tv Wild Isles Deutsche Welle May 21, 2023 9:15pm-10:01pm CEST
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see, consider themselves lucky to have overcome this. as a reminder of our top story, ukraine's presidents let them, as lensky has secured from us as a weapon to be and support the g 7 summit in japan. so as he said, he hopes the new piece planned code and the war ukraine on conflicts worldwide. that's it for now. next the documentary wild. how's? it looks at the threat to prisons, natural beauty from plastics on pollution. don't forget our website data meet up on all the latest news today, june, from all of the top of the, of the loudest voice. my a, my ceiling is out. she's the face of a protest movement. she's there motivator. and she won't give up, no matter what she is nomic for public took my brother hostage a few days ago. just trying to sign in the most the young lady,
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john. they won't be silent. starts june, 3rd, p w. the tenants useful life the as far as we know, she's the only and have a cheap plan. it, you know, universe thought that i faxed it to you have life. it supports is on this right. the since the 1970s, we have diminished of a 60 percent of all wild life, a natural habitats the
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illusion, one and 7 see she's now facing extinction. and many others in decline. the time has come to re address that problem. today the united kingdom is one of the most nature to treat these countries on our planet. but now he's new to the time to dispense as individuals and communities of hazing. the way towards right to each and the now is the time across these like the
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on the i love most scotland change is in the the light tailed eagles, the case largest bed frame with a wing span of up to 8 feet. this magnificent bed was hunted to extinction in the u. k. and the 19th century is the time and victorians out shooting grouse. another game the time when sheet but being bored into the highlands and they didn't win any preferences around. so why until he goes to the top of the list to get rid of the last name, whites out ego in the highlands was shot in the shipments in 1918. just shameful, really, well, human beings are capable of doing but off the decades of hard work and
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dedication that breeding david sexton and all those involved. it's been a lifelong lady. but as now the of to several found attempts, the reintroduction program gathered momentum in the 19 seventy's. and today that continued work has led to one of the most successful wildlife conservation projects in the building 10 bucks a year and no way from 75 to 85. and they were kept in avery's own room and said taffeta and then released. and that was the beginning of it already. that's how it it all started. the fees well but did not accept piece and then from
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and despite to successfully introduction, it took 10 years until they saw the fast successful breeding attempt from a positive settlement on i was lucky enough to be here in 1985 looking for the r as b b, when that says, check, fledge, we will hear as ness protection. people ready at that time it was always the wiring and risk of a collective. and it was a collect does that possibly finished the builds of a 100 years previously? and so it was amazing on a to be part of that bit of conservation history and our tenants on the edge of the law looking out houses committees is all about. we were the happiest people in the land, i think at that time. and that was the 1st check to fly in the u. k. skies for maybe 70 is. that was quite a moment. the,
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the descendants of that matriarchal ego still living on mount today. in 2021 was a record to you for checks the highest number of checks i've ever known in my time and reflects 20 checks this year, which is just a phenomenal result. and those checks take a lot of reading because when they hatch in mid april they you know, they come out of an egg. so does that sort of size kind of a little bowl of down that would sit in publishing and in 10 weeks they've gone from that to fully grown eagles. the 8 foot long span, which is just phenomenal dice, and drugs. and by the time they fly the nest, that's it. that's all the credit and they play makes changes, but they didn't get any bigger than what doc brown top the tab and it's not until they reach maturity at 5 years old,
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but they get that amazing pale blown bright yellow beep and not beaming white tail malls success story and bringing these beds back from extinction shows the change can happen when individuals and communities come together. but even today, conservation conflicts remains a hot topic. one of the reasons why it to the was became extinct just because of the cause. the conflict with livestock and there's no denying that it goes, i printed 3 birds, golden eagle, and wanted eagles again to take some lambs, achia. but what's going to fall now is, is the exaggeration and the claims of losses, which go way beyond reality. that equals why teddy, those in particular have now just become the number one thing plane might have eagles big scavengers. so they will come in and take something off the other
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predators and stopped in the process. and if they see something like that going on, show it out, they'll come in and intervene and take the land. it might already be dead, it might be very dead. but either way, just it's the eagle look at scene and get flamed, that just an easy target is human kind and predators, you know, we, we tolerate them up to a point. but as soon as they interact in any way with what we want to do, we want rid of them. and that's the sort of challenge which we face. and you understand it from the farm is in, across those point of view because the animals of their livelihood of the lead time students find ways through that to find ways of accommodating these buzz back in outlines normally. so ways that is you know, that they respond to things like diversity feeding you and you have to put out some
