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S40 Ep12

American Arctic

Premiere: 4/13/2022 | 00:00:30 |

The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska has long protected survivors of the Ice Age, but this frozen fortress is melting due to climate change. For the caribou, musk oxen, polar bears and Arctic foxes, the Ice Age is slipping away.

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About the Episode

Vast, wild and remote, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) is where some of the world’s greatest wildlife spectacles unfold. Situated in the northeast corner of Alaska, this refuge has long-protected survivors of the Ice Age that still roam a frozen wilderness. The Porcupine caribou herd traverses all of it on the longest land-animal migration on Earth, witnessing extraordinary wildlife moments along the way. Now, this icy fortress is melting due to climate change. For the caribou, musk oxen, polar bears and Arctic foxes, the Ice Age is slipping away.

Buzzworthy Moments:

A newborn musk ox learns how to survive with the help of its mother. Musk oxen were hunted to extinction in Alaska by 1860 but were reintroduced in the 1930s. There are now a few thousand in the state.

A polar bear mother and her cubs search for scraps during a too-hot summer. In the Southern Beaufort Sea, there are only about half as many polar bears as there were 35 years ago. North Alaska has the largest oil field in America, and its effects can be seen in the changing landscape and climate.

The caribou migration is a veritable feast for grizzly bears — if the bears can catch them. Grizzlies hunt all the way to the Arctic Ocean in the summer, but caribou are faster than bears on the open plain.

Noteworthy Facts:

The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge supports a greater variety of plant and animal life than any other protected area in the Arctic Circle.

Each year, around 160,000 caribou make the journey from their wintering grounds around the Yukon to their calving grounds in the ANWR. A round trip of 1,000 miles, it is one of the longest land-animal migrations on the planet, rivaling the wildebeest migration on the Serengeti.

Arctic foxes live in tunnels in the layer above the permafrost. In winter, they sport snowy white coats, which then turn brown in the summer.

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PRODUCTION CREDITS

AMERICAN ARCTIC

NARRATED BY
CAMPBELL SCOTT

WRITTEN AND PRODUCED BY
MARTIN MÉSZÁROS

DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
FLORIAN SCHULZ

NARRATION WRITER
MARK FLETCHER

CAMERA
SALOMON SCHULZ

CAMERA ASSISTANTS
SEBASTIAN KÜBLER
BENJAMIN METZGER

FIELD GUIDE
JAKE SOPLANDA

PILOTS
TONY ONEY
MATT THOFT
EMILY SCHOCK

EDITOR
CHRISTIAN STOPPACHER

ONLINE EDITOR
ROLAND MITTERMÜLLER

COLORIST
LEE NIEDERKOFLER

MUSIC
BARNABY TAYLOR

GRAPHIC DESIGN
FELIX GEREMUS

SOUND DESIGN / AUDIO MIX
STEFAN K. FIEDLER

SCIENTIFIC ADVISORS
MARGARET WILLIAMS
PETER VAN TUYN
STAN SENNER
ERIC V REGEHR
JOHN SEVERSON
HEATHER JOHNSON
MIKE SUITOR
JEREMY LITTELL

ARCHIVE
DR. MATT NOLAN

ARCHIVAL FOOTAGE PROVIDED BY
FLORIAN SCHULZ PRODUCTIONS,
WHICH WAS FUNDED BY CAMPION ADVOCACY FUND

SPECIAL THANKS
THE STAFF OF THE ARCTIC NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE
IÑUPIAT FIRST NATION
GWICH’IN FIRST NATION

LINE PRODUCER
WOLFGANG KNÖPFLER

PRODUCTION MANAGER
EMIL HERRERA-SCHULZ

IMPACT PRODUCER
RU MAHONEY

UNIT MANAGER
DINAH CZEZIK-MÜLLER

EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS
SABINE HOLZER
WALTER KÖHLER

Polar bears have been filmed under the supervision of polar bear guide Robert Thompson under the FWS Permit MA6168B-0.

The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service is a Federal agency dedicated to conserving fish, wildlife, and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. As a Federal Agency, we cannot endorse or oppose projects; rather we provide accurate information about the resources we have been entrusted to manage. The views expressed in this production do not necessarily represent the views of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service nor should any products or positions be perceived as being endorsed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

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ONLINE EDITOR
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RE-RECORDING MIXER
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NARRATION RECORD
BRIAN BEATRICE

ORIGINAL EPISODE PRODUCTION FUNDING PROVIDED IN PART BY
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ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

FUNDING

Support for Nature: American Arctic was provided by Arlene and Milton D. Berkman and Bradley L. Goldberg Family Foundation. Series funding for Nature is also made possible in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, The Arnhold Foundation, The Fairweather Foundation, Kate W. Cassidy Foundation, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III, Kathy Chiao and Ken Hao, Charles Rosenblum, Filomen M. D’Agostino Foundation, Lillian Goldman Charitable Trust, Leonard and Norma Klorfine, Sandra Atlas Bass, Colin S. Edwards, Gregg Peters Monsees Foundation, Koo and Patricia Yuen, and public television viewers.

