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Giant armadillos are elusive, nocturnal animals that spend about three-quarters of their lives underground. Despite their secretive nature, they are ecosystem engineers. With their immense strength and specialized digging skills, they excavate massive, deep burroww...
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00:11In the heart of Brazil lives an animal so elusive, few have ever seen it in the wild.
00:21It's an armadillo.
00:24Some kinds of armadillo are no bigger than an orange, but this rare one is the size of
00:29a pig.
00:31This is the giant armadillo.
00:34For the first time, one man is shining a light into their mysterious world.
00:39In some ways giant armadillos can be considered a ghost species.
00:45People do not know that they exist.
00:49Now, at last, their lives are being revealed.
00:54Just to be able to see this right now is just amazing.
00:59Nobody gets to see this.
01:02Oh, there's the baby.
01:04And their most intimate moments shared.
01:09But these animals have been hiding an even bigger secret.
01:13One that could be vital to the survival of much other wildlife around here.
01:19Did you hear that?
01:20There's an animal inside.
01:22This is a six-banded armadillo using the giant armadillo burrows.
01:27These extraordinary animals could well hold the key to saving one of the wildest places
01:33on Earth.
01:37Welcome to Hotel Armadillo.
01:53Brazil's Pantanal is a place unlike any other.
01:58Covering more than 140,000 square kilometers, this is the largest tropical wetland in the world.
02:14Unlike the lands around the Amazon, which are covered by high forest, the Pantanal consists
02:20of vast expanses of flooded grassland.
02:27With only here and there a patch of dry savanna or a stretch of trees.
02:34Prone to intense drought and severe floods, this is a landscape of extremes.
02:44A huge diversity of species live here, including the secretive giant armadillo.
03:07Solitary, nocturnal and extremely rare, it digs huge underground burrows up to six meters deep,
03:16and spends three quarters of its life in them underground.
03:24Until recently, we knew virtually nothing of their lives in the wild.
03:40But Arnaud Debier, the founder of the giant armadillo project, has changed that.
03:47When I started the giant armadillo project, I had already been working and living in the
03:52Pantanal for eight years.
03:54But during those eight years, I had never seen a giant armadillo.
03:59It was a species I really wanted to see.
04:03Even finding signs of giant armadillos is extremely difficult.
04:09But gradually Arnaud started to build up a picture of their hidden world.
04:15We couldn't leave any stone unturned.
04:19And little by little, yes, we did start finding evidence.
04:26And it was so exciting when we got our first picture.
04:29That was an indescribable moment because there it was.
04:35The species we were working so hard to find, we couldn't believe it.
04:40It's so hard to believe that this magnificent giant is living right beside us.
04:49It's right there.
04:52But you don't see it.
04:59It's May, the start of Arnaud's research year.
05:06But this season's expedition could be different.
05:11He has used camera traps before, but they have only given him brief glimpses of an animal
05:16in which he's so interested.
05:19Now Arnaud has newly developed gear that could give him more continuous pictures
05:24from both above and below ground.
05:28The team has found the burrow of a female that they've named Tracy,
05:33in honour of the first giant armadillo researcher, Tracy Carter.
05:48The new camera rig can record pictures by day and by night.
05:55It's switched on by the tiniest movements and the team are hoping that the animals themselves
06:00will trigger recordings that will reveal new things about themselves.
06:22There are good reasons why giant armadillos are so rarely seen.
06:28Their senses of smell and hearing are acute.
06:32And they're exceptionally wary of people and cameras.
06:39The locals still consider that these animals are supernatural beings.
06:45Monsters that come up from deep within the earth.
06:56The cameras are rigged.
06:58But will Tracy appear?
07:12Okay, okay.
07:14Tracy's coming out.
07:18Ah, it's beautiful.
07:28Armadillos are one of the most ancient of living mammals and first appeared some 50 million years ago.
07:41The giant species is still found in many parts of South America.
07:46But there are so few of them that images like these are truly rare.
07:53It's a major achievement for Arno and his team.
08:00So Tracy's investigating her surroundings.
08:04Scent is the key sense for giant armadillos.
08:09So she's sniffing the air around her.
08:28The burrow is her safety net.
08:31So if anything goes wrong, if she smells anything out of place, if she has any concern, she can just
08:43run back.
08:46Just to be able to see this right now is just amazing.