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alternative suits. so slow them if they happen to be mixed in their learning thought like 3 or 4 fish a day. and they will take that and leave everything else, a lot of what is happening more and more now is actually a change in the landscape of new changes in the way land is manage. people are wanting to do more about the logical restoration. and that's their main focus. it's not about the stalking gas shooting and sheets on the welcome. white tow deals like once a month. so there's a definite new era approaching the despite misconceptions. white towed eagles shining, pushing phone, keeping other predators of pay, maintaining balance within the food chain. and for an isolated island community, like most of these magnificent birds,
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who so generate surprising economic benefit bringing in as much as $5000000.00 pounds a year. as a result of white tailed eco tourism but i think in addition to the economic benefit, which is great and we need it, it is also just that was a mental health and wellbeing. the thing that they provide for people they give back bucket loads to the mountain. people are now coming to watson to, to season people up for the tiers. and sometimes when they see an eagle in its natural habitat soaring in the sky. and that has as much was in my view as any pounds and then economic study david has never forgotten his fasting counter. plus staying among the 1980s.
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i'd see my associated on a holiday here to so this mass it the something across the last in melbourne for the prize speech to the whole let down commit the sort up and over the ridge. and that was the trigger for me. there was no going back to david and he began a lifelong career walk into the world societies of the protection of fat. finally, becoming the mel protection officer in 2003 job. he's still family committed to today. one of the things that gives me most pleasure at the moment is the fact that we're now able to do for england, but no way did for us back in the seventy's. you know, nobody had a thriving population bought to the goes, and they donated a couple of 100 birds over the 3 releases. now because i wasn't doing so well, we're helping projects who are releasing want to the eagles on the on of white. so now there are numbers of white vehicles already soaring over the south and west
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coast of india meal. so surprised for me that knowledge is able to be part of that project. increasing a we need to make room in our lives for these animals that right? so you should be here, you know, we, we were the ones that got rid of them for no good reason. at the end of the day, it's what most people want in their lives. they want a rich, a buyer that's us countryside, the still get a huge kick out of watching these goods and i, i do it. so how's a, we know it's part of the job. i need to know where they are and what they're doing and then secure thought. i would also just do it because i love doing it the i came
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having the right good friend back in the eighty's. he's now passed away. but that's my connection to him. you know, i think that it all the time when i bought my girlfriend here, now my wife, you know, she loved mile and the eagles were part of that connection. my daughter's life growing up on mount eagles upon it, allied side of the whole connection speed went to davis. my life has been expectedly intertwined, and con, separate it sorry. yeah. the and then the,
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and sometimes we can look to native a help in more ways than one might imagine the around the world news is extreme tombs and becoming commonplace. and its labeled temperatures continued to rise. as much as 51 percent of the world's population could be at risk from severe flooding. but one avenue may be able to help be raising visa. these semi aquatic novels could play a significant role in person's nature, recovery and make the countryside more resilient to the impacts of climate change beavers and not to engineers. by filing trees and building dams, they can improve the quality of rivers. slowing down,
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cleaning and storing water. and these newly formed river habitats attracted diverse abundance of wild life. once native because the whole of the you, k fevers were hunted to extinction 400 years ago. for the meat, for st guns. but successful attempts to bring them back in the wild have led to the fest up in beaver the introduction program in plymouth. lead and supported by progressive thinking council. the 6 hex every waltney enclosure, sat in an ancient with the natures of surrounded by local housing states. when you're inside the enclosure, it doesn't fill out your entire toilet feels pretty wild. it's basically a large community. nature is of why with a wildlife can link up trying to create
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a more diverse of the top and for the locals and just nature in general. a j best way again watching a pool from 5 years ago and became inspired to bring beaver's back to the area. after watching a film about re welding. i think we're at a point now as well, obviously to place it in this country compared to a lot of countries that i think we still have to do is to try and bring a lot of that back to wherever possible and practical about 3 years ago. we still applies together and so could we really speak with a logistics a was very difficult, i think for most of the passions side of things we'll we're ready how the heads in the right place. and we're already king trying to achieve that. the of to many consultations that passion and dedication page on november
