Tuesday, 14 June 2016
(2005) The David Attenborough Wildlife Collection: Life in the Undergrowth - Invasion of the Land
Broadcast 23 November 2005, the first episode tells how invertebrates
became the first creatures of any kind to colonise dry land. Their
forerunners were shelled and segmented sea creatures that existed 400
million years ago. Some of them ventured out of the water to lay their
eggs in safety, and Attenborough compares those first steps with today's
mass spawning of horseshoe crabs off the Atlantic coast of North America. Some animals abandoned the oceans altogether when the land became green with algae, mosses and liverworts. The earliest ground-dwellers were millipedes, which were quickly followed by other species. Springtails are shown to be smaller than the head of a pin and, for their size, can jump immense heights. The velvet worm
hunts nocturnally and has scarcely changed over millennia, while the
giant centipede (possibly a kind of Scolopendromorpha) can kill
instantly and is shown hunting bats in Venezuela. Mating habits are explored, including the unusual ritual of leopard slugs and the meticulous nest maintenance of the harvestman. The arrival of earthworms
was of great importance since they changed the nature of the soil,
leading to a proliferation of plant life. Despite their aquatic
ancestry, many invertebrates, particularly those with no exoskeleton, need a moist environment to keep themselves from drying out. Finally, a creature that has adapted to a desert habitat, the scorpion, is shown as it pursues its dangerous courting dance, followed by the birth of up to fifty individuals.
Labels:
(2005),
(Documentary),
David Attenborough Wildlife Collection: Life in the Undergrowth - Invasion of the Land
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