BBC美丽中国 第一集
纪录片《美丽中国》《第一集》(上)
纪录片《美丽中国》《第一集》(上)---中文对照翻译(SQUA WKING)NARRA TOR:The last hidden world,China.最后一个隐秘的世界,中国。
For centuries,travellers to China have told tales of magical landscape and surprising creatures.几世纪以来,到过中国的游客一直描述着中国迷人的山水风景及令人惊叹的珍禽异兽Chinese civilisation is the world’s oldest and today,its largest with well over a billion people.中国文明是世界上最古老的其人口是世界上最庞大的总数超过10亿It is home to more than 50 distinct ethnic groups and a wide range of traditional lifestyles,often in close partnership with nature.它是50多种特殊民族赖以为生的家各形各色的传统生活方式通常与周遭的自然息息相关We know that China faces immense social and environmental problems,but there is great beauty here,too.虽然中国面临着巨大的社会及环境保护问题但还是有它最美的一面China is home to the world’s highest mountains,vast deserts ranging from searing hot to mind-numbing cold.中国有世界上最高的山脉最宽广的沙漠其温差可从灼热高温降到令人麻痹的寒冷Steaming forests harbouring rare creatures.云雾弥漫的森林庇护着稀有动物Grassy plains beneath vast horizons.一望无际的旷野草原And rich tropical seas.丰饶的热带丛林Now for the first time ever,we can explore the whole of this great country,meet some of the surprising and exotic creatures that live here and consider the relationship of the people and wildlife of China to the remarkable landscape in which they live.现在有史以来第一次能够完整地探索这个美好国度接触当地一些令人惊奇的稀有生物进而探讨中国人民及野生动植物与所住的非凡山水之间的互动关系。
BBC美丽中国(1—6集)
BBC美丽中国(1—6集)
BBC美丽中国(1—6集)
BBC 美丽中国
BBC Wild China
【内容简介】
《美丽中国》是由中英联合摄制小组拍摄的一部关于中国野生动物和自然风光的系列记录片,其中有些野生动物和风景的镜头从未在银幕上出现过。
这部系列片将成为中英两国联合电视制作的一个里程碑,片名为《美丽中国》,在北京的一个典礼上上映,现场观众有幸对这一将成为经典之作的记录片投以惊鸿一瞥。
《美丽中国》由世界闻名的英国BBC自然历史制作小组和中央电视台影视制作主力——中视传媒——合作制作。
该片也是BBC和中国
电视台的首次合作。
《美丽中国》将全部以高清晰度方式拍摄,将使观众置身于中国的多彩风光中,包括汉代宫殿、蒙古草原和维吾尔的沙漠、丝绸之路、青藏高原。
影片还包括罕见的大熊猫和一种珍稀的中国特有的食鱼蝙蝠的珍贵生活记录。
BBC环球公司已经授权全球超过25个国家可播放《美丽中国》系列片,今后这一数字还将扩大。
英国驻华大使欧威廉爵士在谈到这一系列片对中英两国关系的重要性时说:“《美丽中国》是一部具有空前雄心壮志的自然历史系列片。
该片的成功拍摄及制作不仅是两国电视节目制作合作的成功,也是中英两国创意产业领域的一次成功合作。
”
美丽中国第一集(中文版)
美丽中国第二集(中文版)
美丽中国第三集(中文版)
美丽中国第四集(中文版)
美丽中国第五集(中文版)
美丽中国第六集(中文版)。
BBC美丽中国英文字幕word第四集
BBC美丽中国英文字幕word第四集The Great Wall of China was built by the Han Chinese to keep out the nomadic tribes from the north They called these people barbarians and their lands were considered barrenand uninhabitableNorthern China is indeed a harsh placeof terrible wintersferocious summersharsh desertsBut it is far from lifelessWith colorful placessurprising creaturesamazing peopleand strange landscapesThe further we travel, the more extreme it becomes So how do people and wildlife copewith hardships and challenges of life beyond the Wall For our troubled but drop-dead beautiful motherland The northern limits of ancient Chinawere defined by the Great Wallwhich meanders for nearly km from east to west The settled Han people of the Chinese heartland were invaded many times by warlike tribes from the northThe Great Wall was built to protect the Han Chinese from invasion To meet those fearsome northernersand the wild creatures who share their world we must leave the shelter of the Walland travel into the unknownNortheast China was known historically as Manchuria Its upper reaches are on the same latitude as Paris but in winter, it is one of the coldestmost hostile places on the planetBitter winds from Siberiaregularly bring temperatures of ? belowDense forests of evergreen trees cover these lands and a rugged terrain is made even more difficult by impenetrable ravines We start our journey on a frozen riversnaking between China's northeastern most corner and SiberiaThe Chinese call itthe "Black Dragon River"The people who live herearen't exactly fearsome warriorsThey are too busy coping with the harsh winter conditionsand they respond to the challengein some creative waysThe Black Dragon river is home toone of the smallest ethnic groups in China the Hezhe peopleIt's not just bicyclesthat seem out of place in this icy world Fishing boats and nets lie abandoned a long way from open waterUnderneather a meter of solid iceswim a huge variety of fishincluding -pound sturgeonenough to feed a family of Hezhe for weeks But how can they catch their quarries First they must chisel a hole through the ice to reach the water belowThen they need to set their fishing net under the icea real challengeA second hole is mademeters away from the firstand a weighted string is dropped in Then a long bamboo pole is used to hook the string and pull the net into position beneath the ice After a few daysthe nets are checkedThese days,almost nobody catches a rare giant sturgeon The Black Dragon river has been overfished like so many othersBut even these smaller fishare a welcome catchFrozen with in secondsthe fish are guaranteed to stay fresh for the wobbly cycle right homeThe forests that lie south of the Black Dragon riverare bound up in snow for more than half the year It's deathly silent Most of the animals here are either hibernatingor have migrated south for the winterBut there is an exceptionWild boars roam the forests of the northeast Like the Hezhe people the boars find it difficult to gather food in winter Staying close together may help them to keep warm in the extreme coldBut there is another reason for group living more ears to listen out for dangerSiberian tigers also live in these forests But these daysonly in captivityThere may be less than a dozenwild Siberian tigers left in Chinathough there are many more in breeding centers This enclosure of Hengdaohezistarted breeding tigers into supply bones and body partsfor the Chinese medicine marketTrade in tiger parts was banned in China in the s and the breeding centeris now just a tourist attractionThe forests of northeast stretch to where the chinese, Russian and Mongolian bordersmeetHere, a surprising herd of animals is on the move The reindeer were introduced to china hundreds of years ago by the nomadic Ewenki people who came here from SiberiaIt's late Apriland the women are calling int heir reindeer which are semi-wild and have spent all winter away in the forest. This a very special relationshipEach reindeer has its own nameand many were hand-reared by these women finally reunited after months apartThey will now remain together until autumn The Owenke women are anxious to check the condition of their animalsand to see which of the reindeer might be pregnant -year old, Malia Suelis one of only Owenke people still living their nomadic lifein these cold northern lands.Almost all her fellow Owenkehave given up the forest life.to settle in concrete houses in modern cities . The reindeer herders are now almost as rare as wild Siberian tigers There is about to be a new addition to the family. The women act as midwives to the new borncalves helping to nurture them through their first precious minutes of life.But the world around them is changing fast.This could be the last generation this ancient partnership will endure.This is hardly the image of the dangerous tribal people that theGreat Wall was built to keep at bay. Along China's border with North Koreais this region's most famous moutainChangbaishanIts name means ever whiteand it harvest the world's higheat volcanic lake Even in mid Maythere is still ice everywhere but there are signs that the seasons are changing Warmer winds arrive from the southand within a few short weeksChangbai Mountain is transformed.Water begins to flow down the mountainside once more replenishingthe landscape.It's Juneand insects emerge to take advantage of the abundance of flowers.The warm weather sees the arrival of migrant birds Stonechats that have spent the winter in the south of China return here to raise their chicks With so many insects aroundthe stonechats may have several broodsHeading west from Changbai Mountainthe forests give way to rolling grasslandsThe Great Wall stretches off into the distance defining the southern limits of the vast Mongolian steppe North of the Wall are huge areas of grassland but one place on our journey is particularly significant In the tall grassa family of red foxes is raising its cubsToday, they have this meadow pretty much to themselves But it wasn't always the caseEight centuries agothis palce would've been teeming with peopleNow these ruins in a field the short distance from Beijing are all that remains of the great city of Xanadu once the summer capital of ChinaWithin these wallsit is said that the leader of the Mongolians the mighty Kubla Khan welcomed Marco Polo to China Mongolian warriors established the greatest empire in history stretching to the borders of EuropeFeared of this worrior tribe is the main reason the Han Chinesebuilt the Great WallThe cornerstone of the Mongolian supremacywas their relationship with horsesThis is what brought them such success in war The Mongolian riders travelled at nightand rode with spare horsesso they could move huge distances strike and then retreat quicker than their opponentsAt the heart of the Mongolian culture is horse racing The annual Nadam Festival held each Julyis a chance for young Mongolians to show off their horsemanship It's said that Mongolian people are born in the saddle Even as children, they are consummate ridersHorsemanship was the core of the Mongolian success as warriores in the pastand is central to their lives as nomads today In a area of grassland know as Bayanbulakfamilies of nomadic Mongolians are gathering The name, Bayanbulak, means rich headwaters and they come here to set up temporary homes to graze their lifetock on the lush summer pastures The search for fresh fodder for their animals keeps them on the goand being able to move home so easilywith a real-life vantageIt takes only a few minuts for the Monolian family to set up their yurts .But Mongolians don't have this place all to themselves. The rich resources also attracked a huge variety of birds, Demoiselle Cranes wading birds and waterfowlmigrate here from all over Asiadrawn to rivers and wetlandsfed by glacial melt water from nearby mountains This place is known in Chinaas Swan LakeIt's the world's most important breeding site for whooperswans and arguably mosquitos as well.The pastures at Swan Lake provide endless amount of lush grassfor birds to nest inand for lifestock to eatIt would seem that's plenty for everybodybut occasionally they can't get too close for comfortyears agothe Mongolians were the most feared people on Earth but they have a spiritual side as wellThe birds of Swan Lakehave little cause to worryThe Mongolians protect the swans,and venerate them,calling them birds of GodThe Great Wall's journey through northern China continues westward by setting a landscape that becomes increasingly parched Our journey has brought us halfway across northern China and the grasslands are becoming hotdryand desolateWandering these wastes are creatures that look more African than AsianThese are Goitred Gazellesskittishand easily startledWhen threatened by danger,they are as fast as a race horseBut in this intense heatthey favor a gentler paceThere is little standing water herebut the gazelles have remarkable abilityto extract moisture from dry grassalthough finding enough worth eatingkeeps them constantly on the moveEven out here, in the semi-desertsthe wall continues its long marchHere it's made of a little more than compacted earth But with hardly any rain fallingit suffered very little erosion over the centuries Hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives building it Yet it seems hard to believethat anyone felt that these distant wastelands needed protecting But the Wall still has one final surpriseThis is Jiayuguanthe mighty fortress in the desertBuilt in the Ming dynasty over years ago legend says that the construction of the fortress was so meticulousily planned that , bricks were specially madeand only one brick was left unusedThis fortress marks the end of the Great Wall of China the greatest man-made barrier on EarthBut ahead, lies an even more formidable barrier a vast no man's land of deserts that stretch westward to the borders of central Asia Jiayuguan fortress was consideredto be the last outpost of Chinese civilization Beyond this point, lays utter desolation China's largest desert, the Taklamakan lies out here Its name has been translated asyou go in, and you never come outThis is a place of intense heatabrasive wind blown sandTotally hostile to lifeYet, there was a route through the desert for those brave enough to risk their lives for it People were lured into the horrors of the deserts because the Chinese had a secret so powerfulthat it changed the course of historyThe key to that secret lies in the distant past Legend has itat around years agoa princess was walking in her gardena princess was walking in her gardenwhen something unusual fell into her teacup A magical thread was extractedand it became more prized than gold or jade The thread, was silk Incredibly, such a beautiful substance and all the history behind it come from a humble little insectthe silkwormSilk moths lay several hundred eggsand the tiny caterpillars that emergeeat nothing but mulberry leavesAfter days of gluttonythey've grown thousand times heavierBut this stagepercent of their body mass is made up of silk glands In the process of turning into adult mothsthey spin a cocoon from a single strand of silk which can be over a thousand meters longIt was the legendary strength and brightness of silk fibers that made it so sought-afterFor over years,people built great fortunes and mighty kingdoms on these delicate threads.And the desert routes those antient traders took became the fabled Silk RoadThe principle of extracting raw silk hasn't changed since it's discoveredHarvested cocoons are droped into boiling water which unravels the long filamentsThese are then gathered and spun into raw silk thread Here at Hotan, on the ancient Silk Roadsilk weaving is still a cottage industrydumbly old-fashioned way on wooden loomsFor the ancient Silk Road tradersthe problem was still how to get the valuable silk from the fortress at Jiayuguanthrough the deserts to markets of central Asia and beyond Those early travellers heading west on the Silk Road were setting off on the worst voyage imaginable through some of the most terrible places on Earth Starting with the world's tallest sand dunesstrong winds whipping in from the westload the sand into ever higher dunesOver millenniamega-dunes build upwalls of sands soaring to over m tallcamels are the only beasts of burden that tackle these monstrous dunesTheir feet are wide and splay outwards to stop them sinking in loose sandThe wind that whips the sand into duneshas created other bizarre shapes in China's western deserts Mysterious giant structuresknown as yardangswere sculpted by flying sandThe wind brought other hazards to travellers in these deserts Marco Polo wrotesometimes the stray travelers will hear the tramp and hum of a great cavalcade of people away from the real line of marchand taking this to be their own companythey will follow the soundAnd when day breaksthey find that a cheat has been put on them and that they are in an ill plightTo this dayno one knows what causes the sands in some parts of the desert to sinkNo wonder travellers call this placefury of Godand sea of deathBut the most severe problem was lack of water The reason this place is so intensely drycan best be appreciated from a satellite view China's deserts arethe farthest place on Earth from any ocean This lack of water is what created the Taklamakan an area the size of Germany covered in sand dunes through which the Silk Road traversedThis is the world's largest shifting sand desert Most living would die herebut the camel is uniquely equipped for desert survival Its nose humidifies the dry desert air as it breathe in then dehumidifies it in the way outconserving precious waterThe camel's thick fur keeps it warm at night while reflectingsunlight by dayAnd its body temperature can rise by degree Celsius before it even begins to sweatWith these adaptationsthey can go for days without drinkingFor the camel trainstravel through the desertis about moving between one life-saving oasis and the next When they finally do reach a drinking hole camels can drink up to liters of water in ten minutes Without oasislife in the Taklamakancouldn't existand travel would be impossibleBut nothing is permanent in the desertThe shifting sands on the extreme climate mean that these precious water sources can disappear This is exactly what happened in the Aydingkol Lake The lake bed is the second lowest place on Earth at meters below sea levelIt's the hottest place in Chinawith air temperatures recorded as high as degree Celsius and ground temperatures up to degreesYet not far from Aydingkol is a surprisea thriving human settlement in the desertThis is Turpan OasisAnd it's famous in China for an unexpected product grapesBut how on Earth can a water-hungry crop grow in such abundance in a desert?The secret lies below groundA subterranean network of canals known as karez is used to channel water around Turpan streetsand into raving yardsBut where does the water come from?The clue lies on the desert floorin these lines of holes which mark the course of the subterranean water waysOver millennia agolocal people carved more than km ofthese canals beneath the desertdiverting water from the distant mountainsChanneling the flow undergroundmeans that less water is lost to evaporation in the desert heat In Augustthe grapes are harvestedThis rich