From the life that flourishes a kilometre beneath the ocean's surface to amazing clownfish teamwork, watch as Sir David Attenborough narrates three hours of wonderful wildlife moments. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub Sign up to our newsletter for the latest news, updates and exclusives from BBC Earth https://www.bbcearth.com/newsletter #Wildlife #WildlifeDocumentary #DavidAttenborough Watch more: Best of BBC Earth 🌍 https://bit.ly/BestOfBBCEarth Best Animal Fights 🥊 https://bit.ly/BestAnimalFights Videos over 10 minutes ⏰ https://bit.ly/3SHJCEJ Planet Earth III 🌍 https://bit.ly/PlanetEarthIIIPlaylist Frozen Planet II ❄️ https:/bit.ly/FrozenPlanetIIPlaylist Blue Planet II in 4K 🌊 https://bit.ly/BluePlanetII4kPlaylist Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of entertaining and thought-provoking natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this. This is a commercial page from BBC Studios. Service information and feedback: http://bbcworldwide.com/vod-feedback--contact-details.aspx
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Nature always provides us with incredible animals, but you've brought those surprises even closer to us. Thank you so much.
IGREJA BRASIL BENDITO ❤️ 💚 💛 💙
It's waaaaaaaay more full of life than it looks. Imagine if u could click the sun on down there. U would be utterly surrounded by freaky beings. There is like 3x more beings that live in the dark of the ocean than live on the surface. So its PACKED with life. So much so that the most basic and common for of language on earth is light. And we don't speak it
Achterlijk ai stemmetje.
David Attenborough has a way of making wildlife feel both scientific and emotional at the same time. That’s rare storytelling.
❤❤❤❤ great video
The meek shall inherit the Earth
From the mysterious deep ocean to the incredible teamwork of tiny clownfish, nature never fails to deliver unbelievable moments. There really is no better way to spend three hours than listening to Sir David Attenborough bring the wild to life.
Watching deep sea creatures that survive for centuries, fish changing gender just to dominate territory, and ants literally turning themselves into a living raft during floods… nature is on another level. No writer could invent this stuff better than reality. And those cheetah brothers coordinating to take down an ostrich like a tactical unit? Absolute masterpiece. Earth is the greatest documentary ever made. 🖤🌍
Adding stupid sound effects makes nature documentaries so hard to watch.
The amount of ads is atrocious, impossible to find this video relaxing
2:27:15 hydrodynamically awkward appendages (fins) may cause unnecessary drag. Yet, thriving.
2:01:26 elegantly soft landing by a hard-shelled creature. Its agility in locomotion is one of the natural beauties. It's a little perplexing. Why not stay all day long nearby their feeding spot? Breathing issue? Kind of a terrestrial crab it is?
1:29:49 perhaps you may be able to measure or calculate how long the banquet would last by watching the size of predators in there.
1:17:43 good luck, but seemingly not cost-free. A desperate counterattack left a mark ... "It's only small .." said. Is it really? I'm not sure if she could eat a whole at once ..
David attonbrough your things are so nice
A fish with a brain advanced enough to calculate the exact air speed, altitude, and trajectory of a flying bird to snatch it mid-air [01:32:55] is purely terrifying. The Giant Trevally completely redefines everything we assume about marine intelligence. I am currently working on similar series on my page. Whether it's vampire finches relying on mutual symbiosis gone rogue [33:38], or fire ants creating a macro-organism living raft to save their queen from drowning [25:04], this compilation is a beautiful reminder that adaptation isn't just about strength, it's about pure, calculated strategy. Nobody presents the architecture of survival like Sir David Attenborough.🎉 Mind-boggling sequence!
In the deepest darkness of the ocean, creatures create their own light. Sometimes survival means becoming your own source of hope.
Nature’s unbelievable moments with the voice of make every scene feel magical and deeply emotional like witnessing the heartbeat of Earth itself. Thanks BBC Earth.
I came into this video expecting cool deep-sea creatures, but I honestly didn’t expect it to feel so emotional and humbling. The part about animals communicating through light in complete darkness was incredible, especially knowing we still understand so little about that world. It’s wild to think there’s an entire ecosystem larger than anything on land, hidden beneath us where sunlight never reaches. The flapjack octopus and those glowing defense mechanisms looked almost alien, but at the same time you could still recognize the same instincts every animal shares: survival, parenting, finding food, and protecting themselves. The red crab migration section was heartbreaking too because it showed how fragile isolated ecosystems really are when humans accidentally introduce invasive species. This documentary made me appreciate how interconnected life on Earth is, even in places most people will never see. Anyone else feel like the deep ocean is still the closest thing we have to another planet?