Join intrepid explorers as they journey deep into the Amazon, uncovering its breathtakingly diverse ecosystems and unique species, from elusive pink dolphins to majestic Andean bears. This compelling documentary highlights the urgent environmental challenges facing this vital freshwater resource, while also showcasing inspiring solutions for its conservation. Discover the beauty and fragility of the Amazon in this essential film.
amazon documentary wildlife ecosystem conservation nature exploration expedition-amazon-2024
#ExpeditionAmazon #AmazonDocumentary #WildlifeFilm #FullMovie
amazon documentary wildlife ecosystem conservation nature exploration expedition-amazon-2024
#ExpeditionAmazon #AmazonDocumentary #WildlifeFilm #FullMovie
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AnimalsTranscript
00:00Transcription by CastingWords
00:30Deep in the Amazon, there's a place where dolphins fly through trees.
00:39I am amazed, but how is possible these animals, these incredible creatures are here in the jungle?
00:46A place where bears live in the clouds.
00:52The Andean bear is like the engineer of the cloud forest.
00:56A place where turtles have guardian angels.
01:03And the trees, they soak up 20 billion tons of water every day to create rivers in the sky.
01:16That water is what connects it all.
01:24We're talking about the largest river of the world.
01:27It's not just water in the river, it's water in the glaciers, in the atmosphere, in the clouds.
01:32But the Amazon is changing in real time.
01:36And there's so much we don't know.
01:38There are a lot of threats here in the Amazon, but still there are some people trying to make the difference.
01:46In an unprecedented two-year expedition, National Geographic is bringing together a passionate group of scientists to follow the water.
01:56As they explore the magnificent ecosystems within, from the tops of the Andes, across 4,000 miles, to the Atlantic Ocean, and beyond.
02:09Science enables us to see into the future.
02:12To ensure that it's still standing for the next generation.
02:16When you think of the Amazon,
02:42these 20,000 foot peaks may not come to mind.
02:46But this is where it all begins.
02:52We actually are in the Amazon Basin.
03:00We're right on the edge, right on the eastern side of the Andes.
03:08This is an important water tower.
03:10The snow and ice that you see here eventually is going to make its way down into the Amazon.
03:18But the glaciers here are disappearing, and we don't know how quickly.
03:23That's what National Geographic explorer Baker Perry is here to find out.
03:32Having lived in the Andes when he was younger, this is a sort of homecoming for Baker.
03:41Just in my lifetime, I've seen tremendous changes happening in the Amazon with ongoing deforestation.
03:51What we're trying to understand is how glaciers are responding.
03:55We have a very, very limited understanding of the weather or climate at the tops of these Andean mountains.
04:06So Baker, Tom, and their team of local guides and experts set out to tackle one of the highest peaks in the Amazon Basin.
04:16These enormous places store water for communities downstream.
04:21As the climate is warming, that kind of reliable source of fresh water is in danger.
04:26That water is intricately tied to the water cycling through all of Amazonia.
04:33The water molecules that fall as snow on the Andean peaks are coming from evaporation from those mighty trees in the Amazon.
04:40Flowing up through the trees, it releases into the atmosphere.
04:50Then it's going to condense out, form a cloud.
04:55And that cloud is going to be moved by the winds into the Andes, where it's going to eventually fall as snow.
05:05When one part is altered, the entire system reacts.
05:12If you cut down trees in the rainforest, the amount of snowfall that occurs here drops.
05:19A weather station will provide insight into how much these glaciers are shrinking.
05:26But first, they need to get there.
05:30Dasungate is not an easy mountain.
05:32It's a huge effort to get weather equipment up to these elevations.
05:36That's why it hasn't really been done before.
05:38Good luck.
05:41The physical challenges on these expeditions are real.
05:46The hardest part of climbing is the lack of oxygen.
05:49We have one little section to go up here, and then another fixed line going up there.
06:17If they succeed, the data from atop Ausungate will be invaluable to the millions of people who depend on it.
06:30In the last 10 years, water is decreasing every year.
06:35Every year is less, less, less than water.
06:37For a Quechuan biologist, Ruth Meripilco Arkaya, this loss is personal.
06:45She grew up in the High Andes, where the glacier has always protected the people.
06:52The glacier is a key part of our culture.
06:58As a child, her grandmother would tell stories about a mythical bear.
07:02This character called the ukuku, like it's the semi-god between a bear and a human,
07:09that's go to the Ausungate to carry a block of ice to the communities.