bounty has not go unnoticedIn the lush vineyards of Turpan one animal misses thriving Red-tailed gerbils are hardy desert creaturesBut those in Turpan have never had it so goodOnce the grapes have been pickedsome are sold in the marketbut most are hung up to dry in the special drying houses This place is far too tempting for any rodent to resist Red-tailed gerbils are excellent climbersBut why botherwhen there is plenty of bounty lying around on the ground unguarded Rather than suffering the extreme environment in which they live The wild life and people of Turbanhave found innovative ways to cope with conditions beyond the Wall But not all desert communities world as resourceful as Turpan Between here and China's western borderslie the ruins of many great citiesIn their day they were vibrant thriving palcesBut in the fifth centurythe Silk Road fortunes took a turn for the worse Once again, a princess was involvedShe smuggled silkworm eggs out of chinaThe secret of silk was a secret no moreAnd China's stranglehold on this lucrative trade was over Even when Marco Polo passed along the Silk Road in the th century many of these cities had been deadfor over yearsBut the Silk Road's most famous city managed to survive Where the desert ends beneath vast mountain ranges China's westernmost point is only a stone's throw from the borders of five centralAsian countriesThis is Kashgar where east meets westThe silk that travelled along the Silk Road ended up here where it is still tradedtodayKashgar is famous for selling everything under the sun The local Sunday marketis one of Asia's largest and most exuberant gatherings But looking around the marketit's hard to believe you are actually in China Kashgar is a melting pot of non-Chinese ethnic people Uyghurs, Tajiks, Kirghiz, Uzbeks and many others Here, our journey heads northwardsinto one of China's wildest placesLeaving Kashgar and the Silk Road behindwe travel into the Tianshanor heavenly mountains.This great mountain range defines the border between China's most northwestern provinceand neighboring Tajikistan and KyrgyzstanIts majestic peaks are nearly as high as the Himalayas Forming a natural great wallFor much of the year it's bound up in iceBut the glacial melt water allows evergreen forests to grow a far cry from the desert south of hereThese mountains are the gatewayto some of China's most surprising people and places In the upland valleysa family of Kazakhs has been grazing their livestock all summer on the lush <u>alpine meadowsIt's autumnin a few weeks' time, winter snows will seal the mountain passes So the Kazakhs have decidedto break camp and move while they still canTurning their backs on the mountain pasturesthey have many long weeks of travel ahead of them along well worn trailsThe destination could hardly be more differentfrom the heavenly mountain's lush pasturesThese paths head into one of China's wildest and least known places This is the Zhunge'er Basinan added landthat lies at the westernmost edge of the great Gobi desert the most northerly desert in the worldthe Zhunge'er is a place of surprisesThis bizarre landscape is called theand though very little lives here nowthe ancestors of Tyrannosaurus rexonce roamed these hillsTheir fossils only discovered inBut the Zhunge'er is not entirely lifelessIn the darkness a little Roborovski's Hamster emerges to search for foodThey're the world's smallest hamstersthe size of a ping-pong balland they live in family groups around tenUnlike the Kazakhs hamsters cut migrate to avoid the severity of winterThey have to prepare for difficult times by storing up provisions to spend the season undergroundAnyone who has kept a pet hamsterknows what an energetic little creature it can be In a single nighta hamster may cover the equivalent of four human marathons but foraging far and wide creates a problemhow to carry the harvest back to its nestHere the hamster's famous flexiblecheek pouches come into playThey can be stuffed full of seeds for carrying back to the burrow Underground the family has special food chambers to store the bounty The supply will have to last themtrough the lean and cold times aheadWinter is on its wayWithin a few short weeksthe five colored hills are blanketed in snowdriven by icy winds from SiberiaDespite being at the same latitude as VeniceAsia's northern deserts have no nearby sea to warm them and sosuffer bitterly cold wintersWhen it melts next springthe snow will provide moisture for grasses and other plants to grow Like almost everywhere beyond the wallthe harsh conditions force people and wildlife to keep moving tofind enough to surviveThe Kazakhs have arrived from the Tianshan Mountains to graze their animals on the meagar pickings in the Zhunge'er But the Kazakhs don'thave this place all to themselves. Their winter migration routes take them passed the fence enclosure in the desert.The horses on this side of the fencearent domestic animals like those belonging to the Mongolians and KazakhsThese are the last wild horses on EarthMillions of them once screeched all the way to Europe but now they barely number in the hundredsFor part of the winterthe wild horses are quarantinedto stop their mating with the Kazakh's horsesThat way, the gene pool of the rare wild animals can be kept pure There is a big problem, howeverThe live stock and the wild horses compete for the same food Many Kazakhs families and their flockswill pass through here over the winterBy the time the wild horses can be released from the pen Much of the best forage will be goneWhen there are so little to go aroundit doesn't take much for the situation to turn critical Even in the least inhabited parts of Chinawildlife and people come into conflict in the struggle to survive Yet in this barren landscapea remarkable association between people and wildlife persists A tradition harking back almost yearsEighty-two year old Reya carries on a tradition that has made the Kazakhs famous throughout China Every winter for most of his life Reya has gone hunting with a golden eagleThis eagle is around years oldit was taken from the wild as a chickand raised by Reyawho trained it to return to him after each flight He will keep this bird for a total of ten seasons before setting it freeFoxes were once the favorite quarry for the eagle hunters These days they almost never catch anythingAs in many parts of Chinawildlife is far scarcer here than it used to be When Reya finally releases this eagleit will be the end of its hunting daysMany of the younger generation of China's nomads are moving to modern cities on leaving their traditions behindTheir lives no longer ruled by the changing of the seasons Back in the northeast in mid winterthe Great Wall still dominates the landscape Originally built to keep out dangerous warriors today it's a little more than a curiosity The Han Chinese whose ancestors built the Wall now live in great cities like Harbinfar to the north.Each year the artists of Harbinget ready for a special winter celebration Giant blocks of ice from nearby riversundergo a magical transfermationTourists flock to Harbin from all over China to see the spectacular carvingsand the ice city that has sprung up all around It takes people days to construct this icy wonderlandIt's impressive enough <u>by daybut the magic of this place only becomes apparent once the sun goes downNorthern China can be a harsh placebut also a place of great beautyThe Harbin Ice Festival showshow attitudes have changed since the Great Wall was built No longer are the extremes of life beyond the Wall merely to be feared Now it is possible to celebrate them,too。
bbc纪录片美丽中国第一集观后感英文
bbc纪录片美丽中国第一集观后感英文The last hidden world ----ChinaAfter watching the video for the second time, I was still fascinated by the well-bedded terraces, endless steppes, beautiful mountains and etc. There is no doubt that this video is a completely outstanding documentary which reflects Chinese Human Geography. To be honest, as a Chinese, I feel ashamed that I have not seen the most sceneries in this video. Our country is so attractive that I can not wait to learn more about it.In addition, when I was attracted by the beautiful scenery, I still thought about the development of our country. China has the largest population and the most ancient culture in the world, developing is the most important problem now. Land desertification, water resources crisis, more and more Industrial wastes, we need to face all those problems.Although China has vast territory and abundant resources, we should take care of it. There are so many species have disappeared forever, what we can do is to do our best to protect them. I hope our country will be wild not only in the past but also in the future.。
BBC美丽中国英文字幕(1、2)——香格里拉__龙之心
美丽中国英文字幕(2)——香格里拉Beneath billowing clouds,in China's far southwesternYunnan province,lies a place of mystery and legend.Of mighty rivers and some of the oldest jungles in the world.Here, hidden valleys nurture strange and unique creatures,and colourful tribal cultures. Jungles are rarely found this far north of the tropics.So, why do they thrive here?And how has this rugged landscape come to harbour the greatest natural wealth in all China? In the remote southwest corner of China, a celebration is about to take place.Dai people collect water for the most important festival of their year.The Dai call themselves the people of the water.Yunnan's river valleys have been their home for over 2,000 years.By bringing the river water to the temple, they honour the two things holiest to them Buddhism and their home.The Dai give thanks for the rivers and fertile lands which have nurtured their culture. Though to some it might seem just an excuse for the biggest water fight of all time.Dai lives are changing as towns get bigger and modernise but the Water Splashing Festival is still celebrated by all.The rivers which lie at the heart of Dai life and culture flow from the distant mountains of Tibet,southward through central Yunnan in great parallel gorges.The Dai now live in the borders of tropical Vietnam and Laos, but their legends tell of how theirancestors came here by following the rivers from mountain lands in the cold far north. Lying at the far eastern end of the Himalayas,the Hengduan mountains form Yunnan's northern border with Tibet.Kawakarpo, crown of the Hengduan range, is a site of holy pilgrimage.Yet, its formidable peak remains unconquered.Yunnan's mountains are remote,rugged and inaccessible.Here the air is thin and temperatures can drop below minus 40 degrees.This is home to an animal that's found nowhere else on Earth.The Yunnan snub-nosed monkey.It's found only in these few isolated mountain forests.No other primate lives at such high altitudes but these are true specialists.These ancient mountain dwellers have inspired legends.Local Lisu people consider them their ancestors,calling them "the wild men of the mountains".During heavy snowfalls, even these specialists cannot feed.It seems a strange place for a monkey.Between snows, the monkeys waste no time in their search for food.At this altitude, there are few fruits or tender leaves to eat.90% of their diet is made up of thefine dry wisps of a curious organism.Half fungus, half plant it's lichen.How have monkeys, normallyassociated with lowland jungle,come to live such a remote mountain existence?This is not the only remarkable animal found within these isolated high peaks.A Chinese red panda.Solitary and quiet, it spends much of its time in the tree tops.Despite its name,the red panda is only a very distant relative of the giant panda.It's actually more closely related to a skunk.But it does share the giant panda's taste for bamboo.Southwest China's red pandas areknown for their very strong facial markings which distinguish them from red pandas found anywhere else in the Himalayas.Like the monkeys, they were isolated in these high forestswhen the mountains quite literally rose beneath themin the greatest mountain-buildingevent in recent geological history.Over the last 30 million years, the Indian subcontinent has beenpushing northwards into Eurasia.On the border between India and Tibetthe rocks have been raised eight kilometres above sea level,creating the world's highestmountain range, the Himalayas. But to the east, the rocks have buckled into a seriesof steep north-south ridges,cutting down through the heart of Yunnan,the parallel mountains of the Hengduan Shan.These natural barriers serve toisolate Yunnan's plants and animals in each adjacent valley.While the huge temperaturerange between the snowy peaks and the warmer slopes below provides a vast array of conditions for life to thrive. Through spring, the Hengduan slopes stage one ofChina's greatest natural spectacles.The forests here are among the most diverse botanical areas in the world.Over 18,000 plant species grow here,of which 3,000 are found nowhere else.Until little more than a century ago,this place was unknown outside China.But then news reached the West of a mysterious, hidden world of the orient.Hidden among the mountains,a lost Shangri-la paradise.Western high society, in the gripof a gardening craze,was eager for exotic species from faraway places.This gave rise to a newbreed of celebrity adventurers, intrepid botanist-explorers known as "the Plant Hunters". Yunnan became their Holy Grail.The most famous was Joseph Rock, a real life Indiana Jones.Remarkable film footage captured his entourage on a series of expeditions,as they pushed into the deepest corners of Yunnan.In glorious colour he recorded the plant life he foundon special photographic glass plates.Sending thousands of specimens back to the West,the Plant Hunters changed thegardens of the world forever.Rock's success was born of a massive effort.For, to find his Shangri-la,not only had he to traverseendless mountain ranges,but some of the deepest gorges in the world.The Nujiang is called The Angry River.This 300-kilometre stretch of raging rapids is as much a barrier to lifeas are the mountains above.WAVES CRASHBut the plant hunters weren't the first people to travel here.Along the Nujiang,less than 30 rope crossings allowlocals passage across the torrents.Tiny hamlets cling to the slopes.This morning, it's market day,drawing people from upand down the valley.PIG OINKSGOAT BLEATSHanging from simple rope slings,people have been using the crossingsfor many hundreds of years.In such narrow, precipitous gorges it's by far the easiest way to get around.Once across, the steep sides mean it's still a hike.Many trek for hours by foot before they get to the market.The immense valley is home to over a dozen ethnic groups.Some, like the Nu people, are found only here.The markets bring the mountain tribes together.To continue his expeditions,Rock had to get his entire entourageacross the giant Yunnan rivers.He commissioned especially thick ropes made from forest rattanand filmed the entire event.With yak butter to smooth the ride, 40 men and 15 mules made the journey.Not all made it across.On the far side of the great Nujiang gorge, the Plant Hunters made a remarkable discovery. Far from the tropics,they seemed to be entering a steamy,vibrant tropical jungle,the forest of Gaoligongshan.The flora here is unlike anywhere else in the world.Next to subtropical species, alpine plants grow in giant form.Crowning the canopy, rhododendrons,up to 30 metres high.In April and May, their flowersturn the forests ruby red,attracting bird species found only here.Constant moisture in the air means that the branches are ladenwith flowering epiphytes,fiercely guarded by tiny sunbirds,unique to these valleys.Nectar feeders, these are the hummingbirds of the Old World tropics.The forests of Gaoligongshan are home to some of China's rarest wildlife. This is a female Temminck's Tragopan.She has a colourful male admirer.He's hoping to woo her with his peculiar peekaboo displaybut she's not about to be rushed.His colourful skin wattlereflects more light than feathers do.To her, this is like a neon sign.Seeing his chance,the male makes his move.Constant moisture inthe Gaoligongshan forestsmeans that throughout the yearthere are always fruits on the trees.Such abundance of food encouragesa high diversity of fruit eatersmore commonly found in the tropics.The black giant squirrel is foundonly in undisturbed rainforest.At close to a metre in length, it'sone of the world's largest squirrels.The mystery is that these forestsare growing well outside the tropics.By rights, none of this jungle,or its animals, should be here.These are bear macaques.They're found only intropical and sub-tropical jungle.With a tiny home range ofjust a few square kilometres,they depend on the abundant fruitthat only true rainforestscan provide all year round.To the European plant hunters,these northern rainforests must haveseemed a fantastic andmysterious lost world.Yet, when they came here, they wouldhave found beautifully constructedancient stone pathwayson which the forestcould be explored.Winding westwards into the hills,these were once some of the most important highways in Asia,the southwestern tea and silk road. Built thousands of years ago,the southwestern tea and silk road gave access to the worldbeyond China's borders,carrying tradesmen and travellers from as