TRANSCRIPT

♪♪ [ Wind whistling ] SCOTT: The Arctic has always been the toughest test, no more so than in the far corner of Alaska called the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Thousands of caribou face the cold... the terrain... and formidable predators to reach one special place at just the right time -- a vast, beautiful plain on the edge of the Arctic Ocean.

Here, they give birth.

This is the story of the last great land migration in North America.

And of how every Arctic creature is now on a daunting journey from a timeless past into a vastly different future.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ SCOTT: On the top of the world, it is still the ice age.

♪♪ ♪♪ It's northern Alaska in winter.

The temperature drops to 50 below.

♪♪ ♪♪ Frozen rivers curl north from the Brooks Range and down to a plain stretching to the Beaufort Sea and the Arctic Ocean, now locked in ice.

[ Wind whistling ] This vast stretch of white mountains, tundra, and icy rivers, forms one of the world's most important wildernesses -- the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

It's a home for courageous creatures from another time.

This wildlife community will face a year of difficult decisions.

Hundreds of miles southeast, bravest of all perhaps, is a pregnant caribou.

She's part of the Porcupine caribou herd and will undertake the longest annual land migration on the planet.

In her lifetime, she's likely to walk the same distance as a complete circuit of the globe.

It's December, and the caribou are waiting, eating lichen in the twilight.

The journey ahead needs precise timing.

She'll march through forests, over mountains, across rivers, to the coastal plain.

It's a round trip of almost a thousand miles.

♪♪ Some 160,000 caribou will walk from their wintering grounds in the Yukon and Northwest Territories to their calving grounds in the Wildlife Refuge.

♪♪ The Brooks Range stands in their way, running parallel to the coast.

The sun sets for the last time until the New Year.

♪♪ ♪♪ The only sunlight is reflected by a wintry moon.

♪♪ Hundreds of miles above, solar radiation fires up the ionosphere, and the ghostly aurora.

♪♪ ♪♪ This is a world of huge planetary forces in constant flux.

This is nature at its most spectacular and extreme.

♪♪ [ Wolf howls ] A dawn twilight returns in January.

♪♪ Blizzards blast the tundra.

Most animals have left or are hibernating under the deep snow, but musk ox remain.

[ Growling ] [ Wind whistling ] They are loyal to a home range and won't leave.

They rarely visit the valley.

The snow is too deep, and they can't dig out the frozen grass.

Even up here, it's hard work.

Winters seem to be more erratic recently, on average more than eight degrees warmer than 50 years ago, which sounds better, but now there's freezing rain on top of heavier snowfall.

The caribou are becoming restless.

♪♪ Her belly is beginning to swell with her unborn calf.

♪♪ She's searching for reindeer lichen, her winter food.

She's a reindeer as much as a caribou.

They are the same species.

♪♪ She digs through snow like the musk ox.

For a prospective mother, finding enough food is her principal focus.

But it's not her only worry.

♪♪ ♪♪ It's a lone wolf.

♪♪ ♪♪ The caribou's instinct is to stay on the move.

Somewhere has to be better than this.

♪♪ But migration is not blind instinct.

It's a series of collective decisions based on subtle clues to weather patterns and journey times.

Every year is different.

The wolf has choices to make, too.

He can follow the caribou, but they move fast, and the journey is too far.

The first birth of spring.

It's not a caribou, but a newborn musk ox, a 30-pound baby, delivered straight onto the snow.

The family surrounds her, a protection from dangers outside their circle.

But within hours, the calf wants out.

There's a beautiful new world to explore.

Every calf is precious.

Musk ox were hunted to extinction in Alaska in the 1860s, but were brought back in the 1930s.

There are now a few thousand here in Alaska.

A little river gully is a new adventure for the calf.

Once in, getting back out is harder.

♪♪ ♪♪ The mother won't follow.

She doesn't know how deep the snow is and could easily get stuck.

She tracks her calf from the bank.

♪♪ The calf discovers... ice.

♪♪ [ Calf lowing ] ♪♪ ♪♪ There's a physical urgency to find your feet here... ...but perhaps a greater mental urgency for the calf to figure out her world.

