Did anyone watch this yet another programme by Sir David Attenborough last night? Was really good if you missed it it's on IPlayer.
Did anyone else notice that the snake caught the Spotted Flycatcher, but when it was shown eating it, it was something else, perhaps a bunting or sparrow with pink legs, rusty brown wings with pale cream edges. Or are we not supposed to notice continuity errors because 'it's an Attenborough'?
On the whole I was rather disappointed with the Asia episode, snake aside, it's all a bit formulaic: Walrus on rock, Polar bear hungry but unable to catch them, Walrus falls, Polar bear feeds. Monkeys cold, fight breaks out amongst rivals (but filmed in too much close-up to really appreciate what's going on), fight ends, monkeys re-group and get warm. Aside from some 'never before' filmed species much of it is repetition of almost every other natural history programme these days. When there's so much un-filmed wildlife in Asia do we really need Oran-gutans again?!
Why are you posting links to climate change denial sources? Note that Susan Crockford, the author of the first article, is the woman behind polarbearscience.com; this website was set up solely to discredit climate science. See: Internet Blogs, Polar Bears, and Climate-Change Denial by ProxyThe series apparently has inaccuracies: blaming walrus deaths to climate change, although similar events occurred long ago. Besides, footage from two places was combined into one.
https://business.financialpost.com/...alruses-its-another-tragedy-porn-climate-hoax
https://polarbearscience.com/2019/0...ause-of-climate-change-is-contrived-nonsense/
Why are you posting links to climate change denial sources? Note that Susan Crockford, the author of the first article, is the woman behind polarbearscience.com; this website was set up solely to discredit climate science. See: Internet Blogs, Polar Bears, and Climate-Change Denial by Proxy