
Wild Ones
Who is the cutest in the animal kingdom? Is it the clown fish, one part of a dazzling array of marine life?

Who is the cutest in the animal kingdom? Is it the clown fish, one part of a dazzling array of marine life?

Who is more dangerous between the sinister cold-blooded crocodile, the venomous snake, and the kingly lion?

The explosive sprinting cheetah and the bearded wildebeest battle for the title of the fastest animal.

The strength of the mighty grizzly bear versus the tiny, yet powerful, ant. Who is the strongest of them all?

See how their cold-blooded metabolisms have let reptiles cover the globe for hundreds of millions of years.

Even the sky isn't safe. See how predator and prey react to each other in the evolutionary, aerial arms race.

Nothing beats speed when it comes to survival in the wild. Learn how some animals are literally born to run.

Explore how animals win the Race of Life from the point of view of food, territory, social status, and mates.

Somehow, some of the world's largest creatures prosper on the African Savannah with a strict vegetarian diet.

Learn the ways animals have adapted to survive (and thrive!) in the harsh climates of the world's deserts.

No one runs the Race of Life faster than the big cats, winners in the contest for survival in the wild.

Anchorage is home to over 2,000 moose! These notorious animals are running riot on highways and in yards.

In spring, one animal arrives by the thousands – salmon, traveling 3,500 miles through rivers and streams.

Anchorage has a large porcupine population, twice the species' average size, living in its parks and gardens.

Anchorage has a unique resident: nature's lumberjack, the beaver. But now they live in the urban jungle.

Anchorage is home to hundreds of black bears. They have mastered life in this urban jungle.

Experiencing nature stimulates unexpected biological and psychological resources, heightening your well-being.

When an elephant dies, animals converge to feast on the carcass, which then becomes home to other species.

The Cape of Storms marks where Atlantic and Indian oceans meet off Africa, shaping land, life, and climate.

Sápmi becomes coastal along Norway, where it splinters off into thousands of islets.