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DAVID ATTENBOROUGH: In all the seas of the world, the warm waters of the tropics
contain the richest and the most colourful communities.
Coral reefs...
They may seem like underwater paradise,
but they are perpetual battlegrounds for space.
Even the corals have to fight for it.
In this crowded, frenetic community
every individual has to find its own place,
its own way of surviving.
But none of these creatures would be here if it were not for the coral.
A coral larva drifts in the open sea
floating in a soup of young reef animals.
If just one of these coral larvae settles in a suitable spot and survives,
a new reef will be founded.
In just a few days the larva changes form and becomes a polyp,
similar to a sea anemone.
Identical copies bud off and gradually a colony develops.
Each polyp surrounds itself with a hard skeleton
and from this solid base begins to grow.
It increases in length by an impressive 15 centimetres a year.
This branching coral is only two years old.
A mature reef can be thousands.
Corals provide the foundations on which the entire reef community relies.
Some organisms, like the Christmas tree worms,
actually live within the coral.
Others climb out, away from the reef,
to filter their food from the water.
As the community grows, intimate relationships are formed
and different creatures become increasingly dependent on one another.
Even animals that spend much of their time
travelling in the open ocean return to the reef for a clean.
Corals reefs can be home to astounding numbers of fish.
Here swim the smallest and the largest fish in the sea.
Whale sharks are only visitors.
When currents bring nutrient-rich water up from the deep,
they come here to feed.
All these animals are here because of the coral.
This extraordinary complex maze is built layer upon layer
by millions and millions of individual animals...
Polyps.
Each polyp's flesh is supported by a limestone skeleton.
Below the gut
is the place where most of the growth occurs.
Here, the living tissue deposits an intricate lattice of limestone.
Beneath that, the limestone skeleton is bare,
having been vacated by the living coral tissues.
This is the hard structure that forms the foundation of the reef.
And a single reef can extend for many miles.
Coral reefs are only found in the clear, warm shallow waters of the tropics.
Sunlight is vital to them, even though they are animals.
Because inside their flesh live millions of tiny single-celled algae...
Plants.
And all plants need sunlight to photosynthesise sugars.
98% of the food that corals consume is produced by the algae.
Without them, the reef would not exist.
Like any other plant, algae need just the right amount of light.
Not too much, not too little.
The corals regulate that with pigments that we can only see
when they are illuminated by ultraviolet light.
Most corals, for protection, spend the day withdrawn into their stony fortresses.
But even then they are not safe from the jaws of these butterfly fish.
At night, the corals take in water,
expand their tentacles and emerge to feed.
They collect plankton.
Each tentacle has batteries of stinging cells, which fire on contact.
Once the prey is caught, it's passed down to the polyp's mouth.
It's at night, when the polyps are extended,
that they add to the limestone foundations beneath them.
Inevitably, the corals begin to overgrow each other.
And that means trouble.
When neighbours get too close, they detect one another's presence chemically.
The aggressor on the right prepares for battle.
The polyps extrude their guts
and simply digest their rivals alive.
A no man's land, a band of white skeleton
is the only evidence of the night's border dispute.
Some corals are targeted by yet more deadly predators.
Predators that can crawl in search of their victims.
Crown-of-thorns starfish, poisonous, invincible eating machines.
They also extrude their gut and digest coral wholesale.
But some corals have help.
Small crabs living within their branches
resist these onslaughts and defend their home.
From beneath, they launch an attack on the vulnerable underside of the starfish.
Even the crown-of-thorns will retreat from such a determined attack.
And this coral is left unharmed.
Humphead parrotfish. Nearly a metre and a half in length.
Their jaws are so powerful they can bite through rock.
When they descend to feed, the reef itself is under threat.
They are indiscriminate feeders,
taking both rock and coral alike in their quest for algae.
These fish play a large part in the erosion of the reef.
The rock and coral they swallow emerges later as a fine sand.
On a single reef, they can produce tonnes of it every year.
This soft sand forms the tropical beaches that we find so alluring.
Over time the sand builds up to form an island,
which is then colonised by animals and plants.
Trees take root. Birds arrive.