08:53Wow.
08:57Arno's research is starting to suggest something quite unexpected.
09:04He has discovered that the huge holes they dig are quickly taken over by other creatures living in the neighborhood.
09:11So they could be critical to the survival of the whole Pantanal ecosystem.
09:18The giants dig a new burrow about every two days and so provide ready-made hotels for dozens of other
09:25creatures.
09:29And now, as Tracy checks out to spend the night feeding, a whole army of guests are ready to check
09:36in.
09:40The team has now recorded 77 different species visiting Hotel Armadillo.
09:48Small rodents are almost always the first to turn up.
10:01It's not only the quality of the accommodation that attracts the lodgers.
10:06The food is good too, for the newly excavated earth is rich with insects and roots.
10:20Lowland tapirs are too big to get into an armadillo burrow.
10:24But that's not a problem for small anteaters called tamanduas.
10:35They visit them more frequently than any other animal.
10:44Tamanduas spend most of their time up in the trees, but they use giant armadillo burrows as nurseries.
10:50Safe, cool places where they can leave a baby.
10:57For them, a family room in Hotel Armadillo is perfect accommodation.
11:18The giant armadillo project is supported by more than 40 zoos and aquariums worldwide.
11:25But it has its base at the Bayer das Pedras Ranch in the heart of the Pantanal.
11:33Here, Arno's team work out how best to track the armadillos and log the great range of other animals that
11:41make use of the hotels they create.
11:46The project currently has four individual animals under surveillance.
11:59Each has been fitted with a tiny transmitter that allows Arno and the team to find and then track them.
12:08An individual can have a home range of up to 10 square kilometres.
12:16And in a single year, it may excavate more than 150 burrows.
12:24Sometimes, old burrows can produce a surprise.
12:28Did you hear that? There's an animal inside.
12:31It's a six-banded armadillo using the giant armadillo burrow.
12:36That's why we call armadillos ecosystem engineers.
12:39So when we say giant armadillos provide homes for other species, this is it. Look, here he is.
12:46But it's giant armadillos the team are searching for, and soon they pick up a signal from a female they've
12:53named Isabel.
12:55Isabel is really an armadillo that introduced us to the giant armadillo world.
13:01Things that now we take sometimes for granted, of things we know about giant armadillos, we learn from Isabel.
13:12Isabel's offspring, Alex, became the first baby giant armadillo ever studied scientifically.
13:18The team followed his story for almost two years.
13:24Through Alex, we learned a lot about giant armadillo parental care.
13:29So lots of discoveries were made. We had no idea that giant armadillos and the females were such dedicated mothers.
13:36But then, when Alex was still less than two years old, he was killed by a hungry puma.
13:46So we all felt devastated by Alex's loss.
13:50The whole team was very, very sad.
13:54And on a scientific point of view, for the project, there was a huge loss because there was lots of
13:58data we still wanted to collect.
13:59There were still lots of questions we had.
14:04The team are desperately hoping that Isabel will produce another baby so that they can continue their research.
14:14But the battery of Isabel's transmitter is running low.
14:18So the time they have to study her at close hand is running out.
14:24She's been tracked to a fresh burrow.
14:28Once she emerges after dark, she'll be held in a mesh tube.
14:35While an alarm signal alerts the waiting team.
14:46At giant armadillo traces old burrow, it's an hour before dawn.
14:54Deep in the basement suite, the Tamanduas are still in residence.
15:08Upstairs in the lobby, a visitor is passing through.
15:12It's a Brazilian porcupine.
15:14A guest never recorded before, and one that brings the list of different species to 78.
15:21Another indication of the Pantanal's amazing biodiversity.
15:44As dawn breaks, the female Tamandua heads out to feed.
15:50Ants and termites make up more than 90% of their diet.
15:56And an adult needs to consume thousands of them every day.
16:11But while the mother feeds, the baby is vulnerable.
16:18A pair of Tyras have picked up the scent of the youngster.
16:29Baby Tamanduas are sometimes killed by these meet-along relatives of the weasel.
16:38But the Tyras have come to Hotel Armadillo for a different reason.
16:46The open ground and the soft earth makes this an ideal spot for mating.
17:01The Tyras move on, and Mother Tamandua returns.
17:11But the infant seems to have been alarmed by the scent of these predators, and it's behaving aggressively.