♪♪ The patient mother waits... and her calf finds a way out.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ She's got maybe another two years looking after this youngster.

The herd of about 15 will protect the calves and search for food around their large home range until summer.

The caribou have left the winter woodland far behind, and are heading north.

♪♪ By April, the snow is starting to melt, and many rivers run earlier than a decade ago.

Spring is moving north faster, and the caribou need to keep up.

♪♪ The herd heads on for about a hundred miles, then will turn west towards the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

♪♪ It's the end of April.

They are over halfway.

The mothers will all give birth within days of the third of June.

Six weeks to go.

[ Birds chirping ] Golden eagles nest along the route.

They came up from the south and established territories in March, feeding on hares, ptarmigan, or marmots.

The eagle pair returns to the same spectacular nest each year.

They are loyal to a site decided over a decade ago.

But the calendar has changed a lot since then.

[ Chirping continues ] By early May, the chicks are near fledging, and the caribou herd has already passed.

A ground squirrel is breakfast.

[ Insects buzzing ] It will take a new generation of eagles to make the huge adjustment to the changes unfolding here.

A lone wolf has stuck with the herd for many miles.

♪♪ ♪♪ Caribou from a broad area either side of the Canadian border are converging on the same route.

They'll navigate around the eastern end of the Brooks Range, about 40 miles from the Arctic shore.

♪♪ ♪♪ In a few places, the route has bottlenecks around rivers and lakes.

♪♪ ♪♪ This migration of Arctic caribou is compared to wildebeest on the African savanna, and so the coastal plain is sometimes called America's Serengeti.

♪♪ As the herd funnels through the foothills of the Brooks Range, the wolf briefly gains an advantage.

The weaker calves from last year are struggling to keep up.

There's been little time to stop and eat.

♪♪ As long as the herd stays watchful and maintains a distance, they're safe.

♪♪ Caribou are faster.

The wolf is a tactician, but tactics are hard if you work alone.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ Here is an unparalleled amount of food on the hoof, but to this lone wolf, it might as well not be here at all.

♪♪ ♪♪ By May, spring has reached the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

[ Buzzing ] Life here has slept under snow for eight months.

[ Chirps ] Plovers and redpolls arrive to nest, part of a massive aerial migration.

Millions of snow geese leave California or Texas and are on their way to the Arctic Islands of Canada.

They'll stop off here on their way back.

♪♪ ♪♪ Sandpipers are part of the worldwide event.

♪♪ Golden plovers set off from Argentina.

Terns, loons, and songbirds come from Antarctica or Africa or East Asia.

Hundreds of species cross the planet on their way to the Arctic north.

♪♪ ♪♪ A world of birds is heading to the summer paradise of Alaska.

♪♪ [ Chirping ] The golden plover couple have arranged a nest on the ground, laid their eggs, and are raising their chicks.

The parents provide some protection against Arctic foxes or predatory birds, but it's mainly just warmth under a camouflaged wing.

Once thawed out, the chicks have to get back to finding food for themselves.

The mother leaves after a couple of weeks, and the father follows a week or so later.

But the chicks stay longer and have to find their own way back to South America.

In the meantime, the chicks catch insects for as long as they can, then come running back to warm up again.

Their mother knows it's not just the cold that will get them.

[ Chirps ] Arctic foxes live in tunnels in the layer above the permafrost.

The parents returned a few months ago from their winter wanderings in snowy white coats to give birth and turn brown for summer.

♪♪ The cubs were born here in early May.

Now, a few weeks later, they enjoy the remarkably warm days.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ They need to grow up fast.

The cubs are already eating meat and seem constantly hungry.

Ground squirrels and nesting birds are here in large numbers in May and June.

One delivery is not enough for them all.

♪♪ The others don't notice the mother's return until it's almost too late.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ Oh, well.

Dad will be back soon with more.

♪♪ It's a constant meal service during days that never quite seem to end.

Nesting on the ground is dangerous, but there is one bird that would fight off any fox -- the jaeger.

Jaeger means hunter in German.

The caribou are beginning to arrive.

They are tired, hungry, many are about to give birth, and they could so easily tread on a bird's nest.

The jaegers are not going to let that happen.

They start with some gentle warnings, but the caribou ignore them.

♪♪ Yet the jaegers are fearless.

♪♪ ♪♪ The caribou mother has come hundreds of miles, faced raging torrents, been jammed by lakes, escaped wolves, and now there's a determined parent bird that doesn't want her here at all.