(SQUAWKING)
The guano from thousands of terns which have chosen to nest here
enriches the sandy soil, which then can support more plants.
But these terns, like other seabirds,
depend on the ocean for their food.
Below water, on the reef, there is not only competition for living space,
but a continual contest between predators and prey.
It's the arms race between them that over millions of years
has produced today's extraordinary diversity of form.
Jacks are one of the key predators on the reef.
Their weapon is speed.
They seek silversides and their defence is to congregate
in confusing shoals of shimmering silver.
The jacks try to deal with that by herding the silversides onto the reef.
Here, the jacks have a better chance
of separating individual fish from the shoal.
The jacks can now catch the isolated individuals with lightning attacks.
It's far safer to be hidden on the reef itself,
within the tunnels of a sponge, for example.
These tiny shrimp are no bigger than grains of rice.
These shrimps are unique.
It's recently been discovered that they have a highly sophisticated social system,
similar to that of bees.
All members of the colony are the offspring of one female.
She is the queen and the only one to produce eggs.
As in a colony of bees,
different individuals are specialised for particular tasks.
Some are guards and are armed with particularly large and powerful claws.
They are on watch at all times, ready to tackle intruders.
A polychaete worm.
For it, a sponge is an excellent hunting ground.
In such a maze of tunnels, attack can come at any time from any quarter.
Once the guards are alerted, the worm loses its advantage.
Better to retreat intact, than risk serious injury.
The sponge not only makes a safe home for the shrimps,
it also supplies them with food, so that they never need venture outside.
An establishment that provides for all their needs
is clearly well worth defending.
Just as shrimps guard their home,
other animals defend their hunting grounds.
Glassfish make tempting prey for the redmouth grouper.
Its strategy is to swim slowly amongst them
until they no longer see it as a threat.
There are other fish here, too.
Lionfish are ambush predators,
taking their time and watching for the right moment.
But there isn't room here for two predators.
The grouper, braving the lionfish's poisonous spines,
tries to evict its rival.
But lionfish are persistent.
This grouper spent many hours simply defending his hunting patch.
Some animals prefer to avoid conflict whenever possible.
These harlequin shrimp, having captured a starfish,
are taking it back to a safe house
beyond the reach of competitors and danger.
The problem with starfish is that they have minds of their own
and five large sticky arms.
By the time the shrimps have prised off one arm, another has reattached itself.
Only by manoeuvring the starfish onto its back
can they have any hope of gaining the advantage.
Even so, getting it back home is a major undertaking.
The starfish is now a living larder.
If the shrimps can hang onto it, it will feed them for days to come.
The top of the reef is usually covered by a thin layer of green algae,
another living larder.
And many fish depend on it.
Powder blue tangs defend their right to graze on a particular patch.
But for a larder as well-stocked as this, there is always competition.
When a shoal of convict tangs decide to graze, little can stop them.
The powder blue tangs try to keep them off.
But they are overwhelmed by sheer numbers.
The territory is stripped of algae in minutes.
The blue tangs appear to be fighting a losing battle.
But eventually they begin to get the upper hand.
They persist with their attacks
until the marauders are well on their way.
When night falls, some very strange creatures
creep out of crevices and crawl over the reef.
This moving bush is an animal.
A basket star, which spreads out its arms to catch the night's plankton.
The reef becomes uncannily tranquil.
Fish retire, hiding themselves where they can.
Marbled rays come out to hunt for prey buried in the sand,
using electro-receptors to scan the seabed.
Their activity attracts sharks.
White tips.
At night, when vision is of little use, sharks have a real advantage.
They can still use both smell and electro-reception to track fish.
These sharks are also hunting for fish concealed within the reef.
Their slender shape enables them to squeeze through surprisingly narrow gaps.
There is nowhere to hide.
Few animals are safe during these feeding frenzies.
Night after night, the reef animals are subjected to these raids.
But life on the reef is not just about food.
It's also about sex.
There are many different breeding strategies,
but each is aimed at maximising the number of young that will survive.
Every afternoon, for two months,
brown surgeonfish can be seen streaming across reefs in the Red Sea.
They all head for the same place, usually some prominent feature.
Here, they wait for the light to fade.
Suddenly, females within the group
make a dash away from the reef, to release their eggs.
