] the cockatoo has a
00:38:20
rich repertoire sounds that
00:38:23
they use when communicating, the
00:38:24
welcome click is one of the most
00:38:27
common,
00:38:28
it seems they almost always screamed like this
00:38:31
when they see their relatives,
00:38:33
unlike other cockatoos, black
00:38:40
cockatoos do not live in flocks, they find
00:38:44
a mate and spend their entire lives together, sometimes
00:38:51
birds live up to 90 years in captivity a cockatoo
00:38:56
meets with a female in adulthood,
00:38:58
but in order to get a girlfriend, the male must have a
00:39:08
single nesting hole in mind,
00:39:09
several
00:39:11
before mating, he must convince the
00:39:13
female that he can build
00:39:15
beautiful nests for her, all the tricks and tricks of the
00:39:21
black cockatoo are aimed at
00:39:23
attracting attention to to his impressive
00:39:25
cool, bright red spots on his cheeks,
00:39:28
spread wings, because of which it
00:39:31
seems to you that all this is more of a demonstration of strength
00:39:33
in front of his relatives and the most important weapon
00:39:37
and his son is biting, in essence, he is trying
00:39:41
to prove that Fini can find the best partner himself
00:39:43
and she can feel at home with him
00:39:46
complete safety
00:39:48
[music]
00:39:56
found
00:39:57
they meet every morning and noon at
00:40:00
this hollow tree discussing everything that happened
00:40:05
during the day 8 sometimes it seems like you are listening to
00:40:09
the conversation of an old married couple, this
00:40:16
analogy can be continued
00:40:18
they behave like people who
00:40:21
show off their houses black cockatoos are
00:40:24
very similar to us but the most
00:40:29
amazing thing happens when the male
00:40:31
brings a small executioner into the hollow
00:40:33
and begins to knock on the edge of the nest.
00:40:39
Perhaps this behavior is explained by the fact
00:40:42
that black cockatoos are long-lived and they
00:40:46
have time to learn a lot. You don’t often
00:40:49
see an animal quite consciously
00:40:52
using some object. It is
00:40:57
likely that these performances
00:40:58
are arranged in honor of the female and such
00:41:01
behavior can tell her a lot either
00:41:04
about the suitor or the
00:41:05
tree nest on which he staged a
00:41:08
concert, it is possible that the sounds of a
00:41:10
drum roll that resonates in an
00:41:12
empty hollow means something, we do
00:41:15
n’t know for sure yet, but she is closely watching what is
00:41:17
happening
00:41:22
picky male perri try two or three
00:41:24
drumsticks until they choose the
00:41:27
one they like
00:41:37
at the beginning of the drumming performance at the
00:41:40
nest, the rhythm is felt in the parrots' drumming parts,
00:41:42
but in the end the male
00:41:51
sits down on the edge of the hollow, splits
00:41:54
the butterfly and throws it to the bottom of the nest
00:41:58
if he managed to
00:42:01
impress the female she will join him to
00:42:03
see if the nest is suitable for
00:42:05
breeding offspring after checking and
00:42:13
approving the future home the couple leaves
00:42:16
the hollow to have breakfast local birds
00:42:25
gather in the fruit trees the
00:42:28
black cockatoo has a very powerful bite and in
00:42:36
comparison with others what is the largest there
00:42:38
with its help they eat food
00:42:41
that is simply too much for other parrots or animals
00:42:47
I think black cockatoos are very smart
00:42:50
birds, you should watch how they
00:42:54
groom each other in the nest
00:42:56
or how the male makes a
00:42:58
drumstick and you will understand that you are
00:43:01
going through a complex thought process in their heads,
00:43:04
of course, not only black cockatoos
00:43:07
are famous for their intelligence
00:43:09
all parrots are smart, but unlike
00:43:14
most birds that learn in their youth,
00:43:16
cockatoos continue to accumulate knowledge
00:43:18
throughout their long lives and pass on
00:43:21
unique mental
00:43:25
abilities to their relatives; a strong beak and dexterous paws;
00:43:28
it seems that parrots initially had everything they
00:43:30
needed to adapt to the
00:43:32
changing conditions of life on the mainland;
00:43:35
these Beautiful and intelligent birds thrive
00:43:38
here from the first droughts until the
00:43:40
Europeans arrived
00:43:41
and they turned Australia into the land of
00:43:45
parrots
00:43:46
[music]
00:43:56
producers before Victor Elizabeth Paire Cook
00:43:59
cameramen David Perry Alliance and Cooper
00:44:02
editing Jane Asher music
00:44:05
Cesare Scobie female scientific
00:44:07
advisers Timid Dream Steve Murphy
00:44:09
anti-banner film translated and voiced
00:44:12
by the company first TVCH 2010
00:44:23
[music]

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