07:13As I say, they are going to have more water.
07:15The ukuku story has played out for centuries in the Coyoriti Festival.
07:21My grandmother used to tell me that the ice was very nearby.
07:27But now, with climate change, the snow is far away.
07:32We are not able to bring this ice cube anymore.
07:38Ukukus are more than a myth.
07:40Ukuku mean and they are very Quechuan, yeah.
07:42For Ruth, the real thing is just as mysterious.
07:49We are trying to understand the secret life of the Andean bear.
07:54A creature we know little about.
08:01Except that it's vital for forests and the clouds.
08:05That's it below Ausungate.
08:06Glaciers may be the water tower for the Amazon Basin.
08:28But Andean cloud forests are the rain machine.
08:32They act like a sponge, soaking up moisture and releasing it downstream.
08:45I always like to climb trees.
08:49It's a different perspective being in the canopy.
08:52It's a different world, completely different world.
08:54The forest and bears are threatened and they need each other to thrive.
09:02As voracious plant eaters, bears spread seeds wherever they go.
09:07They are very good tree climbers.
09:10They spend most of their time actually on the trees.
09:13Camera traps will track their movements
09:15to help Ruth understand their effect on the forest.
09:23Let's see what's in the camera trap.
09:26The Andean bears, it's very hard to study.
09:29Especially in this kind of terrain.
09:32In order to get this information, we need to also hide a lot.
09:36It's time to check the cameras.
09:47All 75 of them.
09:51We left this camera trap for the whole year,
09:53but we are doing the monitoring every two months.
09:56Oh my gosh.
10:00While the bears avoid the spotlight,
10:03others aren't so shy.
10:06Do you think it's only a little bear?
10:07Yes.
10:14What do you see?
10:15A puma.
10:17Oh wow, great.
10:21To follow their trail,
10:28Ruth brings along her top tracker.
10:30Cucu!
10:36Yes, yes, yes, yes.
10:37Yes, yes, yes.
10:39Yes, yes, yes.
10:40Yes, yes, yes.
10:45As the bears are moving,
10:46they are helping to disperse many of these tree species.
10:49They eat the seeds and they poop.
10:52Yes, yes, yes.
10:54Yes.
10:54We raise the tree.
10:54Yes, yes, yes.
10:56So this tree has the seed and has the nutrients to grow.
11:00this vaccine is an arΓ‘ndano silvestre and this is one of the fruit favorites of the
11:10the ss that we just found contain fruit from this we have a camera
11:16a 10 meters only esperemos que la cΓ‘mara haya funcionado
11:36oso oso oso
11:40un pequeΓ±o
11:43cuando vemos un oso asΓ estamos todos felices muy alegres
11:57while the cameras reveal bear behavior
12:02to really understand how they move they need to get closer
12:07the first time we caught your first bear i couldn't describe the feeling i have
12:16i don't know like my brother like my uh elder brother no i feel like part of my family
12:22this incredible creature gps callers track their every move
12:27and for the first time a national geographic critter cam goes on walkabout with a bear
12:36named tsunchu we can see from the perspective of the bear how it's moving around
12:45we are following the journey and we're learning a lot
12:53tsunchu and the other 40 plus bears she's identified so far are covering a larger and higher range than expected
13:02you see some clusters this means they spend quite a lot of time in this part of the forest
13:11her findings are extraordinary as the climate warms and the bears move higher they'll bring seeds with them
13:20helping forests regrow at cooler elevations now we are thinking how the bears are going to tell many of these three species to adapt to the new environment
13:29environment
13:32they just may be the key
13:34to ensuring the cloud forest survives
13:39so we can keep the water moving
13:42down the andes
13:44and into the headwaters
13:47where it begins
13:48to transform
13:50into something recognizable
13:56it's not just one river
13:59you have
14:00thousands of small rivers just flowing to the big amazon
14:08making up
14:09twenty percent of the fresh water
14:12for the entire planet
14:16the amazon is the heart of the planet
14:21and all these rivers are the veins of this heart
14:26one magical creature considers the whole river system home
14:40dolphins don't recognize borders
14:43they basically move free on the rivers
14:46so does fernando trujillo
14:52who moved to the colombian amazon to dedicate his life to them
14:56when i just came here it was difficult to find the dolphins because i didn't have a trained eye
15:02and this was full of life but i couldn't see the life
15:07so it took time until i start to understand a little bit the river
15:14after 35 years
15:16fernando's vision is clear
15:20protect the animal keeping the equilibrium of this system
15:24dolphins are the jaguars in the water
15:27they are the top predators
15:28they are able to move in the main rivers lakes flooded forests everywhere
15:34that equilibrium is under constant assault
15:40and pink dolphin populations are decreasing in record numbers
15:46the deforestation is there
15:48there they are burnings there are pollution
15:55and there's drought
15:56and more than 100 boats were found dead in a lake in the amazon in seven days
16:01the amazon site's worst drought on record in 2023
16:15low water levels trap more heat from the sun
16:18spiking temperatures
16:21for the first time we have a kind of phenomenon
16:25where a lot of dolphins were dying very quickly
16:30we lost 70 dolphins in just one day
16:34millions of fish have died
16:43Fernando is working with local teams to conserve these dolphins any way they can
16:49by tagging them they hope to identify feeding and nursing areas and expand protections
16:57and who better than them to show us
17:04go go go go go
17:09go go go go
17:11Now we capture three dolphins, they are inside the big net.
