All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Stretched to the Limit

    • January 29, 2013
    • Eden

    Some animals appear to have taken Nature’s gifts and stretched them to extreme limits. With these two natural curiosities one creature, the giraffe, has ended up with a super-stretched neck, the other, the chameleon, a super stretchy tongue. In both cases nature has found a way to turn the ordinary into the extraordinary.

  • S01E02 A Curious Hoax?

    • February 5, 2013
    • Eden

    David discovers the curiosities that have led to accusations of forgery but have ultimately helped us rethink evolution. When early explorers brought the first specimen of a duck-billed platypus back to England in 1799, it was thought so bizarre it was deemed a hoax, while the midwife toad became the centre of a raging scientific storm in the 1920s that led to accusations of fakery.

  • S01E03 Young Wrinklies

    • February 12, 2013
    • Eden

    David encounters two examples where Nature has tinkered with the aging process to alarmingly different effect – the first grows old while trapped in a young body while the second looks old from birth but might hold the key to a long life.

  • S01E04 A Curious Twist

    • February 19, 2013
    • Eden

    The single spiral tusk of the narwhal inspiration for tales of unicorns and the myriad variations on the twist of the snail shell have delighted and fascinated naturalists and artists since the dawn of civilization.

  • S01E05 Seeing the Pattern

    • February 26, 2013
    • Eden

    Zebra stripes vary subtly between the different species but there is one group of animals that has evolved colourful patterns of seemingly infinite variety, the butterflies. In this episode David looks at two examples of animal patterns that have bedazzled and baffled science for a long time, and uses modern tools to unlock their secrets.

Season 2

  • S02E01 Virgin Birth

    • February 18, 2014
    • U&W

    Sir David Attenborough reveals more of nature's most amazing animals. Looking at the way female Komodo dragons and aphids reproduce.

  • S02E02 Armoured Animals

    • February 18, 2014
    • BBC Two

    Sir David Attenborough tells us about some amazing animals. Focusing on the rhino and hedgehog, which have developed thick skin to protect them.

  • S02E03 Life in the Dark

    • February 25, 2014
    • U&W

    Sir David Attenborough looks at the eyes of squid and owls and how they've managed to maximise their vision.

  • S02E04 Curious Imposters

    • February 25, 2014
    • BBC Two

    In Curious Imposters we look at cuckoos and the way the death's-head hawkmoth steals honey.

  • S02E05 Bad Reputations

    • March 4, 2014
    • U&W

    In Bad Reputations, we’ll see how the gorilla and the vampire bat both gained frightening reputations when first discovered by explorers and scientists.

  • S02E06 Shocking Senses

    • March 4, 2014
    • BBC Two

    Plants and animals have some curious super senses that we find hard to fathom in our world of only five senses. We learn about how naturalists found out some eels were electric.

  • S02E07 Life on Ice

    • March 11, 2014
    • U&W

    Emperor penguins and wood frogs have remarkable adaptations to survive the most challenging of conditions.

  • S02E08 Spinners and Weavers

    • March 11, 2014
    • BBC Two

    Nature's inventiveness is expertly highlighted in the artistry of weaving and the unique properties of silk.

  • S02E09 Strange Parents

    • March 18, 2014
    • BBC Two

    Sir David Attenborough shines the spotlight on nature's most amazing animals. Looking at female hyaenas and why male seahorses give birth.

  • S02E10 Magical Appearances

    • March 18, 2014
    • BBC Two

    Magical Appearances explores how swallows magically appear each spring and asks how did complex and beautiful insects like butterflies suddenly arrive in the summer.

Season 3

  • S03E01 Impossible Feats

    • February 2, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Fleas are supposed to be able to jump the equivalent of a human leaping over St. Paul’s Cathedral and cheetahs purportedly can clock speeds of 70 miles per hour. But are these claims really true? The discovery of the world's most elastic natural protein in insects and the development of a hi-tech tracking collar have helped reveal the truth. So can these creatures really achieve what should be physically impossible?

  • S03E02 Curious Minds

    • February 9, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Orangutans can use tools but such skills remained undiscovered for centuries. They were considered as just clever mimics until discovery in remote Sumatran swamps revealed their true potential. Clever crows also make surprisingly sophisticated tools. How have the curious minds of these two animals helped them become so inventive?

  • S03E03 Expandable Bodies

    • February 16, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The bodies of some animals stretch and shrink in extraordinary ways. The anaconda can swallow prey twice its own body size - and then wait for over a year until their next meal. The camel’s curious hump can almost double in weight giving it the energy to travel huge distances across deserts. What is the secret behind these expandable bodies?