They're immediately followed by the quickest and closest of the males,
all of whom are striving to fertilise the eggs.
Inevitably, others come here to feast on such easy food.
As the surgeonfish spawn, fusiliers move in above to eat the nutritious eggs.
These are just the first of many predators which will feed on the eggs
and developing larvae as they drift in the ocean during the next few weeks.
Other fish are less casual about their eggs.
Banded pipefish stay close to a small chosen area on the reef.
Every morning at sunrise, the female leaves her sleeping site
and swims to find her partner.
For 10 minutes or so they remain together,
reaffirming the bond that is essential to their partnership.
They swim together around his territory in a simple greeting dance.
Throughout the summer, when the female's eggs are ripe,
courtship begins in earnest in the early morning.
It takes time, and after about two hours
they rise together off the seabed entwining their bodies.
The male rubs himself against the female,
stimulating her, to release her eggs.
And now, swiftly, the male takes them.
The eggs, now stuck to his belly,
are patted down to ensure that they stay there.
The female then leaves him.
But every morning she will return for a session of synchronised swimming
and so ensure that their bond is maintained.
Ten days later, under the cover of darkness,
the male shakes his body and the young pipefish are born.
Only now are they independent of their parents.
Since the male takes charge of the eggs as soon as they are laid,
the female can start immediately producing the next batch.
Without his help, the pair could only breed every 20 days,
rather than every 10.
So, by sharing the work, they're doubling the number of young
they can produce in any one year.
A flamboyant cuttlefish.
Unlike most cuttlefish, this one spends much of its time
walking rather than jetting across the seabed.
This is a male.
He is using his colourful display to try and seduce the larger female,
who seems unimpressed.
Eventually, she concedes.
The final event, the transfer of ***, is very quick.
(WHALE SONG)
A singing male humpback whale
(WHALE SONG CONTINUES)
Humpbacks are only visitors to the reef.
After a pregnancy that lasted a whole year,
the females come here to give birth and suckle their newly-born young.
Their investment in their single offspring is considerable,
for each female will continue to nurse it for a further six to 12 months.
But the males are here to mate.
The lone males sing to establish their relative seniority.
The louder and longer the song,
the bigger and stronger the singer.
(WHALE SONG)
The better the song, the larger the male,
the more mating opportunities he will get.
All these different mating strategies have the same aim,
to ensure that the greatest possible number of offspring
will live long enough to breed themselves.
Corals also reproduce sexually,
but being fixed to the seabed, they can't move to find a mate.
Somehow, they must synchronise their *** activity
and they do so using the rising water temperatures of spring
and the phases of the moon.
A few days after the full moon in late spring,
when tidal currents are at their weakest,
the corals of the Great Barrier Reef are ready to spawn.
Some corals are male and release clouds of ***.
Nearby, a female will be releasing eggs.
Other species of coral, are both male and female.
These release packages of eggs already pre-wrapped in ***.
Bundles of eggs and *** float to the surface,
to mix with others from further along the reef.
Each kind of coral times its release to a certain hour on a certain night.
That maximises the chances of cross-fertilisation.
The fertilised eggs drift away from the reef.
(THUNDER RUMBLING)
The stormy season brings real danger to the animals of the reef.
Lobsters in the Caribbean, sense a change in the water.
The temperature drops and powerful ocean swells disturb the sand.
Under the cover of darkness, they emerge to run before the storm
and risk crossing the exposed sand flats to seek shelter in deeper water.
Every year, they make this journey.
From all over the reef, lobsters come to join the march.
They conserve their energy by travelling in one another's slipstream.
And there is the added benefit of safety in numbers.
(RUMBLING)
By daybreak, they've reached the edge of the deep reef and down they go.
For the rest of the stormy season
they will remain in the shelter of deep water out of harm's way.
(THUNDER RUMBLING)
Sometimes during the stormy season, a hurricane builds.
And then, the very structure of the reef itself is under threat.
An entire reef can be destroyed by just one big storm.
Hundreds of years of growth, gone in a few hours.
Out in the ocean, new life continues to develop.
In time, coral larvae will return to colonise the rubble
and a new reef will grow on the wasteland.