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2020 alone male visa was introduced into, especially posing sasha, the fast to inhabit the valley. in over 400 years. a few months may said he was joined by a female when she was 1st released, she lived separately aside from the mail for the good 2 or 3 weeks and then someone sold them swimming together on the pond. i'm not going to realize that they pads and they were living in the same thorough cheese. definitely the more dominant and in control. and he sort of just hooks up with what she wants to do and she will not sticks off in as she brought down the tray, she felt the majority of the dogs. so she saw of the ring leader and he's just lots, all those around everywhere. you're raising fevers can way up to 38 kilograms and
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a substantially larger than batches. well they're, they will clumsy, forge for food on land. they have a water proof flare that eyes nevada like tao for swimming, which makes them better suited to life. and they will say there's a common misconception that they really fish, but they don't eat fish that completely. i've ever us they basically will strip the bulk of a tree analysis, i think old account being by evans and 8, which is basically really sugary strip that goes all the way through the woods. and then that also a large amount of vegetation. so that late brambles, that late funds in bracket and you know, everything that you might find that will, that will feed on it piece is half
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a life. and the recent arrivals attract to the loss of interest from both young and old, within the community. and there is no doubts about joe's feeling towards these animals, which is an tim, the nickname of these, a man off of that, just to be honest, he may never sent them a lot of i just, i just really and i think that it's amazing to see an animal that can just basically do what you want to do for conservation in its own time, and it can completely shape an environment. you know, you can change the whole rid of the system. you can change the whole area or trees just from one animal that's taking channels and building dams and things that yeah, i think they're great and i think they should be protected and encouraged to spreads in control twice the, the main reservation i saw was the welfare of the beavers i think people worried that you know, you might get
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a few people coming down and breaking in and doing things that they shouldn't be there. and so it's something that we took on boards. that's why i've got the cameras out keeping an eye on it. we've got the right going to be the patrols thief is a large, the not tunnel. which means the camera traps that those that can observe the nighttime activities as well as monitoring the welfare around the clock for a time to just follow where that feet and signs also if it's something interested in a new a new tree, they started no rain or obviously when they started building the down and when is be the stakes that turn up in a new location and i'll try them to somebody about getting on kind of a lot of good for is that i got, luckily, was just for yourself. thinking knocking beaver and trying to anticipate why they've got the joke, can already see a difference in the landscape of to only a few months of the spring away with the baby is one of the main names west to
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potentially show that flooding can be reduced from that behaviors, if you imagine you're going to move to costs, that actually is the same all the way through in all cases and 600 meters of the same topography of water. and then they've now put them in front of it. you now have a really fast area of water comes and it slows right down. when you stand back and look at both channels, you can see it and notice the difference between the channel and they have affected in the channel that have you effective as the beam is installed, more times than slight was having the channel flat. the boat can be sold should show it in a big storm event that those big dams should bounce all or to reduce the amount that flows through the side and downstream. yet sometimes the johnny to a while the plan it can take longer than expected. and then a crew twist of fate. a story took a very different time when
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a severe storm hip assessing the torrential rain cause substantial damage to the enclosure. and those fevers escape the the males sort refuge nearby. sadly, the female died of the if these architects have been here justin as longer with more time to build them and slow the flow for to and the outcome could have been sorry. different jo and the team remain committed to the project and a rebuilding the fences with a new strong good design the say i hoping to welcome deepest back again in the near future the what's the facing that
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can see it would be for the the visit proved from other or thirty's, which would follow seat in areas at risk of floating around the weld of the restoring nature back to its original state. is that some sort of as a land based concept? yes, it's the oceans in which to life when asked depend the, the, you can islands comprise of a 6000 islands and the war to surrounding these coastal communities for many ways. and i don't i the hudson is a reset scientists and the roots is around the west coast of scotland and have
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passed the state of the hebrides is basically one of the most amazing places that we have not only in the u. k, but in europe is huge. they seem to be by the best place. and the reason is, so by this is because of the topography. so around and you get lots and lots of frantic channels right next, very shallow areas. the comfortable said is extremely nature rich, and so when that comes up to the surface and certain areas around the world that's causing the trains of falling. so that brings these looking nutrients back up to the surface and the ox, almost like kind of like a centralize it does. and on cultural land around to see if the opportunities to change the passing of life. and it's just