17:34Not the warmest of welcome homes.
17:40But the powerful defensive display has shown that the youngster is able to fend for itself, and is now ready
17:47to leave the safety of Hotel Armadillo.
17:59The alarm is sounding.
18:04Isabel is in the trap.
18:18Once dawn breaks, she's transferred to a large box and taken to a clearing.
18:27The giant Armadillo project employs two vets who have developed specialist knowledge of this rare creature.
18:37Camila just applied the anaesthetic, and now we have to wait.
18:45Arno has worked out that a giant Armadillo's gestation period is five months.
18:51But he has no way of telling whether or not Isabel is expecting the baby.
19:01However, he takes the chance to check her general health and collect samples of her hair and blood and other
19:08tissues.
19:13A giant Armadillo can weigh an astonishing 50 kilos.
19:20The armour-plated skin is made of a combination of horn and bone.
19:31Flexible and strong, it makes an adult giant Armadillo almost predator-proof.
19:40So, he's got 12,5 kilos.
19:52They are superbly equipped for digging.
19:57Giant Armadillo front claws can be more than 20 centimeters long.
20:03They give Isabel the ability to rip open termite mounds and excavate burrows in really hard ground.
20:12She is a living bulldozer.
20:20Her back feet are shovel-shaped and so efficient that, big though she is, she can disappear below ground in
20:28less than 20 minutes.
20:33Every single part of a giant Armadillo is fascinating for Arno.
20:39I'm collecting a hair off a giant Armadillo.
20:42They have tiny little hairs between the scales.
20:48So little is known about giant Armadillos that every piece of data is precious.
20:58As the mother of Alex, Isabel helped Arno to discover a great deal about her secret world.
21:07I know you're not supposed to have favourites, but we learned so much with her and spend so much time
21:15with her.
21:17She holds a really special place in my heart.
21:27As the final samples are collected, Isabel starts to recover.
21:37The Armadillos are always released into the same burrows where they were caught.
21:44Because this is an animal we've been monitoring already for a while,
21:47so the transmitter is going to stop working soon, she's losing her batteries.
21:52So we're a little bit sad and a little bit emotional because I think this is the last time we're
21:56going to,
21:56this is probably the last time we see her physically or get a chance to put our hands on her.
22:00So, so it's kind of like saying goodbye to her now.
22:04She's still a little unsteady from the anaesthetic.
22:09But she'll have plenty of time to sleep it off once she's got back underground.
22:34Beautiful.
22:36The team may never see Isabel again.
22:52But with luck, the new camera traps will enable them to monitor her progress in detail.
22:59One day she may even be seen with a new baby, and then the work they started with Alex will
23:05continue.
23:07But that remains a dream for the team, one that sometimes seems almost impossible.
23:17The Pantanal may be rich with wildlife, but this place is also home to people.
23:29The traditional way of cattle ranching here, however, gives wildlife plenty of room to
23:34thrive.
23:40Throughout the seasons, cowboys move the herds around the Pantanal from pasture to pasture.
23:49It's a system that has been used here for over 250 years.
24:00The edges of the pastures are dotted with the termite mounds that are crucial food stores
24:07for the giant armadillos.
24:20Arno is also rigging these with cameras.
24:40The team are hoping that footage they capture will confirm their suspicion that the armadillos
24:46are providing something more than accommodation in their hotels.
24:49could it be that they're also in the restaurant business?
25:03that they're in the restaurant business.
25:24The baby Tamandua is enjoying a more tolerable 24 degrees.
25:29Having been alone now for more than 12 hours, it's very hungry.
25:39It's not the only animal that needs a meal.
26:02On the pasture near the borough, a family party of kawatis are looking for food.
26:10These close relatives of the raccoon are also occasional visitors to Hotel Armadillo.
26:27As the sun reaches its highest point, they head towards the burrow and the shady forest.
26:39They're followed closely by a group of peccaries.
26:50Peccaries often follow kawatis to collect the fruit that the kawatis knock from the trees.
27:03But today, the choicest morsels on offer are the exposed roots and shoots around the borough entrance.
27:12Unfortunately, a 30 kilo peccary can easily create major structural damage to the hotel.
27:24The collapsed roof would be a disaster for any resident.
27:40Once they've gone, the baby Tamandua makes its move.
27:52It's now out on its own.
27:59Hotel Armadillo has vacancies.