far away as Rome.Wars were fought over accessto this tiny path,the only sure route inor out of China,that was guaranteed tobe clear of snow all year round. So, what causes Gaoligongshan's strange and remarkable climate?In late May, gusts of wind arrive, bringing with them the key to Gaoligongshan's mystery.The winds are hotand saturated with water.They come all the wayfrom the Indian Ocean.Channelled by Yunnan'sunique geography,they bring with them themoisture of the tropical monsoon. The giant river valleys,created millions of years ago,act like immense funnels.The gorges are so deep and narrow, that the moist warm air is driven right up into the north of Yunnan. The result is rain, in torrents! Four months of daily rainstorms sustain luxuriant vegetation.The arrival of the monsoonawakens one of the forest'smost extraordinarymoisture-loving inhabitants.The crocodile newt is one ofthe most unusual of the many amphibian species found here.As the rains arrive,they emerge to mate.The newts are said toleave an odour trail thatpotential mates can follow.The crocodile newt gets its name from the bumps along its back. These are its defence.If grabbed by a potential predator, the tips of its ribs squeeze a deadly poison from the bumps.The deluge wakesanother forest inhabitant.This one is particularly astounding in its vigour!It can grow up to a metre a day, fast overtaking the otherplants around it.The taller it grows,the faster its growth rate,so that in a matter of days it towers above the undergrowth,and continues reaching for the sky. Not bad for what isessentially a grass.It's bamboo.Given the chance,bamboo will create immense forests, dominating entire areas.Bamboo forests occuracross southwest China,all the way to Shanghai.But probably the highest diversity of bamboos in the worldis found on the hillsand valleys of Yunnan.Though incredibly strong,bamboos have hollow stems,a perfect shelter for anycreatures which can find a way in. This entrance holewas made by a beetlebut it's being used by avery different animal.A bamboo bat.The size of a bumblebee, it's oneof the tiniest mammals in the world. The entire colony, up to 25 bats,fits into a single section of bamboo stem, smaller than a tea cup. It's quite a squeeze!Half the colony are babies.Though barely a week old, they are already almost as big as their mums. Feeding such a fast-growingbrood is hard work.The mums leave to huntjust after dusk each night.Back in the roost,the young are left on their own. Special pads on their wings help them to grip on the bamboo walls -most of the time.The young bats use the extra space to prepare for a life on the wingby preening and stretching.Packed in like sardines, they would make an easy target for a snake.But the snake has nochance of getting in.The entrance is thinnerthan the width of a pencil.When the mothers return,they can push through the narrow entrance only because oftheir unusually flattened skulls.But it's still a squeeze.Bamboos are exploited in avery different way by anotherforest dweller.Fresh bamboo shoots arean important forest crop.Ai Lao Xiang is of the Hani tribe, from the mountainvillage of Mengsong.Roasted, the tender shoots hegathers will make a tasty dish.The Hani have many uses for thedifferent bamboos they growand find in the forest around. Though flexible enough to be woven, bamboo has a highertensile strength than steel. Succulent when young,in maturity it's tough and durable, ideal for making a tableand strong enoughfor a pipe to last a lifetime.The people of southwest Chinahave found an extraordinary number of ways to exploit this mostversatile of plants.THEY SPEAK IN NATIVE LANGUAGEPart of bamboo'sphenomenal successis that it's so toughthat few animals can tackle it.Yet, bamboo does come under attack.A bamboo rat.Feeding almost exclusively on bamboo, they live their entire lives in tunnels beneath the forest.The thinner species of bambooare easy to attack and pull below. She has a fantastic sense of smell and can sniff out the freshgrowth through the soil.Bamboo spreads alongunderground stems.By following these,new shoots are found.Once a shoot is detected,she snips it free and dragsit down into her burrow.This female has a family.At just a few weeks old,the youngsters can already tacklethe hardest bamboo stemsand are eager to try.Bamboo's tough reputation is such, that another bamboo specialist was known by the Chinese as,"The Iron Eating Animal".The giant panda is famousfor its exclusive diet.Giant pandas are thought tohave originated in southwestChina, millions of years ago,but they are no longerfound in Yunnan.Recently, their specialiseddiet has had dire consequences. Bamboo has a bizarre life cycle, flowering infrequently, sometimes only once every hundred years or so. But when flowering does occur,it's on a massive scale,and it's followed by thedeath of all of the plants. Sometimes an entirebamboo forest may die.In undisturbed habitat, pandas simply move to another areawhere a differentbamboo species grows.But as human activity has fragmented their forest home,pandas find it increasingly hard to find large enough areasin which to survive.Wild pandas are now found onlyin the forests of Central China,far to the east.But in the hidden pockets of lowland jungle in Yunnan's tropical south, live one of China'sbest-kept wildlife secrets.DEEP BELLOWThe wild Asian elephant.Elephants once roamed acrossChina as far north as Beijing.But it's only in the hidden valleys of Yunnan that they have survived. Elephants are thearchitects of the forest.Bamboos and grasses are theirfavourite foodbut saplings, tree leaves andtwisted lianas are alltaken, with little care.As they move through the forest,the elephants open up clearings, bringing light to the forest floor. This has a majorimpact on their home.The richest forests are now known to be those which from time to time experience change.The Jinou people are incredibly knowledgeable about their forestsand claim to have uses for most of the plants that they find there. They have names for them all,those good for eating and some which even have strong medicinal qualities. By working here, the Jinou playa similar role to the elephants, opening up the forest,bringing space, light and diversity. Green, fast growingspecies are encouraged.Insects are in high abundance here, together with the animalsthat feed on them.Knowledge of the forest enablesthe Jinou to find not just plants, but other tasty forest food too. Forest crabs are common here,feeding on the abundant leaf litter. This will be a tastyaddition to the evening meal.Flowing through Yunnan'ssouthern valleys,the once angry riversare now swollen,their waters slow and warm.These fertile lowland valleysare the home of the Dai.The "People of the Water"live along streams whichoriginate in the surrounding hills. Each family keeps a kitchen garden modelled on the multi-layered structure of the surrounding forests, which the Dai hold sacred.The gardens are made more productive by inter-planting different crops. Tall, sun-loving species give shelter to plants which thrive in the shade. As companions,the plants grow better.Yunnan's forests are home to more than a dozen wild banana speciesand banana crops grow wellin most Dai gardens.The huge banana flowers are richin nectar for only two hours a day, but it's enough to attract a rangeof forest insects, including hornets. With their razor sharp mandibles, they find it easy to robthe flowers of their nectar.But hornets are predators too.They hunt other insects andcarry them back to their nest.An ideal target,but this grasshopper is no easy meal. There may be a price to pay.The Dai men, Po and Xue Ming, take advantage of a hunter's instincts.A hornet sting is agony.But for now it's distracted,intent on cutting awaya piece of grasshoppersmall enough to carry back home. Success!The white featherhardly slows the hornet,and, more importantly,it can be seen.Now the hunter is the hunted.So long as Po andXue Ming can keep up!Back at the nest,the other hornetsimmediately begin to cutthe feather free.But it's too late. The nest'slocation has been betrayed.The relationship between the forest animals and the people who live here was never one of harmony.Yet the fact that the Dai and other ethnic groups considered theseforests to be sacred,has ensured their survivaland now many have been givenextra protection as nature reserves. Ingenuity and hard workpays off at last.The fattened larvae areconsidered a delicacy by the Dai. Although these forests have experienced a great deal of change, they are still host to someancient and incredible relationships. Almost 60 centimetres high,this is the immense flowerof the Elephant yam.Locals call it the"Witch of the Forest".As the stars rise,the witch begins to cast her spell. The forest temperature drops,but the flower starts to heat up.A heat sensitive camera revealsthe flower's temperaturerising by an incredibleten degrees Celsius.At the same time, a noxious stench of rotting flesh fills the forest air. As the flower's heat increases,a cloud of odour rises up.The foul perfumecarries far and wide.It doesn't go unnoticed.Carrion beetles arrive on the scene. The beetles come in searchof a feast of warm decaying flesh, but they've been tricked.Slippery sides ensure they tumble straight into the centreof the monster flower.There's not enough room to spread their wingsand the waxy walls ensurethat there's no escape.But there's nothing sinisterin the flower's agenda.The beetles will beits unwitting helpers.Dawn arrives,but the flower remains unchanged, holding its captives through the day. As the second night falls,the witch stirs again.In a matter of minutes, the flower's precious golden pollensqueezes from the stamensand begins to fall,showering onto the captivebeetles below.Now, at last, the prisonersare free to go.The flower's wall changes texture, becoming roughto provide the ideal escape ladder. Loaded with their pollen parcels, they can now climb to freedom,just as other forest witchesare beginning to open.Seduced by the irresistible perfume, the beetles are sure to pay a visit, so ensuring pollination,and another generation of incredibly big, smelly flowers.As dawn arrives, forest birds claim their territories in the canopy. BIRDSONGBut there's one callwhich stands out among the rest - virtuoso of the forest symphony.STRANGE CALL RINGS OUTIt's a gibbon.UNDULATING CALL CONTINUESLiving on a remote mountainrange in south central Yunnanis one of the few remainingwild gibbon populations in China. The black-crestedgibbons of Wuliangshan.They are confined tothese forest mountains,so remote and steepthat few hunters ever come here.The Wuliangshan gibbons areunusual for their social structure. Most gibbons live in smallfamily groupsconsisting of a mating pairand their offspring.But these gibbons exist in troops. One male can have twoor sometimes three femalesand all of these can have young. Often even the juvenilesstay in the community.BABY SQUEAKSRarely glimpsed,this baby may be only a day old.If it survives infancy,then it has a promising futurein these few valleyswith its close-knit family.GIBBON CALLS RING OUTGibbon song once inspiredthe ancient poets of China,their glorious callsechoing far across the hills.But now, new, strangely quiet forests have come to Yunnan.These trees are here to producean important and valuable crop.When the tree bark is scored,it yields copious sticky sap,so bitter and tackythat nothing can feed on it.It's the tree's naturaldefence against attack.It's collected daily,bowl by bowl.It will be boiled and processed into one of the most important materials to a fast developing nation - rubber. The expansion of the rubberforests began in the '50s when China, under a world rubber embargo,had to become self-sufficientin this vital product.Beijing turned to the only place where rubber could grow,the tropical south of Yunnan.With efficiency and speed,some of the world's richest forests were torn up and burned.Replaced with mile upon mileof rubber plantation.But there was a problemfor the rubber growers.While Yunnan's uniquenatural forestscan survive on the valleyslopes which stretch to the north... ..just one severe frost will kill off these delicate rubber trees.So Yunnan's terrain puts a limit on how far the plantations can spread, halting at leasttheir northwards advance.The jungles of Yunnanare increasingly under pressure. HORN BEEPSNew roads criss-crossthe tiny remnant forests,the infrastructure needed for trade, industry and, increasingly, tourism. It's a meeting of two verydifferent worlds.ELEPHANT TRUMPETSThat elephants still exist in Chinais remarkableconsidering the immense pressuresin the world's most highlypopulated country.The 250 or so wild elephantswhich still live hereare now strictly protected.And each year youngare born to the small herds.If elephants were to surviveanywhere in China,it could only have been here,in Yunnan.The same mountains which guidethe monsoon rains northand which made Joseph Rock'sjourneys so treacherous,also guarded Yunnan's forestsand its wildlife.ELEPHANTS GRUNT AND TRUMPETFor the moment, the mountains arestill carpeted in a rich green,deceptive in its simplicity.Below the canopy lies perhapsChina's richest natural treasure.Delicate and unique,a complex world of intricaterelationshipsbetween animals, plants and people,beneath the clouds.美丽中国英文字幕(1)——龙之心The last hidden worldChinaFor centuries, travellers to China have told tales of magical landscapes and surprising creaturesChinese civilization is the world's oldestand today it's largestwith well over a billion peopleIt's home to more than 50 distinct ethnic groupsand a wide range of traditional life stylesoften in close partnership with natureWe know that China faces immense social and environmental problemsbut there is great beauty here tooChina is home to the world's highest mountains,vast deserts ranging from from searing hotto mind numbing coldsteaming forestsharboring rare creaturesgrassy plains beneath vast horizonsand rich tropical seasNow, for the first time everwe can explore the whole of this great countrymeet some of the surprising and exotic creatures that live hereand consider the relationship of the people and wildlife of Chinato the remarkable landscaping which they liveThis is wild ChinaOur exploration of China begins in the warm subtropical southOn the Li River, fishermen and birds perch on bamboo raftsa partnership that goes back more than a thousand yearsThis scenery is known throughout the worlda recurring motif in Chinese paintingsand a major tourist attractionThe south of China is a vast areaeight times larger than the UKIt's a landscape of hillsbut also of waterIt rains here for up to 250 days a yearand standing water is everywhereIn a floodplain of the Yangtse Riverblack-tailed godwits probe the mud in search of wormsBut it isn't just wildlife that thrive in this environmentthe swampy ground provides ideal conditions for the remarkable member of the grass family riceThe Chinese have been cultivating rice for at least 8 thousand yearsIt has transformed a landscapeLate winter in southern Yunnan, it's a busy time for local farmersas they prepare the age-old paddy field ready for the coming springThese hill slopes of Yuanyang countyplunge nearly 2 thousand meters to the floor of the Red River Valleyeach contains literally thousands of stack terraces carved out by hand using basic digging toolsYunnan's rice terraces are among the oldest human structures in Chinastill ploughed as they always have beenby domesticated water buffaloeswhose ancestors originated in these very valleysThis man-made landscape is one of the most amazing engineering feats of preindustrial China It seems as if every square inch of landhas been pressed into cultivationAs evening approachesan age-old ritual unfoldsIt's the mating seasonand male paddy frogs are competing for the attention of femalesBut it dosen't always pay to draw too much attention to youselfThe Chinese Pond Heron is a crapulous predatorEven in the middle of a ploughed paddy field<i>nature is red in beacon claw</i>This may look like a slaughterbut as each heron can swallow only one frog at a timethe vast majority will escape to croak another dayTerrace paddies like those of Yunyang county are found across much of southern ChinaThis whole vast landscape is dominated by rice cultivationIn here in Guizhou province, the Miao minority have developed a remarkable rice culture With every inch of fertile land given over to rice cultivationthe Miao build their wooden houses on the steepest and least productive hillsidesIn Chinese rural life, everything has a usedried in the sun, manure from the cowsheds would be used as cooking fuelIt's midday and the Song family aretucking into a lunch of rice and vegetablesOblivious to the domestic chitchatgranddad Guyong Song has serious maters on his mindSpring is a start of the rice growing seasonthe success of the crop will determin how well the family will eat next yearso planting at the right time is criticalThe ideal date depends on what the weather will do this yearnever easy to predictBut there is some surprising help at handOn the ceiling of the Song's living rooma pair of red-rumped swallows newly arrive from their winter migrationis busy fixing up last year's nestIn China, animals have value does much for their symbolic meaning as for many good they may doMiao people believe that swallow pairs remain faithful for lifeso their presence is a favor and a blessingbringing happiness to a marriage and good luck to a homeLike most Miao dwellings, the Song's living room windows look out over the paddy fields From early spring, one of these windows is always left open to let the swallows come and go freelyEach year, granddad Gu knows the exat day the swallows returnMiao people believe the birds arrival predicts the timing of a season ahead。