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a really, really special thing. the feasible is of which in z plankton derived from the greek meaning wondering animals . this type of clinton changed anything from microscopic organisms to largest species like jelly, fish. this pretty much plankton sets up a magical sequence of events, attracting other creatures to come and feed to get fish like micro hiring sprout some deals. some deals are ok. see the lifeline if the hebrides, if you like, there really fast, which makes and that brings all the see birds of a cetaceans of the whales and dolphins and then the also brings the species i went close, closely with the the asking. so the reaching is of 40 feet and then it is the 2nd
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largest show can the ocean and they migrate to the shows every year. making this area, one of the world's biggest spots, the feeding on the duplex, and they sell top to 2000 tons of sea water, an hour 3 that goes out seem like a giant says the these 12 creatures crew slowly along the ocean surface, which has in the past, made them an easy target for hunting. that pretty easy to find that right at the surface, the very slow moving. and so it's very, very easy to use to helping screenshot. it's liver, it contains an oil field, squalling oil. back in the day that used to be used as an energy source oil longer
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specifically. thankfully the hunting of the shocks was bound to the u. k. in the 19 ninety's, iowa thinks that the current population is still recovering from that exploitation . and so the shocks a likely very, very long lived, so it takes them a long time to grow, to reach their actual locks in size. spending a small percentage of that time the surface means that we still know very little about these elusive animals. much of value framing the depths remains a mystery. even to those who study these magnificent giants of the sea, we know that the vast can shop comes back to walters every summer. we know they come back up to the surface to feed on the points and then we know that they go back date and you know,
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they combine great poses and kilometers and they can go thousands of need to speak as well. we don't exactly know what it is that they're doing down now. we've never signs for the nice thing. no one's actually ever seen since i've given birth in the wilds. i'm only just starting to scratch the surface of what the boston talks. life is outside of the time that it comes back to us as well as to feed. the understanding that breeding habits to migrate to repass ins could be key to protecting them from the invisible dangers of climate change. for me, sees to please which speech sources and pollution are affecting the delicate balance of all marine ecosystems shocks are keystone species, which basically means they played a super important role in the ecosystem. the marine ecosystem is basically assignment oil machine. so all of the cogs have to be turning for the next part of
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the machine to work. and so when you see the boston shocks and you see, you know, large populations of in laws obligations that means that this is that it symbolizes the housing assistance. if the shocks on the it may be, signifies that something is going wrong with the rest of the machine this season. so we're worrying an unexpected change throughout the see if everybody's debowski shocks that normally return year on year. almost nowhere to be seen. there is no definitive explanation as to why this has happened, but it's a pointing reminder of how fragile these habitats trulia as i led over it, given up height, she and a team got lucky. on the late tool this afternoon, they caught sight of abbas ski shock and had one of the few encounters in the
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being next to an animal of that size is probably one of the most humbling experiences that you can possibly have. so it makes you feel quite swollen because it was kind of takes you out with yourself or the they are very, very focused on where the status so she lying nicely still and flat and quiet the surface st. valley new way through that. and so it's almost like open the door into it and thinking well, and you're just the very 1st of all, the not only is a window into a world that you know, usually why not pause. but it's also kind of like
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a door and theory and just saying these, these animals that have been successful for such a long time waiting long and then humans have and just kind of being and, and so it's presence is just so special. the, it's almost mind blowing to think about the impacts that we can have. we have such a huge influence on the natural world itself. you know, i've seen on the planet for almost 3 decades now. in my life time, we've seen an almost 71 percent decrease and the number of shocks across the world the majority of that is down to over expectation from fishing. we are taking these ottomans iras news go system, and we offers and that decline. so the majority of oceanic shock species are
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threatened by extinction positives today of the iowa having lived all her life by the sea, diving beneath the waves has opened her eyes to this hidden weld from me. so many magical experience. and it's also kind of where i feel most myself, the, when you're under the waves, as a kind of don't really get tell us to think about what else would have been kind of what's around you. the search and really, really mindful expo. busy the you don't have emails coming in the background, you don't have a show in your back pocket when you just kind of switch off from all of that life on lines and just become completely messed in this other world.
