tv Frag den Lesch Deutsche Welle November 6, 2020 6:30am-7:01am CET
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that's the. best one that nasty you are in danger it's really cool little bird. let's get down. walk a little bit. of a loving. so cool. to so busy yeah i have to figure that. you haven't thought about film. so making me think about ya. when you think about. it like what do you do if you like to watch
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a robot about making a. heart to heart or you think what your dad does is hard oh that's good. i'm glad you appreciate. it hard. to believe. but that. does it as well if you want to see you coming to see otter has absolutely all the criteria. necessary to be the icon for the ocean and the need for us to take care
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of the ocean. roll. so it's possible that i could end up stumbling into the most popular film i've ever worked on in my life. going to the good ones breaking down in front of the next. couple. just going to cause less think we are on our way to the east coast of india to film there are you but. it's a spectacular say tarzan's of all the ridley turtles arriving in moscow on to the beach.
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link so many exit ones and shows there's a way. at one point it was under threat with people collecting they extensively love can be all that has changed. you need those there were you don't have strings for the little. hatchlings which you're going to see when you want to order 1000 we come back. and if you add the magnet factors it may be one of those who tell the. story every
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if i don't think i would describe myself as a patient is precisely what i would describe myself as someone who gets very fascinated by something and when fascination grabs time doesn't play a role and. equals it sitting around forever with nothing happening it's not my dream. and it is the nature of will make you experience so many things outdoors you'll only see that one time in your life of a call that gives them a whole other value. it's
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it's. it's. you know me i remember my childhood when there were so few senors in germany. big issue with birds of prey with either. side was used so widely that it resulted in the eggshells becoming so thin that they. child. i don't seem to be some few decades later there are suddenly several 100 pairs that's wonderful was talking. of an optimist but things aren't all going to go off on this the main problem today is that the lead from hunting ammunition when and what throw off stays on the ground meaning that. he has left i see eagles rabbits.
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but do you see a human in that system are not humans have a huge effect. on keeping the wildlife genre but then impose some of the need to address these environmental issues and wasn't necessarily well received by the wildlife filmmakers community. we're going to go down to is tiger search today. really so you might have an opportunity to see tiger sharks dead sea turtle which is kind of you're crazy searchers super predators. weaver you drops off to be a very good sport. and
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now listen 30 years because their populations drop by 90 percent if you are a standard 70 percent of the oxygen and the very air that we breathe comes from life in the oceans around the sharks control so sharks are incredibly important. to fish skeptical of the fish just to ensure. it should be the rock thank. heaven i should suffer just to follow it as such but. i can't.
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talk the coptic now there was time. to talk 50. who don't know what's going on more than 75 percent of consumers don't know the shark fin soup a shark and a good. whole heartedly that if these consumers knew their consumption of this dish was causing the demise of one of the oldest longest lasting most for others. it would make a different decision. in
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protection on borked. a. little bit like to ask our sister rita onto the state. rita come here please. she has won many prizes. for our film which will show now tell us about an indigenous people in northeastern india the jungle is their home they hunt for their livelihood. that's. what. the was in 2007 when travel to the vast wilderness of middle east india to learn about its father people be about half the cost of the jungle she couldn't rich
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a round rock she village and head to head. in some of the last few pockets of rain forest in the world exists here. hunting she has deep roots she says on my. we will cover this entire area or the chasing team is waiting to hear about a bike about a little bit they will chase the animals to the top and we with the guns will wait on the hilltop ready to shoot a bit of. abuse if it was hunting it is no longer just a way of life it which in marching with its increasingly being driven by the need for trash necessary in a more had world. subsidy biggest danger is that wild meat sales bring significant earnings softness out that on them and then . sell it to me for 150 rupees. to one many find it difficult to accept the i.c.r.c.
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not hunting everyone here agrees that the are life resources in a forest just means diminishing of the pos families and on her beach outing. for several 100 years sea otters were hunted for their very valuable furs to the point where they were almost extinct in fact. around here they were thought to be extinct. one woman found a small raft of about 50 individuals that were off the pretty remote part of the california coast called big sur she kept that secret because she knew that if that
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secret got out that that last little remnant of population would be wiped out. from that time though the population has slowly been increasing the. monterey bay aquarium is just a yacht a rehabilitation conservation program spotters that have been injured or orphaned and rehabilitates them and put them back in the wild. today there are about 2800 otters in this southern sea otter population. and yet as much as we love them and as much as we're trying to take care of them the population is actually now slipping. and it's not anything that we're actively doing it's just that our every day behaviors are impacting the
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health and wellbeing of the seattle population. and. their population is being insulted by a whole host of things that we're doing to them. they're getting these terrible diseases getting infected by toxoplasmosis coming from the feces and the kitty litter that's getting into the ocean. that. they're classified as a threatened species right now. yes. but . you can't interact with the animals directly you have to wear a costume that prevents the otter from attaching itself to heel and.
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they essentially become a wild animal again. the most challenging part is to get these animals that are stranding is basically naive ops from captivity here and then back into the wild and so as that period of time where the likelihood of failures the highest. this is not a 5 or one after nearly a year if she's going to be released next. day . since they've started the program where a surrogate sea otter is mothering or for a lot of the survival rate is now i think pretty close to the survival rate of a normal otter in the wild which may be somewhere around 60 percent
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. give us your country he will make you rich. people will provide you with jobs. that will take good care of my future has to be. lucifer's too cold on the west coast to come out in 2000 so the strips made promises but years later reality looks very different. later choose. good drinking water short. cut. is a. good time it. happened to guyana stream of black coal . oil promises starts december 4th.
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place. this is news coming to you live from berlin as votes in the u.s. election continue to be counted the president called yourself a conspiracy don't trust makes a series of baseless claims insisting he's being involved a victory. meanwhile his challenger joe biden who leads in both the electoral and popular vote asked the american people for patience and faith in their electoral systems face to. play.
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