  • S03E04 Curious Feeders

    • February 23, 2015
    • BBC Two

    The blue whale and the flamingo both have bodies determined by their diet. Blue whales grow enormous by feeding on tiny shrimp-like creatures, while flamingos spend their lives eating with their heads upside down. Both are oddities in their own groups and yet both are curiously similar.

  • S03E05 Curious Cures

    • March 2, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Humans are not alone in using medicines against injuries and infection. Some animals protect themselves with natural remedies in the most extraordinary ways. Hippos produce a blood-red “sweat” that acts as a sunblock and helps fight infections, while capuchin monkeys rub themselves with insect-repellent leaves to protect against insect bites.

  • S03E06 Remarkable Regeneration

    • March 9, 2015
    • BBC Two

    Salamanders can regenerate entire legs and tails to replace ones they have lost, while deer shed their massive antlers and re-grow them from a few remaining cells each year. How do these creatures regenerate entire body parts and why is it not possible for all animals to do the same?

Season 4

  • S04E01 Animal Frankensteins

    • February 14, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Hybrids can be bizarre and they can be deadly. We look at two hybrid animals that owe their existence to human interference – the pizzly bear (a cross between a polar bear and grizzly), which has come into being because of global warming, and the killer bee brought into existence because of the transfer of African bees to South America.

  • S04E02 Finding the Way

    • February 13, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Some animals have an extraordinary ability to find their way. The dung beetle, an insect revered by ancient Egyptians, uses the sun, the moon and even the Milky Way to move its prized ball of dung in the right direction. Pigeons are often considered feeble birdbrains, but they have incredible memories that can recall several complex travel routes with amazing accuracy and they even use manmade roads and hedgerows to find the quickest way home.

  • S04E03 Extreme Babies

    • February 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The giant panda gives birth to the smallest baby of any mammal and has to care for and protect it for many months. The kiwi lays one of the largest eggs in the bird world, which produces a very well developed chick. Why don’t pandas give birth to more developed, robust young and why do kiwis produce a single egg that is a quarter of its body mass and almost too big to lay?

  • S04E04 Curious Counters

    • February 12, 2018
    • BBC Two

    Can animals count? This is a question that has intrigued and fooled investigators for a long time. Just over a hundred years ago, a German horse called Hans was declared a mathematical genius but all was not as it seemed. And strangely, some bamboos around the world flower exactly at the same no matter where they are – are they counting down the years?

  • S04E05 Incredible Shells

    • February 16, 2018
    • BBC Two

    David Attenborough investigates two shells that have proved to be winners in evolution: the bird’s shell and the hard shell of the tortoise. The ostrich egg is so strong it’s possible for a person to stand on it without it breaking – how does the chick break out of this fortress? The evolution of the tortoise shell was for a long time a mystery and this bony box offers a lot more than just protection.

  • S04E06 Ferocious Fighters

    • February 15, 2018
    • BBC Two

    The Siamese Fighting Fish is so aggressive it will fight its own reflection until it is exhausted. Recent research shows that the fighting behaviour varies and depends on the personality of the fish! Male kangaroos were once pitted against humans in the boxing ring – the most impressive male kangaroos are solid blocks of muscle with a kick that can kill. Why do they fight and what skills must a winner have?

Additional Specials

  • SPECIAL 0x1 Shorts: Episode 2: A Curious Hoax?

    • February 5, 2013
    • Eden

    David discovers the curiosities that have led to accusations of forgery but have ultimately helped us rethink evolution. When early explorers brought the first specimen of a duck-billed platypus back to England in 1799, it was thought so bizarre it was deemed a hoax, while the midwife toad became the centre of a raging scientific storm in the 1920s that led to accusations of fakery.

  • SPECIAL 0x2 Shorts: Episode 3: Young Wrinklies

    • February 12, 2013
    • BBC Two

    David encounters two examples where Nature has tinkered with the aging process to alarmingly different effect – the first grows old while trapped in a young body while the second looks old from birth but might hold the key to a long life.

  • SPECIAL 0x3 Shorts: Episode 4: A Curious Twist

    • February 19, 2013
    • BBC Two

    The single spiral tusk of the narwhal inspiration for tales of unicorns and the myriad variations on the twist of the snail shell have delighted and fascinated naturalists and artists since the dawn of civilization.

  • SPECIAL 0x4 Shorts: Episode 5: Seeing the Pattern

    • February 26, 2013
    • BBC Two

    Zebra stripes vary subtly between the different species but there is one group of animals that has evolved colourful patterns of seemingly infinite variety, the butterflies. In this episode David looks at two examples of animal patterns that have bedazzled and baffled science for a long time, and uses modern tools to unlock their secrets.