17:36When I'm close to a dolphin, I feel that my heart is full.
18:00I have a purpose in life.
18:03During a capture, veterinarian Maria Jimena Valderrama monitors the dolphins' health.
18:13It's in some way invasive. We are taking out of the water an aquatic animal.
18:27We are taking out of the water an aquatic animal.
18:34We have a cardiac frequency, respiratory frequency.
18:39If I see that the animal is not very altered, I think it's best to liberate the animal.
18:46Because the most important thing for us is the well-being of them.
18:50This is a female, a big one, 2,20 meters.
18:54It's already pregnant.
18:56A dolphin can have one calf every 4,5 years.
19:01And the pregnancy is 13 months.
19:03So in a lifetime, they can have like four or five calves.
19:08So it's very important for these animals to try to conserve.
19:13Any animal comes.
19:15The tagging became a very powerful tool to understand what areas are really important for the conservation of the dolphins.
19:35Fernando's finding that males have large home ranges.
19:58The males move away looking for other groups of females.
20:02But females stay in areas where they always have access to food.
20:11This puts them in direct conflict with humans.
20:15Sometimes the fishermen say,
20:17Look, the dolphins are stealing our fish.
20:20They go to our nets and take the fish from our nets.
20:24These dolphins have learned to associate fishing activities with a free meal.
20:31Marine biologist and photographer Thomas Peschak joins the expedition near the Negro River to get a look at this behavior from the dolphins' perspective.
20:44The direct conflict can end with a dolphin death or it can damage the net from fishermen.
20:53But there's a possible solution.
20:56The pingers are acoustic deflectors.
20:58It's a way to put noise on the nets to avoid the dolphins approaching the nets.
21:05Pingers have worked in the ocean, but they've never been tested in the Amazon.
21:11So we are testing here for the first time with Mariana.
21:14We are working with the community inside the Cajatuba Lake.
21:19And we have two fishermen supporting us doing the pilot tests.
21:23These give us some learning about how dolphins are motivated to catch the fish in the net.
21:29They perceive the sound and back away.
21:36Right after that, they try again.
21:42They persist and got the fish.
21:48The pingers likely didn't work because the dolphins in this lake are used to people.
21:55So testing continues.
21:57I am hopeful because if it works, it's a mutual benefit for conservation and people.
22:04Knowing how they behave, knowing how they steal a fish might actually help better employ these pingers
22:09to deter these dolphins from stealing fish.
22:13As a National Geographic photographer,
22:16Thomas' ultimate goal is to help create the will to protect the Amazon and all its creatures.
22:24We need beautiful pictures underwater to connect the people with the dolphins.
22:33Diving with these dolphins is truly magical.
22:36There are individuals that are incredibly shy.
22:39There are individuals that are bald.
22:42And there are curious ones.
22:45Getting close.
22:46From next level,
22:48Finally,
22:49δ½ζ―
22:50Tenemos
22:51Charles
22:52Γ€g
23:15Every year, during the rainy season,
23:41an incredible phenomenon occurs throughout the Amazon.
23:47The rivers flood into the surrounding forests,
23:53up to 12 miles past the riverbanks, and nearly 50 feet deep.
23:59Everything has evolved to follow that pulse.
24:02It's like a heartbeat.
24:04The forest, the animals, the people that live here,
24:13they're all living to this pulse of flood and dry.
24:19Including the dolphins.
24:23Flexible flippers and unfused vertebrae
24:27give them seemingly magical powers.
