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What Our Planet
teaches you

David Attenborough reveals how climate change and human activity are transforming every ecosystem on Earth โ€” and what we stand to lose.

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4 things you'll learn

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Environmental Science / Biology
Coral Bleaching: The Canary in the Climate Coal Mine

Coral reefs occupy less than 1% of the ocean floor but support 25% of all marine species. Corals are animals that host symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae) which provide their food and color. When ocean temperatures rise by just 1-2 degrees Celsius, corals expel the algae (bleaching) and starve. The Great Barrier Reef has experienced mass bleaching events in 2016, 2017, 2020, and 2022. Coral reefs are the most sensitive ecosystem on Earth โ€” they die first, which makes them the clearest early warning system for global warming's ecological impact.

Environmental Science / Physics
The Albedo Feedback Loop: Why Ice Loss Accelerates Warming

White ice reflects 80-90% of solar radiation back into space (high albedo). Dark ocean water absorbs 90% of solar radiation (low albedo). As ice melts, it exposes dark water, which absorbs more heat, which melts more ice, which exposes more water โ€” a positive feedback loop. This is why the Arctic is warming 2-3 times faster than the global average. Positive feedback loops are why climate change accelerates rather than progresses linearly: past a tipping point, the system drives its own change.

Environmental Science
Tipping Points: When Ecosystems Flip Irreversibly

Tipping points are thresholds beyond which a system shifts to a fundamentally different state and can't easily return. The Amazon generates 50% of its own rainfall through evapotranspiration โ€” trees release moisture that becomes rain that feeds the trees. Deforest enough (estimated at 20-25%), and the remaining forest can't generate enough rain to sustain itself. The rainforest collapses into savanna. This isn't gradual degradation โ€” it's a phase transition, like water turning to ice. Once crossed, reversing it requires centuries, not decades.

Ecology / Conservation
Habitat Loss: The Primary Driver of Extinction

Species don't go extinct because they're hunted to zero (usually). They go extinct because their habitat disappears. Walruses evolved to rest on sea ice between feeding dives. No ice means they crowd onto shores, leading to stampedes, cliff falls, and starvation. This pattern โ€” habitat loss causing population collapse โ€” drives 85% of all species currently threatened with extinction. Protecting species individually (one animal at a time) fails. Protecting habitats (the ecosystem that supports them) works. Conservation is fundamentally about land and water, not individual animals.

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