The Pantanal: The Land of Giant Animals | How Nature Works | BBC Earth

The Pantanal: The Land of Giant Animals | How Nature Works | BBC Earth
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The Pantanal is the world’s largest tropical wetland. It is also home to some of the largest animals in the world. The largest cat in the Americas – the elusive Pantanal Jaguar, the biggest snake in the world – the green anaconda and the largest rodent – the capybara.

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Taken from ‘How Nature Works’ (2012).

Secrets of Our Living Planet showcases the incredible ecosystems that make life on Earth possible. Using intricately shot natural footage, Chris Packham reveals the hidden wonder of the creatures that we share the planet with, and the intricate, clever and bizarre connections between the species, without which life just could not survive. From the rainforests of Brazil, through the fertile plains of Kenya and out into the wintry wilds of North America, Packham shows us the natural world like it has never been seen before.

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30 Comments

  1. 4:08 "Land of the giants"? That's deceptive. The jaguar is much smaller than African or Asian cats. The largest herbivore is a rodent. The caiman are significantly smaller on average than crocodiles or alligators. So putting that odd punchline in the narration over that Louisiana guitar sounds more like a sales pitch than reality.

  2. I have watched loads of these BBC Wildlife programs and have found the the Narrator gets drowned out by the loud music and they have a habit of giving the job to posh powder puff voiced guys who are more suitable for reading kids stories.

  3. Well, the title is jus misleading, nobody wants to see a large rodent when you say "wanna see a giant animal?". With that type of music, you better show me a dragon or at the very least a live mammoth

  4. I’ve traveled to Africa, Europe, Asia, Australia, México, India, Middle East, and many other countries. *But the only other destination I want to experience is ride down the Amazon River (Pantaneal) during the rain season NOT WITH PROPELLERS but strictly WATER JETS because they can travel down extremely SHALLOW WATERS like the AMAZON RIVER. ONLY BECAUSE I WANT A DESTINATION OF SOLITUDE, so I can actually EXPERIENCE and ENJOY THE SURROUNDINGS without the immature nonsense.

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