24:32They can literally fly between the trees.
24:36That's amazing.
24:39They rely on these trees to feed their fishy prey.
24:44When the forest floods, fish can access fruits and seeds on the branches.
24:50There is always this connection between the systems
24:52that it's very important to maintaining biodiversity and things working as they should.
24:58But for how much longer?
25:03When threats like deforestation and warming temperatures
25:07disrupt the Amazon's ability to create its own rainfall,
25:11the entire system reacts, including the flood pulse.
25:15If you change the availability of water just a little bit,
25:20the ecosystem is not used to that, and it's going to start behaving differently.
25:28How the trees will react is a mystery.
25:31Thiago Silva and his team had to produce flooded forest to solve.
25:35We're here to understand how trees can cope with months and months of flooding,
25:45and how climate change could affect the future of these wetland forests.
25:53We don't know about the physiological properties of these trees.
25:57So we don't know exactly how they will cope.
26:00They work in the dead of night,
26:04collecting samples while the plants are resting.
26:07The idea is to get the fully exposed branches,
26:12so where the sun is illuminating all of these branches during the day.
26:18And then he has to climb very high and to get these very big branches for us to solve.
26:23So it's quite an adventure.
26:26Julia is investigating traits, like vessel size,
26:30telling her how each tree will respond to wetter or drier conditions.
26:41Thiago is using cutting edge technology to map the bigger picture.
26:48What fascinates me about plants is how they run this whole mechanism of maintaining the environment ecosystem.
26:54Well, the animals, most of the time, they're just the actors, right?
27:00Well, the plants, they really set the scene.
27:04Now, for the first time, Thiago's bringing that scene to the rest of the world.
27:10He's using LiDAR to create a 3D 360-degree snapshot.
27:15I like plants equipped with technology.
27:19This is a terrestrial laser scanner.
27:21It will send a beam of lasers in a cone all around this rotating head.
27:30The idea here is to overfly with the drone and get the 3D model from the top of the canopy.
27:35One thing that we expect to be able to do is to have a virtual environment where anyone can go inside the forest.
27:52And then see how the water levels could rise.
27:54And you can almost physically experience what it means to have 10 meters of water flooding a forest.
27:59Tiago and Julia's findings will give a glimpse into the future.
28:08Predicting which trees may not survive and what that means for the creatures who depend on them.
28:19I want to understand enough of the system to be able to prepare for that the best way you can.
28:25And make sure that we don't lose everything that those forests have to offer.
28:30It's not just the animals who rely on these forests, but 40 million people throughout the Amazon.
28:38The vast majority of the population lives just by the river.
28:41They depend on the rivers for transportation.
28:45They depend on this forest for the fish.
28:48They depend on it for the timber itself.
28:51So everybody depends on the Amazon to live.
28:54And the people who live in the middle of it are the key to protecting it.
28:59They depend on the river.
29:00They depend on the river.
29:01They depend on the river.
29:06The river is our sustenance.
29:09But if there were no river if there weren't ever there would be a big part of humanity.
29:16The fight to save this river economy drives another team of explorers deep into the JuruΓ‘,
29:26a tributary of the Amazon, to work alongside local communities.
29:33So, a gente percebe muito essa relaΓ§Γ£o mesmo,
29:36de complementariedade ali daquele sistema,
29:39porque, na verdade, as pessoas nΓ£o estΓ£o ali, elas fazem parte dali.
29:46O objetivo final do nosso projeto
29:51Γ© tentar compreender de que forma a gente consegue alinhar a proteΓ§Γ£o da biodiversidade com o bem-estar das pessoas.
30:00Tudo bem? Tudo certo.
30:04A equipe colaborou com os locais para proteger a tributΓ‘ria gigante
30:08e aumentar os nΓΊmeros de arapaima.
30:13Known locally as Pirarucu.
30:18Both are important for local food security,
30:22but also have high commercial value.
30:25Uma exploraΓ§Γ£o descontrolada desse recurso acabou reduzindo muito as populaΓ§Γ΅es.
30:32For me, Pirarucu Γ© a Amazonian superstar.
30:36It's bigger than me.
30:38It's weight more than me.
30:41It's the largest freshwater-scale fish in the world.
30:44But, by the late 90s, it was nearly fished to extinction.
30:54So, researchers and local fishermen joined forces to create a sustainable fishing plan based on a quota system.