《BBC美丽中国》第一集
(SQUAWKING)NARRATOR: The last hidden world,China.For centuries, travellers to China have told tales of magical landscapes and surprising creatures.Chinese civilisation is the world's oldestand today, its largest,with well over a billion people.It's home to more than 50 distinct ethnic groupsand a wide range of traditional lifestyles,often in close partnership with nature.We know that China faces immense social and environmental problems. But there is great beauty here, too.China is home to the world's highest mountains,vast deserts ranging from searing hotto mind-numbing cold.Steaming forests harbouring rare creatures.Grassy plains beneath vast horizons.And rich tropical seas.Now for the first time ever,we can explore the whole of this great country,meet some of the surprising and exotic creatures that live hereand consider the relationship of the people and wildlife of Chinato the remarkable landscape in which they live.This is <i>Wild China.</i>Our exploration of China begins in the warm, subtropical south.On the Li River, fishermen and birds perch on bamboo rafts,a partnership that goes back more than a thousand years.This scenery is known throughout the world,a recurring motif in Chinese paintings.And a major tourist attraction.The south of China is a vast area,eight times larger than the UK.It's a landscape of hills but also of water.(THUNDER RUMBLING)It rains here for up to 250 days a year,and standing water is everywhere.(THUNDER RUMBLING)In the floodplain of the Yangtze River,black-tailed godwits probe the mud in search of worms.But isn't just wildlife that thrives in this environment.The swampy ground provides ideal conditionsfor a remarkable member of the grass family. |Rice.The Chinese have been cultivating rice for at least 8,000 years.It has transformed the landscape.Late winter in southern Yunnan is a busy time for local farmersas they prepare the age-old paddy fields ready for the coming spring. These hill slopes of the Yuanyang County plunge nearly 2,000 metres to the floor of the Red River valley.Each contains literally thousands of stacked terracescarved out by hand using basic digging tools.Yunnan's rice terraces are among the oldest human structures in China. Still ploughed, as they always have been,by domesticated water buffaloes,whose ancestors originated in these very valleys.This man-made landscapeis one of the most amazing engineering featsof pre-industrial China.It seems as if every square inch of landhas been pressed into cultivation.As evening approaches, an age-old ritual unfolds.It's the mating seasonand male paddy frogs are competing for the attention of the females. But it doesn't always pay to draw too much attention to yourself. The Chinese pond heron is a pitiless predator. (SQUAWKS)Even in the middle of a ploughed paddy field,nature is red in beak and claw.This may look like a slaughterbut as each heron can swallow only one frog at a time,the vast majority will escape to croak another day.Terraced paddies like those of the Yuanyang Countyare found across much of southern China.This whole vast landscape is dominated by rice cultivation.In hilly Guizhou Province,the Miao minority have developed a remarkable rice culture.With every inch of fertile land given over to rice cultivation,the Miao build their wooden houseson the steepest and least productive hillsides.In Chinese rural life, everything has a use.Dried in the sun, manure from the cow shedswill be used as cooking fuel.(WOMEN CHATTERING IN CHINESE)It's midday, and the Song familyare tucking into a lunch of rice and vegetables.(SPEAKING IN CHINESE)Oblivious to the domestic chit-chat,Granddad Gu Yong Xiu has serious matters on his mind.Spring is the start of the rice growing season.The success of the crop will determine how well the family will eat next year, so planting at the right time is critical.The ideal date depends on what the weather will do this year,never easy to predict.But there is some surprising help at hand.On the ceiling of the Songs' living room, a pair of red-rumped swallows, newly arrived from their winter migration,is busy fixing up last year's nest.In China, animals are valued as much for their symbolic meaningas for any good they may do.Miao people believe that swallow pairs remain faithful for life,so their presence is a favour and a blessing,bringing happiness to a marriage and good luck to a home.Like most Miao dwellings, the Songs' living room windowslook out over the paddy fields.From early spring, one of these windows is always left opento let the swallows come and go freely.Each year, granddad Gu notes the exact day the swallows return.Miao people believe the birds' arrival predicts the timing of the season ahead. This year, they were late.So Gu and the other community elders have agreedthat rice planting should be delayed accordingly.As the Miao prepare their fields for planting,the swallows collect mud to repair their nestsand chase after insects across the newly ploughed paddies.Finally, after weeks of preparation,the ordained time for planting has arrived.But first the seedlings must be uprooted from the nursery bedsand bundled up ready to be transported to their new paddyhigher up the hillside.All the Songs' neighbours have turned out to help with the transplanting. It's how the community has always worked.When the time comes, the Songs will return the favour.While the farmers are busy in the fields,the swallows fly back and forth with material for their nest.Many hands make light work.Planting the new paddy takes little more than an hour.Job done, the villagers can relax,at least until tomorrow.But for the nesting swallows, the work of raising a familyhas only just begun. |In the newly planted fields, little egrets hunt for food. The rice paddies harbour tadpoles, fish and insectsand the egrets have chicks to feed.。
美丽中国第一集中英文字幕 讲解版
前2:10使用The last hidden world, China.For centuries, travelers to China have told tales of magical landscapes and surprising creatures.Chinese civilization is the world's oldest and today, its largest, with well over a1.3 billion people.It's home to more than 50 distinct ethnic groups and a wide range of traditional lifestyles,often in close partnership with nature.We know that China faces immense social and environmental problems, but there is great beauty here, too.China is home to the world's highest mountains, vast deserts ranging from searing hot to mind-numbing cold, steaming forests harboring rare creatures, grassy plains beneath vast horizons and rich tropical seas. Now for the first time ever, we can explore the whole of this great country, meet some of thesurprising and exotic creatures that live here and consider the relationship of the people and wild life of China to the remarkable landscape in which they live.This is wild China.最后的隐世净土中国数世纪来,旅人传诵着关于这片神奇土地,以及那些神奇生物的传说。
BBC美丽中国英文字幕word第一集
BBC美丽中国英文字幕word第一集The last hidden worldChinaFor centuries, travellers to China have told tales of magical landscapesand surprising creaturesChinese civilization is the world's oldestand today it's largestwith well over a billion peopleIt's home to more than distinct ethnic groupsand a wide range of traditional life stylesoften in close partnership with natureWe know that China faces immense social and environmental problems but there is great beauty here tooChina is home to the world's highest mountains, vast deserts ranging from from searing hotto mind numbing coldsteaming forestsharboring rare creaturesgrassy plains beneath vast horizonsand rich tropical seasNow, for the first time everwe can explore the whole of this great countrymeet some of the surprising and exotic creatures that live here and consider the relationship of the people and wildlife of China to the remarkable landscaping which they liveThis is wild ChinaOur exploration of China begins in the warm subtropical south On the Li River, fishermen and birds perch on bamboo rafts a partnership that goes back more than a thousand years This scenery is known throughout the worlda recurring motif in Chinese paintingsand a major tourist attractionThe south of China is a vast areaeight times larger than the UKIt's a landscape of hillsbut also of waterIt rains here for up to days a yearand standing water is everywhereIn a floodplain of the Yangtse Riverblack-tailed godwits probe the mud in search of worms But it isn't just wildlife that thrive in this environment the swampy ground provides ideal conditions for the remarkable member of the grassfamilyriceThe Chinese have been cultivating rice for at least thousand yearsIt has transformed a landscapeLate winter in southern Yunnan, it's a busy time for local farmers as they prepare the age-old paddy field ready for the coming spring These hill slopes of Yuanyang countyplunge nearly thousand meters to the floor of the Red River Valley each contains literally thousands of stack terraces carved out by hand using basic digging toolsYunnan's rice terraces are among the oldest human structures in China still ploughed as they always have beenby domesticated water buffaloeswhose ancestors originated in these very valleysThis man-made landscape is one of the most amazing engineering feats of preindustrialChinaIt seems as if every square inch of landhas been pressed into cultivationAs evening approachesan age-old ritual unfoldsIt's the mating seasonand male paddy frogs are competing for the attention of females But it dosen't always pay to draw too much attention to youself The Chinese Pond Heron is a crapulous predatorEven in the middle of a ploughed paddy fieldThis may look like a slaughterbut as each heron can swallow only one frog at a timethe vast majority will escape to croak another dayTerrace paddies like those of Yunyang county are found across much of southern ChinaThis whole vast landscape is dominated by rice cultivation In here in Guizhou province, the Miao minority have developed a remarkable rice cultureWith every inch of fertile land given over to rice cultivation the Miao build their wooden houses on the steepest and least productive hillsides In Chinese rural life, everything has a usedried in the sun, manure from the cowsheds would be used as cooking fuel It's midday and the Song family aretucking into a lunch of rice and vegetablesOblivious to the domestic chitchatgranddad Guyong Song has serious maters on his mindSpring is a start of the rice growing seasonthe success of the crop will determin how well the family will eat next year so planting at the right time is criticalThe ideal date depends on what the weather will do this year never easy to predictBut there is some surprising help at handOn the ceiling of the Song's living rooma pair of red-rumped swallows newly arrive from their winter migration is busy fixing up last year's nestIn China, animals have value does much for their symbolic meaning as for many goodthey may doMiao people believe that swallow pairs remain faithful for life so their presence is a favor and a blessingbringing happiness to a marriage and good luck to a home Like most Miao dwellings, the Song's living room windows look out over the paddy fieldsFrom early spring, one of these windows is always left open to let the swallows comeand go freelyEach year, granddad Gu knows the exat day the swallows return Miao people believe the birds arrival predicts the timing of a season ahead This year, they were lateso Gu and the other community elders have agreed that rice planting should be delayedaccordinglyAs the Miao prepare their fields for plantingthe swallows collect mud to repair their nestsand chase after insects across the newly ploughed paddies Finally, after weeks of preparationthe ordained time for planting has arrivedbut first the seedlings must be uproot from the nursery beds and bundled up ready to be transported to their new paddy higher up the hillsideAll the Song's neighbors have turned to help with the transplanting It's how the community has always workedwhen the time comes, the Songs will return the favorWhile the farmers are busy in the fieldsthe swallows fly back and forth with material for their nest Many hands make light workplanting the new paddy takes a little more than an hour Job done, the villagers can relaxat least until tomorrowBut for the nesting swallows, the work of raising a family has only just begunIn the newly planted fieldslittle egrets hunt for foodsThe rice paddy harbor tadpoles, fish and insectsand egrets have chicks to feedThis colony in Chongqing province is established in when a few dozen birds build nests in the bamboo grove behind Yanguang village Believing they were assigned of lucklocal people initially protected the egrets and the colony grove But their attitude change when the head of the village fell ill They blame the birds and were all set to destroy their nests when the localgovernment stepped in to protect them Bedny bamboo may not be the safest nesting placebut at least these youngsters won't end up at someone's dinner These chicks have just had a meal delivered by their mom quite a chance for litter beaksProviding their colonies are protectedwading birds like egrets are among the few wild creatures which benefit directly fromintensive rice cultivationGrowing rice needs lots of waterbut even in the rainy south, there are landscapes where water is surprisingly scarceThis vast area of southwest Chinathe size of France and Spain combinedis famous for its clusters of conical hillslike giant upturned egg carton seperated by dry empty valleys Thisis the karsta limestone terrain which has become the defining image of southern China Karst landscapes are often studed with rocky outcrops forcinglocal farmers to cultivate tiny fieldsThe people who live hereare among the poorest in ChinaIn neighboring Yunnan provincelimestone rocks have taken over entirelyThis is the famous Stone Forestthe product of countless years of erosionproducing a maze of deep gullets and sharp-edged pinnacles Limestone has a strange property that is dissolves in rain water Over many thousands of years, water has corrode its way deep into the heart of the bedrock itselfThis natural wonder has a famous tourist spotreceiving close to m visitors each yearThe Chinese are fond of curiously shaped rocksand many have been given fanciful namesNo prices for guessing what this one is calledBut there is more to this landscapethan meets the eyeChina has literally thousands of mysterious cavernsconcealed beneath the visible landscape of the karstMuch of this hidden world has never been seen by human eyes And it's only just now being exploredFor a growing band of intrepid young Chinese explorerscaves represent the ultimate adventureExploring a cave is like taking the journey through time a journey which endless raindrops would have followed over countless centuries Fed by countless drips and tricklesthe subterranean river carves ever deeper into the rock The caveriver's course is channeled by the beds of limestone A witness in therock can not allow the river to increase its gradient to flow in providing a real challenge for the cave explorersThe downward rushes halted when the water table is reached Here the slow flowing river carves tunnels with a more rounded profile This tranquil world is home to specialized cave fisheslike the eye-less Golden BarbChina may have unique kinds of cave evolved fishesthan anywhere else on EarthAbove the water tableancient caverns abandoned by the river slowly fill up with stalactites and stalagmitesStalactites form as trickling water deposites tiny quantities of rock over hundreds or thousands of yearsStalagmites grow up where lime laid and drips hit the cave floor So far, only a fraction of China's caves have been thoroughly prospected and caves are constantly discovering new subterranean marvels many of which are subsequently developed into commercial show caves Finally escaping the darknessthe cave river and its human explorers emerge in a valley far from where their journeybeganor now the adventure is overRivers which issue from cavesare the key to survival in the karst countryThis vertical gorge in Guizhou provinceis a focal point for the region's wildlifeThis is one of the world's rarest primatesFran'c'ois' langurIn China, they survive in just two southern provincesGuizhou and Guangxialways in ragged limestone terrainsLike most monkeys, they're social creaturesand spend a great deal of time grooming each otherLangurs are essentially vegetarian with a diet of buds, fruits, and tender young leavesBabies are born with jinger furwhich gradually turns black from the tail end Young infants have a vise-like gripused for cling on to mom for deer lifeAs they get olderthey get bolder and take more risksThose