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the i've got to some of the hardest times in my life by being in the ocean in the regular basis. it's so important to me the, you know, there's a reason why people have been through to. busy that or being very difficult times auction, you know, see, comfortable saying for kind of physical and mental i'll sees, are so worst protect them because we have habitats here that you don't find anywhere
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else in the world. we have habitats here, the huge comp and stores the count for us. and so you know that not just be to full, but not just in this re grounds for juvenile fish. they're actually also stone defenses and they're also natural comp installs. these are all things that can benefit us, as well as you know, just 7 and function within, within the marine. the, as a lots protects and a lot that needs to be done. but we can stop by just showing people how, how much there is and, and you know, what we, we actually started to start to lease the, or you can logical restoration of on natural well, it's a complex subject. has to be there to the future and
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restore what has been lost. we must continue to recognize the livelihood shad consent, facing communities, both here and around the world. yet when we can find ways of working together, the outcome can also be as surprising as it is rewarding. the ground breaking project policy island england is living proof of how urban environments and the natural weld contrives together in 2008 fundings across route project, excavated over 8000000 tons of us to make way for its new, underground valet deep beneath the capital. lacking in partnership with the royal society for the protection of buds,
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3000000 tons of the excavated a was relocated to help create an expensive coast to wetland the most innovative project of this type in northern europe. by raising the land above sea level, they created a new into title area, salt marsh islands and much slots. covering 115, hacked us as well as a network of creeks, say line lagoons and large areas of grazing marshland. which is managed by c 4 legged with rising sea levels threatening the case case 9. these specialized areas, not any provide slots protection that they have created, which fire diverse habitats benefits in those to wild life. and the local community . the policy island
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is now home again to knowledge populations of native migrate to reboot and has become a conservation area. internationally, complaints in the goals and tons located in great numbers. as to over wintering, wages and wild filed in the summer months. nesting bows like the opposite. once on the brink of extinction in the u. k . now the rise in this protected haven, the kind of a ton, is one of the most successful conservation storms in recent years. with a distinctive up 10 feet of a 6 feet by sweeping the bills from side to side. that's
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most just like these know any support marriott, wildlife. they also provide 1000000000 pounds worth of cost to flood defense is around the u. k. the, the success of this project seems that we can find solutions beneficial to both industrial on natural environments. the, sometimes we just need to think in new refreshing the project. so 9800000000 miles to feed by 2050 the challenge of meeting those needs plus presenting on natural, well, hasn't, hasn't been great to find some people that finding solutions to close. the james folk staves grew up
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on an arbor fund in 9, no shops here. the desire to investigate sustainable reduction, met him to return to his funding rates. but this time it was at quick culture. so when people asked me what i do, i usually say like pricing cymbalta when a local muscle phone came up to san including, james found himself with the cussing edge of sustainable foaming people talk about sustained, but it seems a bit of a kind of password. and, and kind of trying to get behind what, what the sustainable, main, and for me it's, how do you produce this protein that we will need, have a from that you can increase the size of it, you know, kind of, let's scale it so that you can produce more more, but without having a negative effect on the environment. the
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and all the input u, v. w story. now on to the, the best has dw news life from breland precedence that landscapes the keels, premises of weapons and supports the g 7 summit stain jeep upon the compasses innovation of the train to the bombing of hiroshima in world war 2. all the enemies using non nuclear weapons, the ruins of how, what cities which have been bent.
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