28:08Hotel Armadillo has vacancies.
28:08Back at the termite mound, Arno is keen to check the camera trap for visitors.
28:18Bang on cue, at half past seven, the first visitor.
28:22It's a big, male, giant Armadillo.
28:35It's crazy. The strength of these animals is absolutely insane.
28:42Termite bounds are extremely hard.
28:46And the giant Armadillo is one of the few animals able to tear into them like this.
28:53But once it's collected enough termites with its long sticky tongue, it will move on.
29:05Their powerful claws open up big holes in the mound.
29:09Which means other animals can benefit from the efforts of the ecosystem's chief digger.
29:16And here, half an hour after, a giant Antetor comes.
29:28This is fantastic. It's perfect.
29:31It just illustrates how both these two giants of the Pantanal feed on the same resources.
29:56The relationship between giant Antetors and giant Armadillos has become increasingly interesting to the team.
30:08Both animals exploit the same food sources.
30:12So, how do these two giants coexist?
30:23The team are planning to catch and radio-tack an Antetor so that its movements can be plotted alongside that
30:31of the tagged Armadillos.
30:37But first, you need to catch your animal. And that's best done at dusk.
30:44It's getting a little too dark, so we probably have maybe five more minutes of light where we can actually
30:50see what we're doing.
30:51And after that, we have to call it a day.
31:01The light has almost gone, but Vet Danilo has spotted an Antetor in the shadows.
31:35One giant Antetor successfully in the bag.
31:40That's quite a run.
31:54Fitting a radio transmitter on a giant Antetor is every bit as challenging as doing so on an anaesthetised giant
32:02Armadillo.
32:06They have just one hour in which to fit the Antetor with the special collar.
32:13Once on, it will give the team a GPS reading every 20 minutes.
32:23The data will then reveal exactly how this other giant fits into the Armadillo's world.
32:44Perhaps this season, giant Antetor will appear for the first time at Hotel Armadillo.
32:55Just five kilometres away, there's a freshly dug burrow.
33:01Beneath the surface, giant Armadillo Tracy is stirring.
33:17Soon, she'll head off to feed, leaving behind more vacant accommodation available for use by other animals.
33:31A single giant Armadillo creating 15 new hotels every month must have a major effect on the housing market in
33:40the Pantanal and benefit hundreds of other animals.
33:52Tracy will be vacating a pristine luxury establishment with only one previous owner.
34:04But after the damage done by the Peccaries, her older burrow now has something of a budget hotel atmosphere.
34:12But that hasn't reduced its popularity with visitors.
34:17Over the last three days, the guestbook has recorded Aguti,
34:23Lowland Tapir,
34:30Rocket Deer,
34:35Bear-Faced Curacao,
34:39Bear-Faced Curacao,
34:40And the giant's pint-sized cousin, the six-banded Armadillo.
34:51It's now an important hiding place for lizards, snakes.
35:01And they, in turn, attract a specialist hunter.
35:11Red-legged Ceriemers eat reptiles.
35:17And now Hotel Armadillo becomes transformed into Tracy's Diner.
35:32The total number of different species recorded at burrows now stands at 79.
35:45Whether you're a crab-eating fox or an ocelot, Hotel Armadillo has something for everyone.
35:56With such extraordinary numbers of animals relying on the giant Armadillo,
36:01it's not surprising that Arno and his team consider the animal to be an ambassador for biodiversity.
36:11But, astonishingly, many of the local people don't even realise that the animals exist.
36:19So, getting the message out there in the community is a critical part of the giant Armadillo project.
36:27How can you care about a species you don't even know you have?
36:32My kids at school have projects on Arctic mammals, on the African savannah.
36:43Somehow we forget to celebrate the amazing animals and plants in our own backyard.
36:53We're worried about what is going to be left for our children.
36:56And most importantly, will they care?
37:01That's what's really scary.
37:05We need to show them the incredible role this species plays in the ecosystem.
37:16I love seeing the faces of kids when they see their first picture of a giant Armadillo.
37:29We need these kids to grow up and care for biodiversity, for nature.
37:37And the giant Armadillo's future ultimately depends on them caring.
37:53There's intriguing news from the field.
37:58While Arno was visiting the school, project biologist Gabriel has made a remarkable discovery.
38:08A freshly dug Armadillo burrow with the entrance firmly earthed up.