are the survive spend a lot of time travelling Yet experienced adults know exactly where to find seasonal foodin different parts of their rangeIn such steep terraintravel involves a high level of climbing skill These monkeys are spectacularly good rock climbers from the time they learnt to walk In langur societyfemales rule the roostand take the lead when the family is on the move One section ofcliffwoops is a trickle of mineral-rich waterwhich the monkeys seem to find irresistible These days there are few predators in the Mayanghe Reserve which might pose a risk to baby monkeybut in past centuries, this area of south China was home to leopards, pythons, and even tigers To survive dangerous night prowlers the langurs went undergroundusing their rock climbing skills to seek shelter in inaccessible cavernsFilmed in near darkness using a night vision camera the troopclmbers along familiar ledgesworn smooth by generations before themDuring cold winter weatherthe monkeys venture deeper undergroundwhere the air stays comparatively warmAt last, journeys end,a coated niche beyond the reach of even the most enterprisingpredatorBut it's not just monkeys that find shelter in caves These children are off to schoolIn rural China, that may mean a long trek each morning passing through a cave or two on the wayBut not all pupils have to walk to schoolThese children are boarderAs the day pupils near journey's endthe boarders are still making breakfastIn the school yard, someone seems to have switched the lights off But this is no ordinary play groundand no ordinary schoolIts houseinside a caveA natural vault of rock keeps out the rainso there is no need for a roof on the classroomZhongdong cave school is made up of classeswith a total of childrenAs well as a school, the cave houses familiestogether with their livestockThis could be the only cave dwelling cows on EarthWith school work over, it's play time at lastIn southern China, caves aren't just used for shelter they can be a source of revenue for the communityPeople have been visiting this cave for generations The cave floor is covered in guanoso plentiful that minutes' work can fill these farmer's baskets This used as a valuable source of fertilizerA clue to the source of the guano can be heard above the noise of the river The sound originates high up in the roof of the cave The entrance is full of swiftsThey are very sociable birdsmore than , of them share this cave in southern Guizhou province The biggest swift colony in ChinaThese days, Chinese house swiftsmostly nest in the roofs of buildingsbut rock crevasses like these were their original home long before houses were inventedThough the swifts depend on the cave for shelterthey never stray further than the limits of daylight as their eyes can't see in darkHowever, deep inside the cavernare the creatures are better equippedfor subterranean lifeA colony of bats is just waking upusing ultrasonic squeaks to orientate themselves in the darkness Night is the time to go huntingRickett's mouse-eared bat is the only bat in Asia which specializes in catching fishestracking them down from the sound reflection of ripples on the water surface This extraordinary behavior was only discovered in the last couple of years and has never been filmed beforeIf catching fish in the dark is impressiveimagine eating a slippery minnow with no hands while hanging upside down Dawn, over the karst hills of GuilinThese remarkable hills owe their peculiar shapesto the mildly acid waters of the Li Riverwhose meandering course over eons of time has corrode away their basis until only the rocky course remainedLi is one of the cleanest rivers in Chinaa favorite spot for fishermen with their trained cormorants The men, all called Huang, come from the same village now in their seventies and eightiesthey've been fishermen all their livesBefore they release the birdsthey tie a noose, loosely around the neckto stop them swallowing any fish they may catchChancing and dancing, the Huangs encourage their birds to take the plunge Underwaterthe cormorant's hunting instinct kicks inturning them into fish seeking missilesWorking together,a good cormorant team can catch a couple of dozen decent-sized fish in a morningThe birds return to the raft with their fish because they've been trained to do soFrom the time it first hatchedeach of these cormorants has been reared to a life of obedience to its master The birds are, in effect, slavesBut they are not stupidIt's said the cormorants can key the tally of the fish they catch at least up to sevenSo unless they get a reward now and then,they simply withdraw their laborThe fishermen of course keep the best fish for themselves The cormorants get the leftover tiddliesWith its collar removedthe bird can at last swallow its prizeBest of all, when it isn't meant to have...These days,competition for modern fishing techniquesmeans the Huangs can't make a living from traditional cormorant fishing alone And this -year old traditionis now practiced mostly to entertain touristsBut on Caohai lake in nearby Guizhou Provincean even more unusual fishing industry is alive and well Geng Zhongsheng is on his way to set out his net for the night Geng's net is a strange tubular contraption with a closed off end More than a hundred fishermen make their living from the lake Its mineral-rich waters are highly productiveand there are nets everywhereThe next morning, Geng returns with his son to collect his catch At first sight, it looks disappointingTiny fishes, lots of shrimps, and some wriggling bugs Geng doesn't seem too downheartedThe larger fish are kept alivethe only way they'll stay fresh in the heatSurprisingly, some of the bugs are also singled out for special treatment They are the young stage of dragonfliespredators that feed on worms and tadpolesNowhere else in the world are dragonfly nymphs harvested like this Back home,Geng spreads his catch on the roof to dryIt's being China, nothing edible would be wastedThere is a saying in the far south"We will eat anything with legs, except a table;and anything with wings, except a plane."Within a few hours, the dried insects are ready to be backed up and taken to marketIts the dragonfly nymphs that fetch the best priceFortunately, Caohai's dragonflies are abundant and fast breeding so Geng and his fellow fishermen have so far had little impact on their numbers But not all wildlife is so resilientThis buddhist temple near Shanghaihas an extraordinary story attached to itIn MayA Wild China camera team filmed this peculiar Swinhoe's turtle in the temple's fishpondAccording to the monks, this turtle had been given to the temple during the Mingdynastyover years agoIt was thought to be the oldest animal on EarthSoft shell turtles are considerd a good-made delicacy by many Chinese and when it was filmedthis was one of just three Swinhoe's Turtles left alive in China The rest of its kindhaving been rounded up and eatenSadly, just a few weeks after filmingthis ancient creature diedThe remaining individuals of its species are currently kept in seperate zoos and Swinhoe's Turtle is now reckoned extinct in the wildIn fact, most of the types of fresh water turtles in China are now vanishingly rareThe answer to extinctionis protectionAnd there is now a growing network ofnature reserves through southern ChinaOf these, the Tianzi Mountain Reserve at Zangjiajie is perhaps the most visited byChinese nature loverswho come to marvel at the gravity-defying landscape of soaring sandstone pinnaclesWinding between Zhangjiajie's peakscrystal clear mountain streams are home to what is perhaps China's strangest creatureThis bizarre animalis a type of newtthe Chinese Giant SalamanderIn China, it is known as the baby fishbecause when distressed, it makes a sound like a crying infant It grows up to a meter and a half longmaking it the world's largest amphibianUnder natural conditions, a Giant Salamander may live decades But like so many Chinese animalsit is considered delicious to eatDespite being classed as protected speciesgiant salamanders are still illegally sold for food and the babyfish is now rareand endangered in the wildFortunately in a few areas like Zhangjiajie,Giang Salamanders still surviveunder strict official protectionThe rivers of Zhangjiajie flow northeast into the Yangtse floodplain known as the land of fish and riceOn an island in a lake in Anhui provincea dragon is stirringThis is the ancestral home of China's larges and rarest reptile A creature of mystery and legendDragon eggs are greatly prizedthese babies need to hatch out quickIt would seem someone is on their trailFor a helpless baby reptileimprisoned in a leathery membrane inside a choky shell a process of hatchingis a titanic straggleAnd time is running outIt's taken hours for the little dragon to get its head out of this egg It needs to gather its strength nowa final massive pushFree at lastthe baby Chinese alligators instinctively head upwards toward the surface of the nestand waiting outside worldBut the visitors are not what they seemSheshuzhen and her son live nearbyShe has been caring for her local alligators for over yearsso she had fair ideawhen the eggs will likely to hatchBack home, she's built a pond,surrounded by netting to keep out predatorswhere her charges will spend the next monthsuntil they are big enough to fend for themselvesFor the past twenty yearssmall scale conservation projects like this are all that have kept China's wildalligators from extinctionJust south of the alligator countrydawn breaks over a very different landscapeThe meter high granite peaksof the Huangshanor yellow mountainTo the ChineseHuangshan's pines are peak mines, the strength, and resilience of nature Some of these trees are thought to be over a thousand years old Bellow the granite peakssteep forest in the valleysshelter surprising inhabitantsHuangshan macaquesrare descendents of the Tibetan macaques of western China are unique to these mountain valleys where they enjoy strict official protection After a morning spent in the treetopsthe troop is heading for the shade of the valleya chance for the grownups escape the heatand maybe pickup a lanch snack from the streamAs in most monkey societiessocial contact involves a lot of groomingGrooming is all very well for grownupsBut young macaques have energy to burnLike so much monkey businesswhat starts off is a bit of playful rough-and-tumble soon begin to get out of handThe alpha male has seen it all beforehe's not in the least botheredbut someone or something is watching with a less than friendly interest The Chinese Moccasin is ambush predator with a deadly bite This is one of China's largest and most feared varmint snakes But themondkeys have lived alongside these dangerous serpent for thousands of yearsThey use this, specific alarm call, to warn each other whenever a snake is spottedOnce its cover is blown, the bite proposes no threat to the monkeys now safe in the treetopsAnd life soon returens to normalBy later summer, the rice fields of southern China have turn to gold The time has come to bring in the harvest Nowadays, modern highyield strains are grown throughout much of the rice lands Boosted by chemical fertilizersand reaped by combine harvestersThis is the great rice bowl of Chinaproducing a quarter of the world's riceInsects, stirred up by the noisy machines, are snapped up by gangsof red-rumped swallows including this year's youngsterswho have fledged several keeks agoThis could be their last feast before they head for the winterMechanized farming works best in the flat bottom valleys of the lowlandTo the south, in the terraced hills in Zhejiang province an olderand simpler lifestyle persistsIt's in the morningand Longxian's most successful business man is off to workIn the golden terraces surrounding the village the ears of rice are plump and right for harvesting But today, rice isn't at the most in Mr Yang's mind He has bigger fish to fryFurther at valley, the harvest has already began Yang's fields are ripe toobut they haven't been drained yetThat's because for him, rice is not the main crop The baskets he's carried up the hillside give a clue to Yang's businessBut before he starts workhe needs to let some water out of the system As the water level dropsthe mystery is revealedgolden cubLongxian villages discoverd the benefits of transferring wild caught cub into theirpaddy fields long agoThe tradition has been going on herefor at least yearsAs the water level in the paddy dropsbamboo gate stop the fish's escapingThe beauty of this farming methodis that it delivers two cropsfrom the same field at the same timefishand riceSmart ecology like thisis what enables China to be largely self-s<fontcolor=ffffcc>u</font>fficient in foodeven todayBack in the villageYang has his own smoke housewhere he preserves his fish ready for marketLongxian cub have unusually soft scalesand a very delicate flavorperhaps as a result of the local waterMeanwhile, outside the smoke housethere is something fishy going onTo mark the harvestthe village is staging a partyChildren from Longxian schoolhave spent weeks preparing for their big moment Everyone from the community is here to support them The rice growing cycle is complete By Novembernorthern China is becoming distinctly chillybut the south is still relatively warm and welcoming Accross the vast expanse of Poyang lakethe birds are gatheringTundra swans are long-distance migrant from northern Siberia To the Chinese, they symbolize the essence of natural beauty The Poyang Lake Nature Reserve offers winter refuge to more than a quarter of a million birdsfor than speciescreating one of southern China's finest wildlife experiences Thelast birds to arrive at Poyangare those which have made the longest journey to get here All the way from the arctic coast of SiberiaThe Siberian Crane, known in China, the White Crane is seen as a symbol of good luckEach year, almost the entire world population of these critically endangered birdsmake a km round tripto spend the winter at PoyangLike the white cranesmany of southern China's unique animals face pressure from exploitation andcompetition with peopleover space and resourcesBut if China is leaving proof of anythingit is that wildlife is surprisingly resilientGien the right helpeven the rarest creatures can return from the brinkIf we show the will naturewill find the way.。
BBC拍摄——美丽中国视频英文字幕CD4(上)
BBC拍摄——美丽中国视频英⽂字幕CD4(上)The great wall of China was built by the Han Chinese to keep out the nomadic tribes from the north . They called these people barbarians , and their lands were considered barren and uninhabitable . Northern China is indeed a harsh place of terrible winters , ferocious summers , parched deserts . But it’s far from lifeless . With colorful places , surprising creatures , amazing people and strange landscapes . The further we travel, the more extreme it becomes . So how do people and wildlife cope with the hardships and challenges of life beyond the wall ?Music ….Wild China --- Beyond the Great WallThe northern limits of Ancient China were defined by the Great Wall which meanders for nearly 5,000 kilometers from east to west . The settle Han people of the Chinese heartland were invaded many times by warlike tribes from the north . The Great Wall was built to protect the Han Chinese from the invasion . To meet those fearsome northerners and the wild creatures who share their world , we must leave the shelter of the Wall and travel into the unknown . Northeast China was known historically as Manchuria . Its upper reaches are on the same latitudes as Paris but in winter it is one of the coldest , most hostile places on the planet . Bitter winds from Siberia regularly bring temperatures of 40 degrees below zero . Dense forests of evergreen trees cover these lands . And the rugged terrain is made even more difficulty by impenetrable ravines .We start our journey on a frozen river snaking between China’s northeasternmost corner and Siberia . The Chinese call it the Black Dragon River . The people who live here aren’t exactly fearsome warriors . They’re too busy coping with the harsh winter conditions and they respond to the challenge in some creative ways . The Black Dragon River is home to one of the smallest ethnic groups in China . The Hezhe People . It’s not just bicycles that seem out of place in this icy world . Fishing boats and nets lie abandoned , a long way from open water . Underneath a meter of solid ice swim a huge variety of fish , including 500-pound sturgeon , enough to feed a family of Hezhe for weeks . But how can they catch their quarry ? First they must chisel a hole through the ice to reach the water below . Then they need to set their fishing net under the ice , a real challenge . A second hole is made , 20 metres away from the first and a weighted string is dropped in . Then , a long bamboo pole is used to hook the string and pull the net into the position beneath the ice . After a few days , the nets are checked . These days , almost nobody catches a rare giant sturgeon . The Black Dragon River has been overfished like so many others . But even these smaller fish are a welcome catch . Frozen within seconds , the fish are guaranteed to stay fresh for the wobby cycle ride home . (冰窟捕鱼)The forests that