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A 10-foot shark in the Pacific; a giant octopus with tentacles stretching 16 feet and a giant wolf eel all are the marine animals captured and fitted with a device that emits a signal that activates the computerized recorder that has been developed to record the movements of sea creatures. [270]
Sea Monsters, [a] marketed as Chased by Sea Monsters in the United States, is a 2003 three-part nature documentary television miniseries created by Impossible Pictures and produced by the BBC Studios Science Unit, [4] the Discovery Channel and ProSieben. [5]
Educational Video Presentations 51452 Kingdom of Plants: What Is a Seed? Educational Video Presentations 51455 Kingdom of Plants: What Is a Flower? Educational Video Presentations 51474 Seasons in the Sea (blue cover variation has no ISBN) 1990 1990 500 0-7922-1958-9 National Geographic Video Presentation 51479 Amazon: Land of the Flooded Forest
As fish stocks dry up, supermarkets are now offering new and strange species from the deep sea. Bizarre-looking creatures are being dragged up in vast fishing nets from depths of 1,000 metres or more. The methods used to catch them are horrifying. As the nets drag along the sea bed they rip up 100-year-old corals and sponges, destroying the ...
The show also focuses on explaining the creatures' feeding habits, behaviour and conservation status. Rebroadcasts of the episodes with captions showing behind the scenes commentary from the host about the particular episode can also be seen on both Animal Planet and Discovery Channel. These episodes are going by the title River Monsters: Unhooked.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
This is a first response emergency vehicle and medical station (complete with an X-Ray machine), allowing Kwazii to treat and transport sea creatures to safety. A beak-like hatch exists at the nose of the vehicle for capturing sea creatures being rescued by the vehicle. Parrotfish: Octonauts and the Great Barrier Reef (11th Special) GUP-Q
The first episode, "From Pole to Pole", was watched by more people than any natural history programme since Attenborough and Fothergill's previous series, The Blue Planet, in 2001. [54] The first five episodes drew an average audience of 11.4 million viewers, including the early evening repeats, outperforming even The Blue Planet. [55]