38:17It was close to the spot where the team released Isabel, the female who lost her baby Alex.
38:27Hotel Armadillo would only close like this for one sort of guest.
38:33The baby giant Armadillo.
38:42Gabriel was able to set up cameras, but frustratingly he had to leave the area before he could check the
38:48images.
38:50Seeing Isabel with another baby is very important to the project.
38:54I want to pick up where we left off with Alex.
38:58There's so many questions we still have.
39:02Arno and the team are back in their Pantanal headquarters within 24 hours.
39:08We just arrived last night and we're going to go straight to Isabel's territory.
39:15And it's almost too good to be true.
39:16It's hard to believe, so I want to see it with my own eyes.
39:45The burrow is quickly located.
39:49And the recording played back.
39:53It is definitely Isabel.
39:58But where's the baby?
40:02Okay, then at night at 6pm she leaves on the 31st.
40:06And nothing has come into the burrow.
40:07Nothing has happened.
40:102nd of September.
40:13This is where it should happen now.
40:14She opens the burrow.
40:22We could not see any image of a baby.
40:26We both checked together.
40:27Daniel and I, we looked at the camera several times.
40:34The images showed nothing.
40:39There was no baby giant armadillo.
40:43Even more frustratingly, she's moved to a new burrow.
40:49And with her transmitter now completely dead, it's not possible to follow her by radio.
40:56I think one of the biggest challenges to this project is the species itself.
41:02Giant armadillos occur at such low densities and are so hard to find.
41:10The secret, I think, is persistence.
41:14Never giving up and being in this for the long run.
41:21It may be a lean period for Arno and the team.
41:25But back at Hotel Armadillo, business is booming by day and night.
41:32Since the team first located Tracy in May, she's excavated more than 50 new burrows.
41:50Recent visitors caught on camera include crab-eating fox, ocelot,
41:57and exactly what the team were hoping for.
42:01A giant anteater.
42:05That brings the total guest list to 80 species.
42:19Baby giant anteaters are now appearing in the Pantanal,
42:23each clinging tightly to its mother's back.
42:33They're relatively easy to see, making the search for the baby giant armadillo even more frustrating.
42:45The team have traveled almost 100 kilometers in the last few days.
42:53But they didn't find a telltale closed burrow.
42:59And even more worryingly, part of Isabelle's territory is in flames.
43:16Fire is a natural part of life in the Pantanal.
43:21It's used by the ranchers to encourage new growth when the rains arrive.
43:27But with the growing intensity of ranching, the frequency of fires has increased.
43:38And they may now burn out of control, destroying giant armadillo habitat.
43:46And therefore undermining the part the species plays in maintaining the wonderful diversity of this place.
44:00At a local level, and sometimes international level, it really feels like biodiversity does not stand a chance.
44:11And we see this with our own eyes all around us.
44:19The changes, impacts and cascading effects of our actions are becoming bigger and bigger.
44:33And seeing these vast expanses of cash crops.
44:40Where you cannot even hear a single bird sing.
44:47When you see the number of animals killed on our roads.
44:52You sometimes feel like a fool for thinking you're going to make a difference.
44:59You feel powerless.
45:02It feels impossible.
45:07I think what keeps us going, is that we love what we do.
45:14I love the life I lead.
45:16I love what I do.
45:22We love the life I love.
45:23Sheer persistence has led Arno to a burrow deep in the forest.
45:38Magical method
46:05This is it, this is it, this is what we're looking for.
46:15The burrow entrance is firmly earthed up, it must be Isabel.
46:25This is definitely the burrow with the baby.
46:28What's typical of it is this sand that's on top of the burrow.
46:30And that's because she closes the burrow, something she never does unless she's protecting her baby.
46:35So she left to go forage and she leaves the baby in here.
46:40Now it should be a simple case of setting up the remote cameras around the sealed burrow to capture pictures
46:47of Isabel's return.
46:50But they'll have to wait until dawn to see the results.
46:57Now it's the other way!
47:10Now it's the time.
47:14Now it's time to see the burrow.
47:16Now it's time to get an old burrow, and we're at the back of the back of the bus.
47:28Yeah, so we're very curious to see.
47:29We just saw footprints of Isabel going to the burrow.
47:34So we believe that she's inside, and let's just make sure that she hasn't taken the baby
47:39out.