lie south of the Black Dragon River are bound up in snow for more than half the year . It’s deathly silent . Most of the animals here are either hibernating or have migrated south for the winter . But there is an exception . Wild boars roam the forests of the northeast . Like the Hezhe people , the boars find it difficult to gather food in winter . To survive , they follow their noses , among the keenest in the animal kingdom . They will eat almost anything they unearth . But one energy-rich food source is particularly valued . Walnuts . When a lucky boar finds a walnut , there’s bound to be trouble . But despite the squabbles , wild boars are social animals and together in groups . Staying close together may help them to keep warm in the extreme cold . But there is another reason for group living . More ears to listen out for danger . (野猪)Siberian tigers also live in these forests . But these days , only in captivity . There maybe less than a dozen wild Siberian tigers in China . Though there are many more in breeding centers . This enclosure at Hengdaohezi started breeding tigers in 1986 to supply bones and body parts for the Chinese medicine market . Trade in tiger parts was banned in China in the 1990s and the breeding center is now just a tourist attraction . (西伯利亚虎)The forests of the northeast stretch to where the Chinese , Russian and Mongolian borders meet . Here , a surprising herd of animals is on the move . The reindeer were introduced to China hundreds of years ago by the nomadic Ewenki people who came here from Siberia . It’s late April , and the women are calling in their reindeer , which are semi-wild , and have spent all winter away in the forest . This is a very special relationship . Each reindeer has its own name and many were hand-reared by these women . Finally reunited after months apart , they will now remain together until autumn . The Ewenki women are anxious to check the condition of their animals and to see which of the reindeer might be pregnant . Eighty-one-year-old Maliya Suo is one of only 30 Ewenki people still living the nomadic life in these cold northern lands . Almost all her fellow Ewenki have given up the forest life to settled in concrete houses in modern cities . The reindeer herders are now almost as rare as wild Siberia tigers . There’s about to be a new addition to the family . The women act as midwives to the newborn calves , helping to nuture them through their first precious minutes of life . But the world around them is changing fast . This could be the last generation this ancient partnership will endure . This is hard to imagine pf the dangerous tribal people that the Great Wall was built to keep at bay . (鄂温克族牧⼈)Along China’s border with North Korea is this region’s most famous mountain , Changbaishan . It’s name means Ever-White and it harbours the world’s highest volcanic lake . Even in mid-May there is still ice everywhere . But there are signs that the seasons are changing . Warmer winds arrive from the south , and within a few short weeks Changbai Mountain is transformed . Water begins to flow down the mountainside once more , replenishing the landscape . It’s June , and insects emerge to take advantage of the abundance of flowers . The warm weather sees the arrival of migrant birds . Stonechats that have spent the winter in the south of China return here to raise their chicks . With so many insects around , the stonechats may have several broods . Heading west from Changbai Mountain , the forests give way to rolling grasslands . (长⽩⼭)The Great Wall stretches off into the distance , defining the southern limits of the vast Mongolian Steppe . North of the Wall are huge areas of grasslands but one place on our journey is particularly significant . In the tall grass , a family of red foxes is raising its cubs . Today they have this meadow pretty much to themselves . But it wasn’t always the case . Eight centuriesago , this place would have been teeming with people . Now these ruins in a field a short distance from Beijing are all that remains of the great city of Xanadu , once the summer capital of China . Within these walls it is said that the leader of the Mongolians , the mighty Kublai Khan , welcomed Marco Polo to China . Mongolian warriors established the greatest empire in history , stretching to the borders of Europe . Fear of this warrior tribe is the main reason the Han Chinese built the Great Wall . The cornerstone of the Mongolian’s supremacy was their relationship with horses . This is what brought them such success in war . The Mongolian raiders traveled light , and rode with spare horses so they could move huge distances , strike and then retreat quicker than their opponents . At the heart of Mongolian culture is horse racing . The annual Nadam Festival , held each July is a chance for young Mongolians to show off their horsemanship . It’s said that Mongolians people are born in the saddle . Even as children . they are consummate riders . Horsemanship was the core of the Mongolians’ success as warriors in the past , and is central to their lives as nomads today . In an area of grassland known as Bayanbulak , families of nomadic Mongolians are gathering . The name Bayanbulak means “rich headwaters ” and they’ve come here to set up temporary homes to graze their livestock on the lush summer pastures . The search for fresh fodder for their animals keeps them on the go and being able to move home so easily is a real advantage . It takes only a few minutes for the Mongolian family to set up their yurts .(蒙古游牧民族)But the Mongolians don’t have this place all to themselves . The rich resources also attract a huge variety of birds . Demoiselle cranes , wading birds and waterfowl migrate here from all over Asia , drawn to the rivers and wetlands fed by glacial meltwater from nearby mountains . This place is known in China as Swan Lake . It’s the world’s most important breeding site for whooper swans , and arguably , mosquitoes as well . The pastures at Swan Lake provide endless amounts of lush grass for birds to nest in and for livestock to eat . It would seem there’s plenty for everybody . But occasionally they can get too close for comfort . Eight hundred years ago , the Mongolians were the most feared people on earth . But they have a spiritual side as well . The birds of Swan Lake have little cause to worry . The Mongolians protect the swans , and venerate them , calling them birds of God . (天鹅湖)The Great Wall’s journey through northern China continues westward bisecting a landscape that becomes increasingly parched . Our journey has brought us halfway across northern China and the grasslands are becoming hot , dry and desolate . Wandering these wastes are creatures that look more African than Asian . These are goitered gazelles , skittish and easily startled . When threatened by danger , they’re as fast as a racehorse . But in this intense heat , they favour a gentler pace . There’s little standing water here , but the gazelles have a remarkable ability to extract moisture from dry grass . Although finding enough worth eating keeps them constantly on the move . Even out here in the semi-deserts , the Wall continues its long march . Here it’s made of little more than compacted earth . But with hardly any rain falling , it’s suffered very little erosion over the centuries . Hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives building it . Yet it seems hard to believe that anyone felt that these distant wastelands needed protecting . But the Wall still has one final surprise . This is Jiayuguan , the mighty fortress in the desert . Built in the Ming dynasty over 600 years ago , legend says that the construction of the fortress was so meticulously planned that 100,000 bricks were specially made and only one brick was left unused . This fortress marks the end of the Great Wall of China . The greatest man-made barrier on earth . (长城外荒凉、嘉峪关)But ahead lies an even more formidable barrier . A vast no-man’s land of deserts that stretch westward to the border of Central Asia . Jiayuguan Fortress was considered to be the last outpost of Chinese civilization . Beyond this point lay utter desolation . China’s largest desert , the Taklamakan , lies out there . It’s name been translated as “You go in , and you never come out . ” This is a place of intense heat , abrasive wind-blown sand totally hostile to life . Yet there was a route through the desert . For those brave enough to risk their lives for it . People were lured into the horrors of the deserts because the Chinese had a secret so powerful that it change the course of history . The key to that secret lies in the distant past . Legend has it that around 5,000 years ago , a prince was walking in her garden when something fell into her tea cup . A magical thread was extracted and it became more prized than gold or jade . The thread was silk . Incredibly , such a beautiful substance and all the history behind it comes from a humble little insect . The silkworm . Silk moths lay several hundred eggs , and the tiny caterpillars that emerge eat noting but mulberry leaves . After 50 days of gluttony they’ve grown 10,000 times heavier . By this stage , 25% of their body mass is made of silk glands . In the process of turning into adult moths , they spin a cocoon from a single strand of silk which can be over 1,000 meters long . It was legendary strength and brightness of silk fibres that made it so sought after . For over 5,000 years , people built great fortunes and mighty kingdoms on these delicate threads . And the desert routes those ancient trade took became the fabled Silk Road . The principle of extracting raw silk hasn’t changed since its discovery . Harvested cocoons are dropped into boiling water which unravels the long filaments . These are then gathered and spun into raw silk thread . Here at Hotan , on the ancient Silk Road , silk weaving is still a cottage industry , done the old-fashioned way on wooden looms . (塔克拉玛⼲沙漠、丝绸之路、蚕丝)。
BBC美丽中国第六集中英文字幕
wild China.美丽中国(Wild China)第六集潮汐更迭 Tides of Change 双语对照文本字幕从东端的长城起From the eastern end of the Great Wall,中国的海岸跨度14,500公里China's coast spans 14,500 kilometres并且拥有五千多年的历史and more than 5,000 years of history.在这个方面显示了This is the area which showsthe greatest contrast中国的过去和未来之间的差距between China's past and its future.如今中国的东海岸线Today China's eastern seaboard有七亿人口is home to 700 million people,居住在科技高速发展的沿海城市packed into some of the mostdazzling hi-tech cities on earth.然而这些拥挤的海岸仍然是野生动物的一个重要财富Yet these crowded shores remain hugelyimportant for a wealth of wildlife. 现在古老的传统渐渐被新的气息所侵蚀Now, as ancient traditionsmingle with new aspirations,那么在中国拥挤的海岸上还有野生动物的活动场所吗is there any room at all for wildlifeon China's crowded shores?谨以此献给我们多灾多难但美丽依旧的祖国For our troubled but drop-dead beautiful motherland在中国北方的扎龙自然保护区In northern China's Zhalong Nature Reserve, 一对丹顶鹤正守望着它们的产卵领土a pair of red-crowned craneshave staked out their nesting territory 在一个商业管理的芦苇床残株里in the stubble of a commercially managed reed bed.数百年来For centuries,cranes have been revered in China鹤被中国人视为长寿的象征而备受尊崇as symbols of longevity.它们的雕像被放在皇帝的宝座旁Their statues were placed next to the Emperor's throne.鹤因此而受到赞扬The cranes have cause to celebrate.幼鹤在困难时刻就象征着希望This chick is a sign of hope in difficult times.丹顶鹤是世界上最濒临灭绝边缘的物种之一Red-crowned cranes are one ofthe world's most endangered species.在过去的一个世纪Over the last century,中国失去了近一半的沿海湿地China has lost nearly halfof its coastal wetlands并且大多数改造地是为了造福人类而非野生动物and most of what remains is managed forthe benefit of people, not wildlife. 从现在起的数个月A few months from now,幼鹤和它的家人将面临一场往南方的大迁徙this chick and its parents will facea long migration south来躲避北方的严冬to escape the harsh northern winter.它们将沿着海岸向前Their route will take them along a coast然而这些海岸已经受到人类活动的巨大影响which has been greatly affectedby human activity.在它们的征途上Along their journey,the cranes will be joined将有成千上万其他鸟类加入迁徙大军by many thousandsof other migrating birds.它们迁徙的方向横跨南渤海湾All heading south across the Bohai Gulf沿海岸的黄海和中国东海and along the shores ofthe Yellow and East China Seas,最远甚至抵达中国南海some even reaching as far asthe South China Sea 寻找一个安全的冬季避难所in search of a safe winter haven.每年候鸟迁徙已持续了数千年之久The annual bird migration has beengoing on for thousands of years.在中国东岸的锦屏山Here at Mount Jinpingon China's northeast coast,存留着人类there is surprising evidence曾长期居住过的惊人遗迹that people have lived here almost as long.七千年前Seven thousand years ago,少昊部落的成员雕刻下的神奇符号members of the Shao Hao tribecarved magical symbols描绘出他们日常生活得到的重要原理representing significant elementsof their daily lives.这种岩石雕刻显示出The petroglyphs show wheat sheavesconnected by lines to human figures, 中国第一个有记录的耕种遗址the first known recordings ofcultivation in China.因为常年目睹群鸟迁徙的奇观Familiar with the spectacleof yearly bird migrations,少昊人选择一只鸟的符号作为他们的图腾the Shao Hao people chosea symbol of a bird as their totem.锦屏山位于半岛附近Mount Jinping lies nearthe Shandong peninsula,是候鸟的一个重要越冬场所an important wintering sitefor migrant birds, 即使在今天仍然有鸟群沿着这条海岸线前进and even today there are stillcommunities along this coastline并且和当地的鸟群保持着密切关系who retain a special affinitywith their local birdlife.烟墩礁Yandun Jiao village,位于半岛的东北岸on the north-eastern shoreof the peninsula,以其传统特色的海藻覆顶建筑闻名于世is famous for its traditionalseaweed-thatched cottages.在早春料峭的清晨On a chilly morning in early spring,屈夫妇在破晓时刻出来碰运气Mr and Mrs Qu venture out at first light带着海民的传统工具——桶和小铲armed with the traditional seasideaccessories of bucket and spade.当屈家人朝着港湾前进As the Qus head down into the harbour,一群被当地人a flock of whooper swans,亲切称为“冬日天使”的大天鹅known affectionately hereas "winter angels",在海湾醒来are waking out in the bay.屈家和他们的邻居在潮落的泥浆中The Qus and their neighbourssearch for tube holes寻找管状的孔in the mud at low tide,那里意味着有扇贝或竹蛏深藏在泥底the sign of cockles and razor shellshidden deep below.收集贝克是颇为流行的消遣While gathering shellfishis a popular pastime, 当地人以出海为主要营生the main business of Yandun Jiaohappens further out at sea.当老屈站在启程船只的甲板上As the boats set out,with Mr Qu on board, 天鹅并肩掠过the swans set a parallel course.整个海湾是一个巨型海藻农场The whole of the bay isa gigantic seaweed farm.人们整天忙于清理和照料海藻叶The men work all day cleaningand tending the kelp fronds海藻长在巨大浮标舰队互相连接的绳子上that are grown on ropes linked toa vast armada of buoys.天鹅只吃长在绳子表面的本地海藻The swans eat native seaweedsgrowing on the surface ropes而非更有价值的产物rather than the valuable crop of kelp,所以它们无损经济作物的生长so they do no harm to the commercial operation.下午当风在海上生起In the afternoon,as the wind picks up out at sea, 工人和天鹅退回岸边the workers and swans return to shore.当追求与自然和谐的文化While the culture of seeking balance with nature 历经远路回归中国的时候goes back a long way in China,在中国拥挤的海岸线很难看到如此和谐的人地关系it is rare to see such harmoniousrelationships on China's crowded coast. 当夜晚降临As evening draws on,屈家人准备了扇贝the Qu family preparetheir evening meal of cockles, 馒头和海藻做为晚膳steamed bread and seaweed.孩子们谈话声(KIDS CHATTERING)剩菜被村里的孩子们用来喂天鹅Leftovers are given tothe village children to feed the swans.这给孩子和村民带来许多乐趣It's fun for the kids and provides并未鸟儿们度过寒夜提供了能量补给an extra energy boost for the birdsas they face another cold night. 天鹅已经利用这个庇护港The swans have been usingthis sheltered bay作为冬天的过冬地at as a winter refugefor many generations.只要敬重自然的传统还在As long as the traditionof respect for nature persists,烟墩礁的村民和“冬日天使”间的this remarkable association betweenthe Yandun Jiao community奇妙友谊就会持续下去and their winter angelslooks set to continue.在渤海湾天鹅村的最东北处Out in the Bohai Gulf,northeast of the swan village,一座小小的岩岛为迁徙的鸟儿提供了安静的歇脚地a small rocky island provides a quietresting spot for migrating birds. 但是蛇岛亦潜伏着危险But Shedao Island has hidden dangers.由于海平面上升蝮蛇已被困在这座岛上6000余年Pallas' pit vipers trapped here6,000 years ago by rising sea levels 这已演化成一种险恶的生存方式have evolved a sinister lifestyle.每年有10个月For 10 months of the year岛上没有任何食物there is nothing substantial to eaton the island,因此爬行类动物保持静止以保存体力so the reptiles conserve their energyby barely moving at all.鸟群鸣叫(BIRDS CAWING)当使它们的岩石家园变暖As the sun warms their rocky home,这些蛇便爬进灌木树丛the snakes climb upinto the bushes and trees.但是它们不是来这晒日光浴的But they aren't here to sunbathe.越来越多的毒蛇出现了More and more vipers appear事实上毒蛇占据了几乎所有栖息地until virtually every perchwhere a bird might land等着鸟们上钩has been booby-trapped.“守猎”游戏开始了Then the waiting game begins.蛇隐藏得很好The serpents' camouflage is remarkable,但是蛇攻击鸟的时候but so are the birds' reactions,鸟的反应同样迅速as this high-speed shot reveals.鸟群只在岛上停留几周The birds will only stay on the islandfor a couple of weeks.但是尽管蛇已经饿了几个月了But although the snakeshave been starving for months,但是它们实现饱餐一顿心愿的途径their only hope of bagging a mealis to be patient只能是潜藏起来耐心等待and sit tight.即便最微小的失误The slightest miscalculation也会导致狩猎的失败and the snake is left witha mouthful of feathers. 蛇只能通过嗅觉寻找失去的美味The dropped meal is tracked downmainly by smell,毒蛇用分叉的舌头the viper using its forked tongue分辨空气来靠近追逐的猎物to taste the air untilit is close enough to see its quarry.最后的挑战是吞下自己头部两倍粗的食物The final challenge is to swallow a mealthat's twice the size of its head. 蛇能让下巴脱臼并合理安排食物的方向It does so by dislocating its jawsand positioning its prey使鸟嘴指向后边so the beak is pointing backwards.对于爬虫来说,充足的时间也很短暂For the reptiles,this time of plenty is all too brief.再过几个星期,迁移就要完毕了In a couple of weeks,the migration will be over鸟群会继续前进and the birds will have moved on.这可能是蛇六个月中的最后一餐This could be the snake's last mealfor six months.但是并不是岛上会经历But it isn't just islands盛宴和饥馑的循环that experience cyclesof feast and famine.