♪♪ The caribou respond to the swooping bird ballet with strange dance moves of their own.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ As more of the herd arrives, the jaegers battle tirelessly to keep their eggs safe.

For the birds, and for all life here, there's little rest.

Even the sun keeps going, skimming above the horizon for most of June.

♪♪ This midnight sun warms the caribou as they all finally reach their destination.

♪♪ These are their calving grounds, in the heart of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

♪♪ She must arrive precisely, so that she's in the right place when, a week to 10 days after the snow melts, the sedges and grasses are at their most nutritious.

Somewhere is a mother giving birth -- one new calf among 160,000, anonymous to all but each other.

Almost all the mothers give birth within a few days.

♪♪ ♪♪ The calf doubles in size in two weeks.

The first green flush of sedges is briefly high in protein and sugars and coincides within a few days of when the calf needs most milk.

A week or so later, the grass will become coarser, bitter, and indigestible.

♪♪ The caribou slowly spread out, surfing a wave of melting snow and growing grass.

♪♪ The successful flood of energy transforms the character of the caribou.

♪♪ The first people here feel part of it.

Humans and caribou were created as one, they believe, and each still contains a piece of each other's heart.

To the Gwich'in, this is the sacred place where life begins.

♪♪ ♪♪ It's late June, and paradise suddenly closes in.

A plague of mosquitoes emerges.

[ Mosquitoes buzzing ] Each one may take just a drop of blood, but the warmer summers favor the insects.

They emerge earlier and breed faster.

The mosquitoes take so much blood and distress the caribou mothers so much that the herd spends the rest of the summer attempting to avoid them by searching for somewhere cooler.

Life becomes a daily balancing act of finding food for yourself and not being food for mosquitoes.

The consequences of the hotter summers may be subtle and complex for the caribou, but the effects to the north are much more obvious.

Over the last 40 years, the decline of sea ice in the Beaufort Sea is one of the most dramatic changes anywhere.

♪♪ One of the animals affected most is the polar bear.

During the last ice age, they would probably spend all year on the frozen sea.

Since the ice age ended, polar bears hunted seals on the Arctic ice in winter and spring, and in late summer, rested on land, snoozing and living off their fat.

♪♪ Nowadays the ice on the Beaufort Sea is erratic.

It melts faster, and the bears arrive early and thinner.

♪♪ ♪♪ By July, they are hunting for food along the shore.

They're not a huge threat to the caribou herd.

They are lumbering on land, and easily overheat.

[ Gulls crying ] Years are more variable now, and polar bears are showing unexpected flexibility.

They search for smaller prey and scavenge or fight over scraps.

The Arctic Refuge is a safe home, but there is no refuge from the outside world.

It's too hot for them.

The July record here is now 85 degrees Fahrenheit.

It's often hardest for a mother.

Polar bear cubs are born in midwinter.

This coast is one of the most important onshore denning areas in North America.

These cubs are almost two years old but still need their mother's milk.

Polar bears have declined in the southern Beaufort Sea.

There are about half of how many were here 35 years ago.

♪♪ These are desperate times.

♪♪ [ Ship horn blares ] North Alaska has the largest oil field in America.

♪♪ ♪♪ The base at Prudhoe Bay is next to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

It's a stark reminder of the cause of the changing seasons.

♪♪ ♪♪ Pipelines extend south and cross several caribou migration routes.

♪♪ The polar bears search for food across land now scarred by oil exploration.

♪♪ [ Woman vocalizing ] ♪♪ For the caribou, the green surge is over, and they are eating willow shrub and searching for anywhere cooler and mosquito free.

For some, that means the coast.

Others head south into the foothills of the Brooks Range.

♪♪ After enduring the heat of July, by late August, it's cooler.

A mother and calf turn south, with the protection of the herd.

Waiting for them is a grizzly.

Grizzlies and caribou meet each year.

The herd is named after the Porcupine River they must cross.

The bear's journey here is equally hazardous.

In summer, grizzlies hunt all the way to the Arctic Ocean.

The Porcupine caribou herd is heading south into the Brooks Range.

♪♪ Away from the water, the caribou start to relax.

It's a mistake.

♪♪ ♪♪ Caribou may be faster than bears on the open plain, but they must also rest the calves.

♪♪ Grizzlies and polar bears are almost the same species and increasingly overlap and interbreed, but grizzlies are a more serious threat to the herd.

The bear has learned to chase off the mothers and then search for calves hiding in the scrub.

♪♪ ♪♪ He's found two.

In a moment of indecision... he loses both.

The calf's mother gallops to his side.

It's a huge victory after so much hardship.