47:40So we're going to go check it out.
48:03Here she's coming out.
48:50She carefully builds a ramp.
48:54If there was a baby, this is what would happen here.
49:02No, I don't have the baby.
49:10Oh, there's the baby.
49:11I have the baby.
49:13Yeah.
49:39Oh, this is amazing.
49:45Wow.
49:46Yeah, I'm sorry.
50:35Yeah, she's leaving, she's taking the baby out, she's coming out right here, they sell
50:39through their tracks.
51:01The team's discovery of Isabelle's baby confirms that giant armadillos only produce a single
51:08infant once every three years.
51:11So each new birth is even more precious than anyone realised.
51:17Not just for giant armadillos, but for the whole ecosystem.
51:28The more Arno and his team discover about this extraordinary creature, the better they will
51:33be able to protect it, and the more homeless there will be for all the other creatures
51:38that habitually live in the accommodation that the armadillos create.
51:44And the team's commitment to doing just that remains unwavering.
51:50The battle to save the giant armadillo is the battle to save by diversity.
51:57It's all the same, it's all together.
52:03We have a pact with giant armadillos and we are in this for the long run and really feel
52:12that we can make a difference.
52:15I don't think you could ask for much more than that.
52:35For Hotel Armadillo's camera assistant, Fergus Gill, filming in the Pantanal was a completely
52:42new experience.
52:43It's really a world away from anywhere else that I've ever been.
52:48It's almost like something from Jurassic Park.
52:52Nearly got you!
52:53He joined director cameraman Justin Purfoy and wildlife cameraman Lindsay McRae to film
52:59the elusive giant armadillo and the animals that visit their burrows.
53:04Well, as soon as we put our camera traps in, of course, we're going to see some of these
53:07amazing creatures visiting daily.
53:13Quite quickly we realised the reality was not so straight forward.
53:29Our entire first trip, we didn't get anything other than rats on our camera traps.
53:36We'd set up camera traps and the cameras would fall over.
53:41We'd set up cameras and be knocked over by animals.
53:51Really, everything we tried came up short.
53:55I mean, that's great.
53:56I wonder if we can get it even further down.
53:59Well, that's just, yeah, you might have longer arms than me, but that's as far as I can reach.
54:03I've got a tiny wee short arms, like a T-Rex.
54:16Oh, it's so bright.
54:18More?
54:23And once again?
54:25Rats.
54:27It could only be rats.
54:30Oh, no.
54:33If it was easy, people would have done it by now.
54:38And there was worse to come.
54:43We were flying our drone down at the wetland one morning and it was going fine.
54:48We were getting some really nice shots, actually.
54:49Probably our best aerials so far.
54:52And then all of a sudden we noticed the drone started dropping a little bit.
54:59It crashed into the water and it's tried to recover itself.
55:09We were watching it slowly sink into the floodplain.
55:18We rushed out and we got in a boat and we tried to find it as best we could, but
55:22it was a needle in a haystack.
55:29There were caiman at times just tens of feet away.
55:37Not only them, but there's the animals you can't see.
55:39They're piranhas.
55:40They're stingrays.
55:40So you really had to be careful where to place your feet.
55:43I don't want to step on the pavement.
55:47And then suddenly, Arna said he felt something.
55:58By that point, it must have been in the water for five hours.
56:02We took it back and we dried it out and the footage was there.
56:09Back at Hotel Armadillo, the proprietor and the guests finally started to arrive.
56:40So we've been camera trapping an individual called Tracy for a number of days.
56:44And she seemed like quite a good armadillo to try and take another step with.
56:49And we really just threw everything at hoping to film a giant armadillo in colour.
56:54Something that no one has ever been able to do before.
56:58We took a gamble.
57:00We set up a lighting rig outside a burrow that we knew Tracy was in.
57:08We put Lindsay as close as we dared let him go to the burrow.
57:14So really what we want to get is probably for the first time ever a giant armadillo on camera with
57:21a cameraman there operating it.
57:27And we had no idea what was going to happen.
57:34This giant armadillo just emerges from underground.
57:49Even from where we were you could see these amazing claws.
57:52This relic almost of a time of dinosaurs.
57:56We were able to film them in a way that no one ever has before.
58:00And it was extraordinary.
58:01And it was really freestyle.
58:04I'll never forget it!
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