海也有季节变化The sea, too, has its seasons,沿岸的渔民都知道这个变化a fact well known to fishing communitiesalong the neighbouring coasts. 在初望港In Chuwang harbour,盛大的聚会是新汛期开始的证明the start of a new fishing seasonprovides the excuse for a massive party. 但是对于船主老来说But for boat owner Mr Zhao,既有庆祝又有祈祷it's a day of prayeras well as celebration.老希望通过祭祀海神Zhao hopes that by presenting giftsand showing respect to the sea goddess, 来确保他们来年捕鱼he can help ensure a prosperousand safe year ahead 顺利安全for him and his crew.同时鼓声爆竹反映了古人的信念Meanwhile, drums, firecrackers andfireworks reflect the ancient belief 古人认为嘈杂巨响能驱赶海怪和坏运气that loud noises will frighten offdangerous sea devils and bad fortune. 台子中间的那个是海龙的象征Occupying centre stageis a representation of the sea dragon,传说海龙控制着水和天气mythical ruler of water and weather.夜晚风平浪静In the calm of the evening,先生和家人点亮了纸船灯笼Mr Zhao and his familylight paper boat lanterns. 每一个闪烁的火焰带着一个愿望飘向海神Each flickering flamecarries a wish to the sea goddess,这个传统世代传递着a tradition passed on from parentsto children over countless generations. 在中国拥挤的海岸线上On China's crowded coasts,渔民们必须非常机敏fishermen need to beextremely resourceful.收渔网是一项繁重的工作Hauling in the nets is hard work,目前为止还没有看到鱼and so far there's not a fish in sight.只有海蜇Only jellyfish.每年无数的海蜇Each year, millions of jellyfish被渤海湾的水流带到南方are carried south with the currentsin the Bohai Gulf.这种现象的生态学原因很复杂The ecological storybehind this event is complex,但决不是中国特有的but by no means unique to China.海蜇是快速繁殖的浮游生物的食物Jellyfish are fast-breedingplankton feeders.近些年来人类污水和精耕细作使用的化肥In recent years, human sewage andfertilisers from intensive farming 增大了海湾的浮游生物繁殖速度have increased plankton bloomsin the Gulf, 提供了丰富的海蜇食物providing extra jellyfish food.由于过度捕鱼海蜇的敌人和竞争者少了While over-fishing has reducedtheir enemies and competitors.这种现象已经It's a phenomenon that has becomeincreasingly widespread在全球蔓延across the world's seas.然而别的地方认为是个问题However, what is seen elsewhereas a problem, 在中国却被当成机会in China is perceived as an opportunity.岸上Back on shore,四轮车载着海蜇到附近的大商店里mule carts transport the jellyfishto nearby warehouses在那里处理后销往全国where they will be processedand sold as food all over China.四代人正在饱餐一碗海蜇片Four generations tuck intoa bowl of sliced jellyfish,这道菜可以延年益寿the recipe for a long and healthy life.离开了渤海湾Leaving the Bohai Gulf behind,迁徙的鹤群migrating cranes,篦鹭和鸭子里边加入了其他鸟类spoonbills and ducksare joined by other birds,它们都飞向南方寻找安全的冬天栖息地all heading southin search of a safe winter haven.鸟群的迁徙路线顺着黄海The birds' migration route followsthe coast of the Yellow Sea一路朝向省down into Jiangsu Province,那里有肥沃的农业风景a fertile agricultural landscape有中国最后存留的盐沼泽地with some of the last remainingsalt marshes in China.大丰At Dafeng,一小块盐沼泽的就是一只幸存动物的家园a small salt marsh reserve is hometo an animal which is lucky to be alive. 中国人认为麋鹿是奇怪复杂的动物The Chinese see these Milu asa curious composite animal,有像马一样的头with a horse's head,牛一样的脚cow's feet,驴一样的尾巴a tail like a donkey朝向后边的鹿角and backwards-facing antlers.在西方自从第一个欧洲人In the West, we know it asDavid's Deer,叫它麋鹿以后我们也这样叫了after the first European to describe it. 在发情期During the rut,雄鹿用植物的花环来装饰自己stags decorate themselveswith garlands of vegetation这些东西是用鹿角弄的collected in their antlers.激烈的战斗决定谁拥有交配权Fierce battles decide mating rights.雌鹿仍然带着去年的幼鹿The females still havelast year's fawns in tow. 母鹿在发情期也没有给幼鹿断奶They haven't been weanedby the time of the rut幼鹿聚在一起and band together in large crhes,只回到自己母亲那里喂食only returning to their mothers to feed.这种特殊的行为有助于帮助它们记清楚好斗的雄鹿This unique behaviour helps to keepthem clear of the aggressive males. 现在中国仅存2500头麋鹿了Today, there are just2,500 Milu in China, 很明显如果再多也很有限but it is remarkable thatthere are any at all. 在20世纪初期野外的麋鹿濒临灭绝In the early 1900sMilu became extinct in the wild,幸运的是一些良种鹿群被当作礼物送到了欧洲but luckily, some of the Imperial herdhad been sent as a gift to Europe. 那些在英格兰Woburn Abbey的麋鹿繁衍了下来Those at Woburn Abbey,in England, prospered.20世纪80年代 40头鹿被送回了故乡And in the early 1980s, 40 of the deerwere returned to their homeland 它们在那里继续繁衍生息where they continue to thrive.迁徙的鹤群至今已经The migrating craneshave so far travelled顺着海岸向南飞行了两千多公里了over 2,000 kilometres southwardsalong the coast.经过了大丰的麋鹿预留区Passing the Milu Deer Reserve at Dafeng,它们接近了另一个盐沼泽地they are approaching another salt marsh那里给它们过冬提供了极好的条件which will provide the perfectconditions for them to spend the winter. ,中国最大的沿海湿地This is Yancheng,the largest coastal wetland in China,每年估计有三百万鸟拜访这里visited by an estimatedthree million birds each year.(嘎嘎的叫声)(SQUAWKING)刚出生七个月的幼鹤Crane chicks that were only bornseven months ago完成了第一次来回旅行have now completed the first legof a round trip 它们将会每年重复这样which they will repeat every year.坚强的鹤群能应付冬天的温度The hardy cranes can copewith winter temperatures温度可能降到零度以下which may drop below freezing.但是其他迁徙的鸟类比如濒临灭绝的黑面篦鹭However, other migrating birds, likethe endangered black-faced spoonbill,就没有那么耐寒are less cold-tolerant它们将要继续南飞寻找更温暖的气候and will continue even further southin search of warmer climes.(嘎嘎的叫声)(SQUAWKING)在这里许多迁徙的鸟群At this point,many of the migrating bird flocks 勉强达到了它们南飞旅程的一半are barely halfway alongtheir southward journey.在它们前面还有新的挑战Ahead of them lies a new challenge,中国最伟大的河——长江China's greatest river, the Yangtze,是许多种类迁徙物种的聚集地and the venue fora very different kind of migration.每年上百万吨的货物往来江面Each year, millions of tons of cargotravel up and down the river,使这里成了世界上最繁忙的航路之一making this one ofthe busiest waterways in the world.这些是中华绒蝥蟹These are Chinese mitten crabs,因它们长毛爪子得名named for their strange hairy claws.它们可以迁移长达1500公里They may migrate as much as1,500 kilometres 从支流和湖泊一直到河口from tributaries and lakesto the river mouth, 他们在那里繁殖后代where they gather to breed.中华鲟也有相似的迁徙 A similar migration is madeby the giant Yangtze sturgeon,中华鲟能长到4米长半吨重which can reach four metres longand weigh half a ton.近些年来它们的数量骤减In recent years,its numbers have declined dramatically这是由于它们的迁徙被越来越多的河坝阻挡了as its migration is impededby ever more river dams.但是不仅中华鲟有这样的境遇But it isn't just animals likethe sturgeon that are in trouble,整个长江的生态系统都遭到了破坏the entire Yangtze Riverecosystem is being poisoned.虽然有显耀的清理计划项目In spite of being the subjectof an ambitious clean-up plan,估计长江是最大的today the river isreckoned to be the biggest污染太平洋的单向水源single source of pollutionentering the Pacific Ocean.坐落于长江入的Situated right at the mouthof its estuary,崇明岛为迁徙的滨鸟Chongming Island providesa vital resting and feeding spot提供了重要的休养生息的地方for migrating shorebirds,人们对长江流域的野生动物的态度不断转变and a place which offerswelcome evidence这个地方也是个很好的证明of changing attitudes towardsthe Yangtze's beleaguered wildlife.几个世纪里这些沿岸泥滩一直吸引许多捕猎者For centuries these coastalmudflats have attracted hunters,就像金先生一样like Mr Jin,他们不断地改善捕猎技巧who have honedtheir trapping skills to perfection 捕获稀有鸟类供有钱人食用to put rare birds on the tablesof Shanghai's elite.40年里金先生一直用一网For 40 years Mr Jin has used a net,简单的诱鸟和一只竹笛simple decoy birds and a bamboo whistle来诱惑经过的鸟到他的网里to lure passing birds towards his nets.(笛声)(WHISTLING)这需要耐心和高超的技巧It takes both patienceand consummate skill.但是事情并不总是这样But all is not as it seems.像其他许多最好的自然保护者一样Mr Jin, like many ofthe best conservationists,金先生现在由偷猎者变为了看护者is poacher turned gamekeeper,使用他捕猎技艺来保护他原先的猎物using his hunting skillsto benefit his old quarry.在东潭鸟类保护基地里The staff here at Dongtan Bird Reserve人们将给这些捕获的鸟测量带环称重will measure, ringand weigh the trapped birds然后把它们释放before releasing them unharmed.由金先生和他的同事们收集的这些信息The information gatheredby Mr Jin and his colleagues帮助保护了200多个不同的鸟类helps to protectover 200 different species of birds这些鸟类每年都要来到这个岛屿which visit the island each year.在崇明岛正南端Just south of Chongming Island是中国最大的海边城市——lies China's largest coastal city,Shanghai. 处于一条河流生物和鸟类迁徙的路径上Situated on a major migration routefor birds as well as river life, 现在它正进行一个更大的侵袭动作Shanghai is now preparingfor an even bigger invasion.满载着建筑材料的驳船不停的到达这个城市的码头Barges loaded with building materialsconstantly arrive in the city's docks,来满足这个世界最繁忙建设之一的需要feeding one of the greatestconstruction booms in the world.去年全世界一半的水泥都运往中国的各个城市Last year, half the world's concretewas poured into China's cities,这些都是为了人类历史上最大规模的all in preparation forthe biggest mass migration of people人口迁移做准备in the history of the world.在未来25年里预计有超过3亿中国人In the next 25 years,well over 300 million people将从中国农村迁移到城市例如are predicted to move fromrural China into cities like Shanghai.从农村到城市的人类迁移The migration of peoplefrom country to city在全世界各地都可以看到is being mirrored around the world,and by 2010 到2010年超过一半的世界人口将成为城市居住者over half of the world's populationwill be urban dwellers.当夜晚来临时就会揭示它的本色As night falls,Shanghai reveals its true colours.这是中国最快增长的金融中心China's fastest-growing financial centre是这个巨大繁荣的中心is in the midst of a massive boom.其人口估计超过2千万With an estimated populationof more than 20 million, 无疑是中国最大Shanghai is officially China's largest也是最耀眼的城市and certainly its most dazzling city.但他的辉煌背后存在着环境代价But there is an environmental cost.居民使用的电力是Shanghai residents now use two anda half times more power per head郊区居民的2.5倍than their rural cousins.这个城市近乎贪得无厌的能源需求The city's seeminglyinsatiable energy demands得需要17个电厂来提供满足currently require the outputof 17 power stations.往南城市灯光逐渐暗淡South of Shanghaithe city lights gradually fade 好象我们进入了一个古老的世界as we enter an ancient world.这是省This is Fujian Province,一个崎岖的地域a rugged terrain由于花岗岩大山的护卫guarded by sheer granite mountainswhich have helped to forge and preserve 使得一些中国最古老的遗址和传统文化得以稳固并保存some of China's most ancient sitesand traditional cultures.远高出海边地带坐落着1400米高的太姥山Towering above the coast,the 1,400-metre-high Taimu Mountains是中国人熟识的“海上仙都”are known to the Chineseas "Fairyland on the Sea".潮湿的海风在寒冷的山顶凝聚Moist sea breezes condenseon the cool mountaintops并与排水良好的酸性土壤结合and combine with well-drained acid soils便形成了完美的种植环境to producethe perfect growing conditions适合喜酸性的植物——例如野杜鹃for acid-loving plantslike wild azaleas.也适宜生长山茶It's also home to camellias,including the most famous of all,包括最著名的茶树种植the tea plant.沿着沿海一带的类似种植环境Similar growing conditionsall along the Fujian coast使得中国茶叶独享其尊make this the treasure chestfor China's tea,其茶产业远可源自4000多年前the heart of an industry dating backalmost 4,000 years.这个地区最传统的茶树栽培文化One of the most traditionaltea-growing cultures in the area当数这里的客家人沿袭的is that of the Kejia people.每天清晨山羊被放养在这些茶树梯田间Every morning, goats are let looseamong the tea terraces,这是个历史悠久的传统a centuries-old tradition.看起来好象很奇怪让这些This might seem surprisinggiven goats' reputation 山羊去吃这些绿色的植物for eating anything green,不过茶树并不像看上去那样毫无设防but tea isn't as defencelessas it looks.茶叶中存在刺激性的化学成分Tea leaves are loadedwith bitter chemicals 以驱走啃食的动物designed to repel browsing animals.这对山羊很有效It works on the goats,它们只是吃光茶树外的杂草who leave the tea untouchedand instead eat up the weeds,它们的粪便恰好茶树供给了养分fertilising the tea plantswith their droppings.惊讶的是我们人类The surprise is that we humans却还没发现同样刺激性的化学鸡尾酒should find the samebitter chemical cocktail以便让人类根本不敢染指utterly irresistible.对客家人而言种植茶树是家族事业Among the Kejia people,tea-growing is a family business.女人们采摘男人门加工打包Women do the picking,while the men process and pack it.女士是一名客家家族的成员Mrs Zhang belongs to a Kejia family她们家族在这片同样的茶园that has lived and workedfor generations生活劳作了数个世代among these same tea terraces.最精良的茶叶需要在温暖的里快速采摘The finest tea needs to begathered quickly in warm sunshine这样可以让茶叶保留有茶油的香味as this brings out the flavour-enhancingoils inside the leaves.这个可持续的产业使得中国最精美的地形之一This sustainable industry has protectedone of China's finest landscapes 和最传统文化之一得以保存下来and one of its mosttraditional cultures. 在早上采摘之后At the end of the morning's picking,女士把茶叶带回家以待加工Mrs Zhang returns home to drop offher tea ready for processing.这个城堡式样的建筑在过去This fort-like designhas survived from a time 客家人得以从与敌对的当地部落势力when the Kejia needed toprotect themselves斗争中幸存下来against hostile local tribes.每个房子有3到4层Each house has three or four levels以适合50到250人居住designed to accommodate50 to 250 people.最底层是厨房和家畜使用The ground floor housesthe kitchens and animal stock同时有一条通道通向水井取水with access to a well for water.第一层房间用作储藏The first floor roomsare used for storage第二层作为寝居and the upper floors are bedrooms.这一些很非凡的建筑已有800多年历史了Some of these remarkable buildingsare 800 years old经历了地震和台风并完整的保存了下来and have survived earthquakesand typhoons.当收集一定数量茶叶时下一步加工开始了Once enough tea has been gathered in,the processing begins.把绿色茶叶变为市场销售的茶叶Turning green leaves into saleable tea最少包含8个步骤involves at leasteight different stages,包括干燥捻细筛挤压和扭拧including drying, bruising,sifting, squeezing and twisting,这些都是成品打包前必须的步骤before the finished productis finally ready for packing.女士的村庄出产“小黑龙”茶The Zhang's village produces"little black dragon",即——乌龙茶or oolong tea,其称呼源于冲泡茶叶时so called because of the wayits twisted leaves unfurl那宛如蟠龙舒展的姿态when water is poured over them.茶在客家人生活中占据着重要地位Tea plays a vital part in Kejia life, 既是一个收入来源也是一种迎宾之道not only as a source of income,but also as a way to welcome visitors 它将人们联系在一起and bring people together.在中国人传统生活中In traditional Chinese life,即使最简单的一杯茶也被赋以复杂的仪式even the simplest cup of tea is pouredwith an intricate amount of ritual. 在过去In the past,客家人的其他主要收入来自运送像茶叶一样的货物the Kejia people's other main incomecame from transporting goods like tea 穿越变幻莫测的山川和河流入口across the treacherous topographyof mountains and river estuaries.他们的运输路线在1059年变得轻松易行Their route was suddenlymade easier when, in 1059,一切归于这座名桥的建造this remarkable bridge was built.它的桥面由重达10吨的花岗岩架设而成Made from massive10-ton slabs of granite,是中国不太知名的建筑奇葩之一it is one of China's lesser-knownarchitectural gems.桥历经地震狂潮风采依旧Luoyang Bridge has withstoodearthquakes and tempestuous tides.被称为“万安渡”的Known as "10,000 ships launching",46座桥墩the bridge's 46 piers在潮水的冲刷下已经屹立的近千年have withstood time and tidefor almost a millennium.据当地传说According to folklore,桥的成功在于有远见地应用了生物工程its success is due to a far-sightedpiece of bio-engineering.在桥墩上养殖牡蛎之后Oysters were seeded on the piers利用他们的凝固物可以and ever since,their concretions have helped cement 将花岗岩胶合凝结起来the granite blocks together.如今惠安的女人们仍用传统的Today, oysters are still cultivated here 方法在这里养殖牡蛎in the traditional way by Hui'an women.屹立在桥下的泥滩之中的岩石Stones are stood in the mudflatsbelow the bridge可以使牡蛎附着生长to encourage the oysters to grow.如今当地人主要用桥来Luoyang Bridgeis now mainly used by locals运送货物穿过河口到港口去carrying goods across the estuarytowards the coastal ports.两千多年来For more than 2,000 years,中国的沿海贸易主要依靠于coastal trade in China has depended一种具有开创性卓越性能船on a remarkable andpioneering type of ship, 我们称之为舢板known to us as the junk.这艘船所用的的大众化设计This working vessel followsa general design 在已经使用了600多年that's been in use in Fujianfor at least 600 years. 船首是画上了两只大眼睛的鸟喙造型Its bows take the form of a beak,with two large painted eyes古代的航员们相信evoking the traditionalseafarers' belief鸟的形象可以使海员们平安归来that the bird's imagewould help sailors return safely,就像每年春秋回来的候鸟一样like the migrants that returneach spring and autumn.茶叶和其他货物经防水处理后储存Tea and other goodswere stored in strong bulkheads,分储在防水壁中以降低洪涝带来的损失each waterproofed and separatedfrom the next to minimise flood damage.这种保持珍贵茶叶干燥的革新措施This innovation, introducedto keep precious tea cargos dry,不仅改进了中国的船只spurred on the improvementof not only Chinese boats, 还改进了西方的船只but Western ones, too.舢板上独特的索具The distinctive rigging ofthe junk's sails使得它在恶劣的天气下也容易操纵allows easy handling in bad weather,这在风暴肆虐的海边至关重要essential alongthis storm-battered coast.台风一词源于“大风”的谐音Each year from July to November,up to a dozen typhoons,每年7至11月成批的台风a corruption of the Chinese wordfor "great wind", 朝西北方向席卷中国而来head northwest towards China.全球像二氧化碳这样的温室气体的增加Typhoons are becoming more frequentas sea temperatures rise,使得海的温度升高aided by a global increasein greenhouse gases,台风也因此变得更加频繁such as carbon dioxide.但卫星图片却显示了一个令人惊讶的转变But satellite pictures have revealeda surprising twist.台风好像可以将深处富含营养的海水It seems that typhoons can pulldeep, nutrient-rich seawater带到表面使得浮游生物繁荣繁衍up to the surface causing plankton blooms, 而他们又可以吸收大量的二氧化碳which in turn soak uplarge quantities of carbon dioxide.当台风袭来时When a typhoon strikes,因其遮蔽的停泊所one of the best places to beis Hong Kong harbour而成为最正确泊地之一with its sheltered anchorage.作为一个国际贸易中心A centre of international trade,她以参差错落的摩天大楼the city is famousfor its jumble of skyscrapers 和熙攘拥挤的商业中心闻名and its bustling commercial centre.但还有鲜为人知的一面But there's a side to Hong Kongthat's less well known. 在这个盲目扩的城市之中Behind the urban sprawl坐落着一片湿地lies a swathe of wetlands其中就包括米埔野生动物保护区which include the Mai Po Nature Reserve. 保护区主要用于保护候鸟Managed principally for the benefitof migrating birds,此外还保存着许多传统的虾塘the reserve maintains a seriesof traditional prawn farms,也就是基围known as gei wais,还有毗邻的红树林和泥滩and their adjoining mangrovesand mudflats.从11月到3月份每两周Every two weeks from November to March,就会打开一个基围塘的水闸排水one of the gei wais is drainedby opening up the sluice gates.随着水位下降鸟儿们开始聚集As the water level falls,birds begin to gather.苍鹭白鹭和鸬鹚Herons, egrets and cormorants。
《美丽中国》第一集 龙之心
tadpole ['tædpəʊl] n. 蝌蚪 chick [tʃɪk] n. 小鸡;小鸟;少妇adj. 胆小的;懦弱的 n. (Chick)人名;(英)奇克 wading bird n. 涉水鸟;[鸟] 涉禽(如苍鹭、鹤等) scarce [skeəs] adj. 缺乏的,不足的;稀有的adv. 仅 仅;几乎不;几乎没有 conical ['kɒnɪk(ə)l] adj. 圆锥的;圆锥形的 pinnacle ['pɪnək(ə)l] n. 高峰;小尖塔;尖峰;极点vt. 造小尖塔;臵于尖顶上;臵于高处
A stalactite (UK /ˈstæləktaɪt/, US /stəˈlæktaɪt/; from the Greek stalasso, (σταλάσσω), "to drip", and meaning "that which drips") is a type of formation that hangs from the ceiling of caves, hot springs, or manmade structures such as bridges and mines. Any material which is soluble, can be deposited as a colloid, or is in suspension, or is capable of being melted, may form a stalactite. Stalactites may be composed of amberat, lava, minerals, mud, peat, pitch, sand, and sinter.A stalactite is not necessarily a speleothem, though speleothems are the most common form of stalactite because of the abundance of limestone caves.
