
What a Colourful World
A global journey to discover the colourful creatures that make our world wonderfully diverse.

A global journey to discover the colourful creatures that make our world wonderfully diverse.

Wales, with its peaks, forests, and shores, may be small but rivals the wild wealth of any land.

What has happened to evolution? The answer is very simple: us.

Tarahumara and Woodabe: isolated lives, autonomous families, and nomadic traditions endure unchanged.

Brazil's coast offers more than Copacabana: whales, dolphins, octopuses, and deadly snakes make it diverse.

Otters thrive in the dry season but must let the caiman take over when it becomes a vast glittering swamp.

Brazil's secret lies in its vast grasslands, shaped by summer storms and fire, and its least known habitat.

An enigmatic forest, home to South America's largest monkey and birds learning dances over 10 years.

Watch how animals move differently, exploring nature's ways to keep creatures alive and in motion.

Tremendously tall – or ridiculously small: nature never ceases to surprise.

This is the story of Tosca, a long-haired, primeval-looking brown hyena.

The oceans act as a driving force for local weather phenomena and global climate change.

Viewed from space, our blue planet seems so familiar that we forget how extraordinary it is.

At first sight, our atmosphere seems empty. But this mantle of air is a habitat for life in its own right.

Too many legs? Feathers? Tentacles as arms? Behold, there's more to nature's greatest than fluffy cuteness!

Not even the big bad wolf can touch the dingo when it comes to being feared and hated.

A young volunteer learns how to feed a Nile crocodile without being devoured herself.

Blacky the wild dog takes a battering from his pack which makes him try to escape on every occasion.

Frikkie shows tourists feeding cheetahs, all rescued after being shot, injured, or kept as pets.

A lion has escaped! A tame warthog was having an afternoon nap nearby and pays with its life.