Episode list

Nature

Radioactive Wolves
What happens to nature after a nuclear accident? And how does wildlife deal with the world it inherits after human inhabitants have fled?
7.7 /10
Jungle Eagle

Tue, Nov 08, 2011
The most powerful raptor in the world, the harpy eagle, hides away deep in the South American jungle.
7.2 /10
My Life as a Turkey
Naturalist Jim Hutto's remarkable experience of being imprinted on by a group of wild turkey hatchlings, and raising them to adulthood and beyond, in the remote wilderness of northern Florida.
8.6 /10
Kangaroo Mob

Tue, Jan 10, 2012
Following the stories of several urban kangaroos, Kangaroo Mob reveals how these metropolitan marsupials manage to survive the city, and documents the ongoing debate on how best to manage them.
8.1 /10
Fortress of the Bears
Part of the massive Tongass National Forest, Admiralty Island in Southeast Alaska supports the largest concentration of bears anywhere in the world. Sustained by a wealth of salmon streams, isolated and protected by their environment, some 1,700 Alaskan brown bears are part of a unique circle of life that has played out here for centuries.
7.5 /10
Raccoon Nation

Tue, Feb 07, 2012
An examination of the raccoon, the largest mammal species to have adapted well to human cities.
7.7 /10
Ocean Giants: Voices of the Sea
Humpback whales' songs carry thousands of miles, while a sperm whale scans the ocean depths with a sonar laser beam louder than a thunderclap. Discover a surprising underwater world where sound takes the place of sight.
7.8 /10
The White Lions
Follow two rare white lion cubs on their journey to adulthood on the South African savanna.
8 /10
Cracking the Koala Code
Follow individual koalas from a small social group on an Australian island to learn just how a koala manages to survive and thrive on a diet poisonous to almost all other herbivorous mammals. From the miracle of marsupial birth to tender moments of discovery between mother and newborn joey, encounters with threatening forest creatures, battles between rival males and the complex chorus of bellows and grunts that have become so important to science -- join leading scientists as they unravel just what a forest needs to support a healthy population of koalas by listening to these marsupials themselves and cracking the koala code.
6.6 /10

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