[ Bear panting ] ♪♪ Though not for the bear.

The journey south crosses the Brooks Range in fall.

In spring, this route is blocked by snow, but now they can return straight over the mountains.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ For the calf, this is his first taste of the wider world, with some new characters -- Dall sheep.

♪♪ They are cousins of bighorns, little bighorns, and mountain specialists.

Like musk ox, they don't migrate, but they do move around the mountains looking for grass and shrubs between the rocks.

The ewes give birth to a single lamb in late May.

By September, they are all enjoying the last of the summer.

♪♪ [ Sheep bleats ] ♪♪ The mothers gather in flocks and watch for wolves and eagles.

This is the migration route south, familiar to more than just caribou.

♪♪ [ Bleating ] ♪♪ The fledged golden eagle has been shadowing the caribou herd south.

As the herd turns east, the caribou face the mountains' wolves.

♪♪ In a small valley, the herd slows to rest.

A lone female plans her hunt.

She doesn't try to hide.

The mountains are on her side now.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ A calf becomes separated.

♪♪ ♪♪ To its mother, almost home, the trek has lost its meaning, its purpose.

The snow geese arrive here from the northernmost Arctic islands.

This is an important stopover on their way back to California, Texas, and Mexico.

[ Squawking ] Snow geese numbers have grown over the last 20 years.

There are now 20 million of them.

♪♪ In a world of so much decline, it's good to know some species are doing well.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ The autumn storms are sweeping in.

The weather changes very quickly.

♪♪ ♪♪ Ptarmigans have been caught in their summer plumage.

They'll turn white to an out-of-date schedule.

As long as the snow isn't too deep, they can feed on willow buds and birch.

♪♪ Ptarmigans are here all year.

That makes them a reliable target for a red fox.

♪♪ ♪♪ [ Calling ] The many eyes of a flock and their sharp calls protect them for now.

Red foxes are thriving in the Arctic and out-compete Arctic foxes if the weather is milder.

♪♪ By October, the rivers are frozen and are buried under snow.

♪♪ The musk ox have to dig for vegetation again.

♪♪ The male musk ox have other concerns.

Before winter arrives, they must sort out mating rights to the harem.

The rut started in August and a clear victor has yet to emerge.

♪♪ ♪♪ [ Growling ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ The musk ox are also related to bighorn sheep, but are much bigger.

Males weigh in at 800 pounds, and their closing speed is close to 60 miles an hour.

Their skulls are heavily reinforced and the brain protected by fluid.

♪♪ ♪♪ They back away, but only to prepare for combat.

♪♪ On the right, the older waits, then charges.

♪♪ ♪♪ There's probably no other animal on Earth that could survive this battle.

The winner will now mate with the herd.

♪♪ By October, the land is frozen solid.

[ Gulls crying ] Two polar bear cubs have survived the summer thanks to their mother.

♪♪ The sea won't freeze solid until November, but some coastal bays and river estuaries freeze earlier.

It's their playground while they wait.

On warm days the surface starts to melt and becomes slippery and tides weaken the new ice.

The surface is still fragile.

♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ By midwinter, they'll be sniffing out seals in a freezing twilight far from land.

♪♪ This is their ice age home at last, a timeless scene that leaves behind a world of change.

♪♪ Then the ice breaks, and reality returns.

The sea melts and refreezes and will melt again for two frustrating months.

♪♪ The polar bears of the southern Beaufort Sea are doing better than many others around the Arctic.

♪♪ ♪♪ The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge protects the dens, and mothers have become expert scavengers.

Their sense of smell is probably the best of all animals.

♪♪ ♪♪ And look what they've found.

♪♪ It's a bowhead whale -- what's left of it.

[ Gulls crying ] With unpredictable winter ice ahead, this bowhead carcass is a salvation for the family and for all the local polar bears.

They will feed for weeks.

Bowhead whales are increasing, maybe thanks to longer summers.

Everything is changing, and everything is connected.

There is regulated whale hunting here, and this carcass has actually been left on the beach for the wildlife.

For the polar bears, it's a lifeline, but maybe little more.

They are ice bears, evolved in another world.

♪♪ Across millions of years, the Earth has seen huge changes many times.

The most recent was the end of the Ice Age, 12,000 years ago.

♪♪ This extraordinary wilderness protects these Ice Age survivors -- the polar bears, musk ox, arctic foxes, and the spectacular caribou, holding out on the top of the world.

Now, even for them, the ice age may, finally, be coming to an end.

[ Woman vocalizing ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ To learn more about what you've seen on this "Nature" program, visit pbs.org.

♪♪

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