31:02A proteΓ§Γ£o dos ambientes aquΓ‘ticos que vocΓͺ estΓ‘ protegendo no Pirarucu Γ© como vocΓͺ esteja fazendo uma conta bancΓ‘ria.
31:10JoΓ£o e a equipe estΓ£o ajudando a implementar esse plano aqui em JuruΓ‘ por 15 anos.
31:17It's an incredible success story.
31:26The Pirarucu population has increased by 600%.
31:31E, alΓ©m disso, a gente costuma chamar o Pirarucu como o peixe da mudanΓ§a.
31:36Ele tem trazido vΓ‘rias mudanΓ§as sociais e econΓ΄micas para essas comunidades.
31:43Now, they're taking that success one step further.
31:46Using a GPS tag on Pirarucu is a really challenging task because it was never done before.
31:58It was only possible because we worked together with local fishermen.
32:03So, they have this historical knowledge interacting with these species.
32:07If it works, real-time data tracking their range may lead to additional protection and, ultimately, more fish.
32:25If we're going to increase our number of taxes, we're going to have a greater income in each manager of Pirarucu.
32:48Further down the JuruΓ‘ River, JoΓ£o and Andresa join forces with other locals.
32:54In their fight to protect one of the Amazon's iconic species.
32:58Every year, female turtles emerge on the riverbanks to nest.
33:00Every year, female turtles emerge on the riverbanks to nest.
33:01They go into a trance-like state, while they are in a trance-like state, while they are in a trance-like state.
33:06Making everyone, mom included, vulnerable.
33:07They go into a trance-like state, while laying eggs, making everyone, mom included, vulnerable.
33:09Despite their protected status, they are in a trance-like state, while they are in a trance-like state.
33:16They are in a trance-like state, while they are in a trance-like state, while they are in a trance-like state.
33:23Every year, female turtles emerge on the riverbanks to nest.
33:29They go into a trance-like state, while laying eggs, making everyone, mom included, vulnerable.
33:36Despite their protected status, river turtles and their eggs are a delicacy in high demand.
33:44The poachers are relentless, destroying 99% of nests on unguarded beaches.
34:04For nearly 30 years, Bomba and his family live across from the turtle-nesting beach, or tabuleiro, they protect.
34:25We know that if we didn't do this type of monitoring, for our adolescent, that's coming
34:32today, we wouldn't exist anymore.
34:35Bomba was one of the first guards of the beach.
34:42And today, he is a very strong representative of all the protectors of the beach.
34:47What motivates me most to continue is that the father is taking care of.
34:54I'm inspired by him.
34:59They work at night, he's MarrojΓ£o Pedro.
35:04And when it's 6am, sometimes 7am, I'm going to see what came out of the table.
35:14What Chica finds is that their hard work is paying off.
35:19On protected beaches, poaching rates drop to just 2%.
35:26This is the most joy I have.
35:28It's been a lot.
35:30Good morning, Sebooma.
35:31Good morning.
35:32Good morning.
35:33Good morning.
35:34Good morning.
35:35Good morning.
35:36Good morning.
35:37Good morning.
35:38Good morning.
35:39Good morning.
35:40Good morning.
35:41Good morning.
35:42But unlike the fishermen, beach guardians don't profit from what they protect.
35:46To keep the program going, they need help.
35:49Um problema da proteΓ§Γ£o das praias Γ© que ainda nΓ£o Γ© possΓvel ter um bom pagamento pros
35:54protetores de praia.
35:55Their payment is a monthly food basket and only for the monthly work, from nesting to hatching.
36:02Γ uma coisa que se a gente for analisar, nΓ£o dΓ‘ nem pra comprar um calΓ§ado.
36:07Se der, Γ© pra comprar um mantimento de casa.
36:10So they're fully dependent on fundraising.
36:13E um dos objetivos que a gente tem, nΓ³s Γ© justamente fazer uma captaΓ§Γ£o de recursos
36:18que permita que esse programa de proteΓ§Γ£o de praia se estenda eternamente.
36:31Eu tenho certeza, se nΓ³s sair daqui, os invasor vΓ£o acabar com isso aΓ, se nΓ£o colocar outro
36:36monitor.
36:37EntΓ£o, se a gente luta pra isso...
36:46A luta por uma amazΓ΄nia saudΓ‘vel impacta tudo.
36:51A floresta, aqui, sΓ³, troca muito carbono.
36:56Eles ajudam a proteger o planeta inteiro.
36:59Cada floresta, cada Γ‘rvore, tem um papel nisso, porque eles eliminam CO2 da atmosfera.
