Saturday, 6 July 2013

Top 10 Sir David Attenborough's series BBC


 



Top 10 Nature documentaries on TV ever!

These are my personal top 10 documentaries that I'd personally recommend to anyone. Sir David Attenborough has always been my favorite guy and here are some of his work. 
These documentaries will cost you much more than you ever get from pocket money.However, you can watch some of the best documentaries FREE.   

10. Penguins 3D (Sky production) 

Click on the link below to watch. 


09. Life in Cold Blood (BBC)  

Click on the link below to watch in Full. 
The Life of Mammals DVD cover


08. The Private Life of Plants (BBC) 

Click on the link Below

The Life of Birds DVD cover

07. Flying Monsters 3D (Sky Production) 

Click on the link to watch. 

 

06. Life in the Undergrowth(BBC)

Click on the link below to watch. 


05. Life on Earth (BBC) 

Sorry! this series can't be watched on-line due to copyright. A Few clips can be found on Youtube. 
Life on Earth DVD cover


04. Nature's Most Amazing Events (BBC)

Click on the link below to watch. 


03. Africa (BBC)

click on the link below and watch


02. Planet Earth (BBC)                   Frozen Planet (BBC) 

Can't be watched unless purchased. 

Screenshot of series title cardFrozen Planet.png

01. Life (BBC)

Click on the link below to watch in full. 


Tuesday, 11 June 2013

Mankind will destroy our planet?

Beautiful tress have been chopped down, world's oceans have been dumped with rubbish and all sort of chemicals, magnificent animals and plants have extinct.Great jungles and forests are in critical conditions. Who might be responsible?

Sadly, ourselves We have devastated our planet's habitat. 50 years ago, there were around only 2 billion people. Today, there are 7 billion and still growing. Predictions are that by 2050, there will be 9 billion.Each of us need food, air, water, home, schools etc. We are totally dependent upon the natural world. Climate change is already taking place. Polar bears having difficultly to find food in summer because the ice melts and seals go out of reach. Animals in Africa will suffer the sun's heat. 1 million people go hungry everyday. 


How can we stop this all? After all, we all started it. What can be done? We can't reverse now..

We should stop producing more and more babies. Seek medical conditions and use of contraception.Parents will find easy to feed four children instead of ten. If you believe in God whom will fix these problems then you are wrong. God never interrupts with us. He gave us brains to use. We must start looking after our planet as well as ourselves. 

What would happen if we don't stop? 

People will grow dramatically, more forests will disappear.Animals and plants will extinct.People will die. Less space for our natural world. Ecosystem will collapse. We'll find very hard to find food, jobs, houses. Famine will arrive and we'll suffer. People in thousands and millions will die.

We must do something before it's too late. 

Monday, 10 June 2013



Platypus

Platypuses are both bizarre looking and unusually adapted. They belong to a sub-group of mammals that lay eggs rather than giving birth to live young (monotremes). When the first platypus was shipped to Britain from Australia, people thought it was a joke and that someone had sewn a duck's bill to a mammal's body. Even when accepted as real, it was thought to be a bird or a reptile as it laid eggs.
Scientific name: Ornithorhynchus anatinus
Rank: Species


Saturday, 8 June 2013


Gelada baboon

Gelada baboons are not actually true baboons, although they look very similar and are easily recognisable by the patches of hairless skin on their chest, which turns crimson when females are in oestrus. They are in fact the last surviving species of a once widespread group of grass-grazing primates. Geladas live in large groups of as many as 600 members. Such a complex society requires clear communication, and geladas use visual signals, such as facial expression and body posture, to interact.
Scientific name: Theropithecus gelada

Friday, 7 June 2013


With a population that may number fewer than 1,000, silky sifakas are one of the rarest and most critically endangered mammals on the planet. A typical day for silky sifakas consists of foraging trips for leaves and fruit, broken up by plenty of rest in the rainforest canopies of northeast Madagascar. In fact almost half the day is spent taking it easy. Living in small, female-led groups of up to 10 individuals, these large lemurs, famed for their long, silky, white fur, travel around 700 metres each day through a territory that covers many tens of hectares.
Scientific name: Propithecus candidus


Harpy eagle.                                 
Harpy eagles are some of the world's largest and most powerful birds of prey. The largest eagles of the Americas, they are also mean fliers. They hunt in and around the canopy of Central and South America's rainforests, striking at animals with deadly precision - sloths and monkeys are particular favourites. The unfortunate victims are subdued with large, viscious talons that a grizzly bear would be proud of. Named by early South American explorers after the half-woman/half-eagle monster of Greek mythology, these legendary eagles are seldom seen in the wild.
Scientific name: Harpia harpyja











Great Barrier Reef wildlife

The Great Barrier Reef can only be described as breathtakingly beautiful and one of the wonders of the natural world. It is the largest collection of corals on Earth (over 400 types) making up thousands of individual reefs of all shapes and sizes, alongside hundreds of exotic islands. This is the world's most extensive stretch of coral reef and the only living thing visible from space.

There is no doubt that the Great Barrier Reef is one of the world's richest areas of diversity; supporting a dazzling array of colourful corals, sponges, anemones and worms. Many species of tropical fish, birds, mammals and reptiles are also found here. No wonder it is one of the jewels in Australia's  crown and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Sadly, pollution, climate change and outbreaks of the crowns-of-throns-    starfish
 are all threats to this fragile ecosystem.