
Ten Deadliest Sharks
A countdown and a death-defying journey to meet ten of the world's deadliest sharks.

A countdown and a death-defying journey to meet ten of the world's deadliest sharks.

With their bizarre bills, clumsy young pelicans must learn the skills necessary for high-impact plunge-diving.

The Nile Monitor is Africa's largest lizard and most notorious 'raider'.

With a brain-size similar to our own, some say that dolphins share our level of intelligence.

What do you do with an animal that the tourists love, but the farmers will shoot on sight?

Set in the heart of the Peruvian Amazon, this is the story of the world's largest otter.

In the forests of Costa Rica live an extraordinary troop of wild Capuchins.

There's one animal that can match the skill and power of the most well-equipped construction team: the beaver.

On the island of Madagascar, just off the coast of Africa, lives an animal found nowhere else in the world.

Meet the cephalopods: cuttlefish, octopus, and squid, the eight-armed ocean family that's licensed to thrill.

Enter Africa's rising stars, the banded mongooses, poised to topple the meerkats from the top of the charts.

Wildlife on One tries to solve a wildlife whodunit with the victim as the enigmatic three-toed sloth.

Rhinos are among the most threatened animals on earth and black rhinos are on the brink of extinction

It's hard to resist this game of wit against might, as a mother squirrel fends off predators from her pups.

Red piranhas live in dry season rivers. When the Orinoco floods, they escape to indulge in feeding frenzies.

Giraffes grace the African plains with slow motion travel, lofty looks and ludicrously long eyelashes.

With their bizarre bills, clumsy young pelicans must learn the skills necessary for high-impact plunge-diving.

The Nile Monitor is Africa's largest lizard and most notorious 'raider'.

With a brain-size similar to our own, some say that dolphins share our level of intelligence.

What do you do with an animal that the tourists love, but the farmers will shoot on sight?