37:05Γngelo Bernardino, quer saber quanto.
37:09Ele vai para a boca do rio, onde a Γ‘gua que comeΓ§ou nos glaciais,
37:14deslizou para o AtlΓ’ntico.
37:16At a ratea de 84 olympics rain pools, cada segundo.
37:21EntΓ£o, isso deveria ser fantΓ‘stico!
37:23Here, lives a coastal forest unlike anything they've ever seen.
37:29This is a mixed mangrove forest, so it's gonna be really neat to see what's going on in there.
37:41Let's go!
37:43Γngelo is studying the Amazon mangroves for the first time.
37:49I think mangroves here in Brazil are such an iconic place.
37:55They are really important to protect the coast and as a life-supported system.
37:58Most mangroves grow in salt or brackish water.
38:04Not these.
38:06We are right here in the ocean and we are measuring the salinity and the salinity is zero.
38:12It's fresh water.
38:14Forcing these mangroves to adapt.
38:17This might be a very unique forest on the coast of the Amazon.
38:23We've never seen this before.
38:25There it is.
38:31They're taking samples to find out just how much carbon is stored here.
38:37What do you think?
38:38I reckon it's about 400 years worth of sediment, that position here.
38:42Nice.
38:43What's really important, guys, is to twist all the time.
38:48So, hopefully, you get your soil sample out.
38:50Look at that.
38:51That's beautiful.
38:52Nice.
38:53It's got a two-meter core.
38:55But what's incredible is how much carbon we can still see, even at two meters in depth.
39:02And you can even see old leaves that are thousands of years old that have been preserved in the soils.
39:06Amazon rainforests sequester 120 billion tons of carbon.
39:14It turns out these mangroves contain even more.
39:19Amazon mangroves hold three to four times more carbon than the same area in the Amazon upland forest.
39:25You can use this natural function of mangroves in the Amazon river mouth towards mitigation of climate change.
39:35They are sustaining life by just being there, by just being preserved.
39:38The Amazon's global impact doesn't stop here.
39:45And neither does the Amazon.
39:49The plume of fresh water and sediment that pours from the Amazon into the ocean reaches as far as the Caribbean islands.
39:59So, you can actually detect the fresh water of the Amazon as far north as Puerto Rico.
40:09All that fresh water carries an infusion of nutrients, whose impact on the marine ecosystem is yet to be fully understood.
40:18We are now in Tobago in the Eastern Caribbean Sea.
40:22Tom and Angelo team up to see it firsthand.
40:25Are you all ready?
40:29A lot of the marine life that we see here may be directly dependent on the food that is delivered by the Amazon river plume.
40:46And that translates into a completely different marine ecosystem.
40:50Here you have reefs that are dominated by sponges.
40:54Even like blue sponges. I've never seen blue sponges in my life.
40:57The sponge is actually uniquely responsible for taking the riches the Amazon river bestows on the Caribbean and transforming it into compounds that all the other species in the food web can actually access as well.
41:13We are only scratching the surface in terms of understanding the far reaches of the Amazon river plume.
41:22When it comes to the Amazon, one thing is clear. Everything is connected.
41:27From sponges in the Caribbean, all the way back to its icy origin in the Andes.
41:33You good?
41:34Okay, we've powered it up. The battery is charging. It's an awesome job.
41:47This weather station is the highest in Peru and the highest in the tropical Andes.
41:53And ultimately, we'll improve climate projections into the future.
41:58We're in a position that we know that the decisions we take in the next decade or so will determine what the face of the Earth looks like for thousands of years to come.
42:08What we do in the next few years really matters.
42:10So everybody can keep enjoying this beautiful and amazing place that is our home, our planet.
42:17So we're in Bolivia, Brazil, Cambodia, Colombia, Ecuador, India, Nepal and Venezuela. Perfect.
42:35We're in Bolivia, Brazil, Cambodia, Colombia, Ecuador, India, Nepal and Venezuela. Perfect.
42:47One, two, three. River Dolphins!
43:17The response to the conservation of the Amazon, how to use the best resources and natural resources are here with these people in these places.
43:27We're not going to bring them. We're going to build them here.
43:32It's not only about science. It's also about solutions. Also about working with local communities and also about hope.
43:49Speakers.
43:56Feel free of andiness.
43:58Use the word for work.
44:03Take care.
44:06Take care.
44:08Take care.
44:11Take care.
44:14Take care.
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