纪录片《美丽中国》英文字幕-part8
the Sea of Flowers on SwampsIn eastern China, there is a sea of flowers blooming in the water. Every spring, this gorgeous sea of flowers will attracts countless tourists to appreciate the beautiful scenery. What people are seeing, is in fact a great example of Chinese intelligence. China’s ancient philosophy, the harmonious interaction with nature, blooms and bears fruit here. 5000 years ago. this was a beach. 3000 years ago, the coastline moved eastward, and land appeared in the Xinghua area. 1000 years ago, to prevent floods, the hard-working and intelligent people in Xinghua excavated a network of deep ditches or streams in the swamps, and piled up the soil on one side, forming fields suitable for cultivation. These fields, either square or round, wide or narrow, high or low, long or short, have different shapes and sizes. Big ones can be a kilometer wide while the smaller ones just a few meters. They all have one thing in common, and that is, they are surrounded by water. The fields are not connected to each other, and look like islets on the sea. Taking into account the local natural conditions, hardworking and intelligent local ancestors transformed low-lying wetlands unsuitable for agriculture into farmland and fields, providing grains and vegetables for the local people. But also, these fields have maintained the original water currents, as well as rivers and canals and the surrounding natural ecological environment. It has formed a new landscape representing the unity of man and nature. Today, the unique landform of the Xinghua Fields has become a globally important agricultural cultural heritage. Every spring, when oil seed rape flowers are in full bloom, as people meander between these fields in small boats. They say the “boats walk in the water and the people swim in the flowers”.The Tectonic Story of Sanpan StoneIn China’s southeast coastal province of Zhejiang, there is a group of giant rocks called the Sanpan Stone, literally meaning, the three pieces of stone. Once upon a time however they were one whole piece of rock. The story of the Sanpan Stone started 135 million years ago. Back then, during a violent tectonic event, powerful forces formed a basin covering nearly 247 square miles. Imagine the basin as a cradle, in which the Sanpan Stone is nestling. In this huge bowl, sedimentary rocks gathered, dominated by conglomerates. These sediments were the origins of the Sanpan Stone. The process of mountain building continued. The sediments in the basin were forced up to form asedimentary massif, with gradually grew into the Sanpan Stone. For tens of millions of years, wind and water eroded the massif along vertical fractures until most of the rocks was weathered away. Eventually the three individual rocks with steep cliffs we see today were formed. The highest of them measures 324 meters. However, the steep cliffs pose a great challenge for those wishing to reach the top. About 500 years ago, in Chian’s Ming Dynasty, a group of carpenters was hired to build a wooden ladder in order to reach the top of the Sanpan Stone. They toiled for three long years, but failed in their in their task. Before the ladder could reach the summit, its foot had rotted away. The ambition of reaching the top was not an achieved until the end of 1980s. Over 3500 stones steps were carved into the rock face. Now, we can finally climb these steep stairs and reach the top to experience the power of the tectonic movements from the remote past.The Tide Bore of Qiantang RiverThe Qiantang River is located in Zhejiang on the southeastern cost of China and flows into the East China Sea. Every year on the eighteenth day of the eighth lunar month, people gather along its banks expectantly, eager for the arrival of the tide. The waters of Hangzhou Bay and the Qiantang River meet on the horizon, forming a thin white line. Hundreds of thousands of tons of water per second the fusion of ocean and river dramatically tumble back towards the land. The seawall contains the force of tons per square meter. The waves can reach a maximum of 9 meters, about three stories high and even taller than four of China’s famous basketball player, Yao Ming. The huge tides and waves do little to deter the bold. People jumped into the powerful waves as early as the Southern Song Dynasty of China, more than 800 years ago. The people of the time called them the Tide Players. It looks so much like today’s surfing, minus the surf board. Today, the Qiantang River attracts thousands of people from far and wide for the annual tide surfing competition.The unfrozen RiverIn winter, Arxan, a city in northern China becomes a world of ice. Its rivers become frozen. All except one. Upstream of the Khakhyn Gol River, there is a stretch around 20 kilometers long. Even in winter, when the air temperature typically drops to minus 40 to 30 degrees Celsius, this sectionremains ice free. People call it the Unfrozen River. Its secret lies deep beneath the river bed, where the river passes over an area of geothermal activity near Arxan. The heat from below, raises the temperature allowing the river water to stay above freezing point. And so, it remains ice free. During the harsh winter, it even becomes a spa for animals. A group of cattle are strolling along on the river bank. They can’t wait to wade through the water. Look closely and you’ll see steam rising from the surface of the river. Such a nice warm bath! Let’s leave the cattle to enjoy it!。
BBC美丽中国英文字幕word第二集
Beneath billowing clouds,in China's far southwestern Yunnan province,lies a place of mystery and legend.Of mighty rivers and some ofthe oldest jungles in the world.Here, hidden valleys nurture strangeand unique creatures,and colourful tribal cultures.Jungles are rarely found thisfar north of the tropics.So, why do they thrive here?And how has this rugged landscape come to harbour the greatest natural wealth in all China?In the remote southwest corner of China,a celebration is about to take place.Dai people collect water forthe most important festival of their year.The Dai call themselves the people of the water. Yunnan's river valleys have been their homefor over , years.By bringing the river water to the temple,they honour the two things holiest to them - Buddhism and their home.The Dai give thanks for the rivers and fertile lands which have nurtured their culture.Though to some it might seem just an excusefor the biggest water fight of all time.Dai lives are changingas towns get bigger and modernizebut the Water Splashing Festivalis still celebrated by all.The rivers which lie at the heart ofDai life and cultureflow from the distant mountains of Tibet, southward through central Yunnanin great parallel gorges.The Dai now live in the borders of tropical Vietnam and Laos,but their legends tell ofhow their ancestors came hereby following the rivers from mountain landsin the cold far north.Lying at the far eastern end of the Himalayas, the Hengduan mountains form Yunnan'snorthern border with Tibet.Kawakarpo, crown of the Hengduan range,is a site of holy pilgrimage.Yet, its formidable peak remains unconquered. Yunnan's mountains are remote,rugged and inaccessible.Here the air is thin and temperaturescan drop below minus degrees.This is home to an animal that's foundnowhere else on Earth.The Yunnan snub-nosed monkey.It's found only in these fewisolated mountain forests.No other primate lives at such high altitudes. but these are true specialists.These ancient mountain dwellershave inspired legends.Local Lisu people consider them their ancestors, calling them "the wild men of the mountains". During heavy snowfalls,even these specialists cannot feed.It seems a strange place for a monkey.Between snows, the monkeys wasteno time in their search for food.At this altitude,there are few fruits or tender leaves to eat.% of their diet is made up ofthe fine dry wisps of a curious organism.Half fungus, half plant -it's lichen.How have monkeys,normally associated with lowland jungle,come to live such aremote mountain existence?This is not the only remarkableanimal found within theseisolated high peaks.A Chinese red panda.Solitary and quiet, it spends muchof its time in the tree tops.Despite its name,the red panda is only a very distantrelative of the giant panda.It's actually more closelyrelated to a skunk.But it does share the giantpanda's taste for bamboo.Southwest China's red pandas are known for their very strongfacial markingswhich distinguishthem from red pandas foundanywhere else in the Himalayas.Like the monkeys, they wereisolated in these high forestswhen the mountains quiteliterally rose beneath themin the greatest mountain-building event in recent geological history. Over the last million years,the Indian subcontinent has been pushing northwards into Eurasia.On the border between India and Tibet the rocks have been raisedeight kilometres above sea level, creating the world's highest mountain range, the Himalayas.But to the east,the rocks have buckled into a series of steep north-south ridges,cutting down through theheart of Yunnan,the parallel mountains ofthe Hengduan Shan.These natural barriers serve to isolate Yunnan's plants and animals in each adjacent valley.While the huge temperaturerange between the snowy peaksand the warmer slopes belowprovides a vast array ofconditions for life to thrive. Through spring,the Hengduan slopes stage one of China's greatest natural spectacles. The forests here are among the most diverse botanical areas in the world. Over , plant species grow here,of which , are foundnowhere else.Until little more than a century ago, this place was unknown outside China. But then news reached the Westof a mysterious, hiddenworld of the orient.Hidden among the mountains,a lost Shangri-la paradise.Western high society, in the gripof a gardening craze,was eager for exotic speciesfrom faraway places.This gave rise to a newbreed of celebrity adventurers, intrepid botanist-explorersknown as "the Plant Hunters".Yunnan became their Holy Grail. Indiana JonesThe most famous was Joseph Rock,a real life Indiana Jones. Remarkable film footage captured his entourage on a series of expeditions, as they pushed into thedeepest corners of Yunnan.In glorious colour he recordedthe plant life he foundon special photographic glass plates. Sending thousands ofspecimens back to the West,the Plant Hunters changed the gardens of the world forever.Rock's success was bornof a massive effort.For, to find his Shangri-la,not only had he to traverseendless mountain ranges,but some of the deepestgorges in the world.The Nujiang is calledThe Angry River.This -kilometre stretchof raging rapidsis as much a barrier to lifeas are the mountains above.WAVES CRASHBut the plant hunters weren't the first people to travel here.Along the Nujiang,less than rope crossings allow locals passage across the torrents. Tiny hamlets cling to the slopes. This morning, it's market day, drawing people from upand down the valley.PIG OINKSGOAT BLEATSHanging from simple rope slings, people have been using the crossings for many hundreds of years.In such narrow, precipitous gorgesit's by far the easiestway to get around.Once across, the steepsides mean it's still a hike.Many trek for hours byfoot before they get to the market. The immense valley ishome to over a dozen ethnic groups. Some, like the Nu people,are found only here.The markets bring themountain tribes together.To continue his expeditions,Rock had to get his entire entourage across the giant Yunnan rivers.He commissioned especially thick ropes made from forest rattanand filmed the entire event.With yak butter to smooth the ride, men and mules made the journey. Not all made it across.On the far side of thegreat Nujiang gorge,the Plant Huntersmade a remarkable discovery.Far from the tropics,they seemed to be entering a steamy,vibrant tropical jungle,the forest of Gaoligongshan.The flora here is unlikeanywhere else in the world.Next to subtropical species,alpine plants grow in giant form. Crowning the canopy, rhododendrons, up to metres high.In April and May, their flowersturn the forests ruby red,attracting bird speciesfound only here.Constant moisture in the airmeans that the branches are laden with flowering epiphytes,fiercely guarded by tiny sunbirds, unique to these valleys.Nectar feeders, these are the humming birds of the Old World tropics.The forests of Gaoligongshan are home to some of China's rarest wildlife. This is a female Temminck's Tragopan. She has a colourful male admirer.He's hoping to woo her with his peculiar peekaboo displaybut she's not about to be rushed.His colourful skin wattlereflects more light than feathers do. To her, this is like a neon sign. Seeing his chance,the male makes his move.Constant moisture inthe Gaoligongshan forestsmeans that throughout the yearthere are always fruits on the trees. Such abundance of food encouragesa high diversity of fruit eaters more commonly found in the tropics. The black giant squirrel is found only in undisturbed rainforest.At close to a metre in length, it's one of the world's largest squirrels. The mystery is that these forestsare growing well outside the tropics.By rights, none of this jungle,or its animals, should be here. These are bear macaques.They're found only intropical and sub-tropical jungle. With a tiny home range ofjust a few square kilometres,they depend on the abundant fruit that only true rainforestscan provide all year round.To the European plant hunters,these northern rainforests must have seemed a fantastic andmysterious lost world.Yet, when they came here, they would have found beautifully constructed ancient stone pathwayson which the forestcould be explored.Winding westwards into the hills, these were once some of the most important highways in Asia,the southwestern tea and silk road. Built thousands of years ago,the southwestern tea and silk road gave access to the worldbeyond China's borders,carrying tradesmen and travellers from as far away as Rome.Wars were fought over accessto this tiny path,the only sure route inor out of China,that was guaranteed tobe clear of snow all year round. So, what causes Gaoligongshan's strange and remarkable climate?In late May, gusts of wind arrive, bringing with them the key to Gaoligongshan's mystery.The winds are hotand saturated with water.They come all the wayfrom the Indian Ocean.Channelled by Yunnan'sunique geography,they bring with them themoisture of the tropical monsoon. The giant river valleys,created millions of years ago,act like immense funnels.The gorges are so deep and narrow, that the moist warm air is driven right up into the north of Yunnan. The result is rain, in torrents! Four months of daily rainstorms sustain luxuriant vegetation.The arrival of the monsoonawakens one of the forest'smost extraordinarymoisture-loving inhabitants.The crocodile newt is one ofthe most unusual of the many amphibian species found here.As the rains arrive,they emerge to mate.The newts are said toleave an odour trail thatpotential mates can follow.The crocodile newt gets its name from the bumps along its back. These are its defence.If grabbed by a potential predator, the tips of its ribs squeeze a deadly poison from the bumps.The deluge wakesanother forest inhabitant.This one is particularly astounding in its vigour!It can grow up to a metre a day, fast overtaking the otherplants around it.The taller it grows,the faster its growth rate,so that in a matter of days it towers above the undergrowth,and continues reaching for the sky. Not bad for what isessentially a grass.It's bamboo.Given the chance,bamboo will create immense forests, dominating entire areas.Bamboo forests occuracross southwest China,all the way to Shanghai.But probably the highest diversityof bamboos in the worldis found on the hillsand valleys of Yunnan.Though incredibly strong,bamboos have hollow stems,a perfect shelter for anycreatures which can find a way in. This entrance holewas made by a beetlebut it's being used by avery different animal.A bamboo bat.The size of a bumblebee, it's oneof the tiniest mammals in the world. The entire colony, up to bats,fits into a single section of bamboo stem, smaller than a tea cup. It's quite a squeeze!Half the colony are babies.Though barely a week old, they are already almost as big as their mums. Feeding such a fast-growingbrood is hard work.The mums leave to huntjust after dusk each night.Back in the roost,the young are left on their own. Special pads on their wings help them to grip on the bamboo walls -most of the time.The young bats use the extra space to prepare for a life on the wingby preening and stretching.Packed in like sardines, they would make an easy target for a snake.But the snake has nochance of getting in.The entrance is thinnerthan the width of a pencil.When the mothers return,they can push through the narrowentrance only because oftheir unusually flattened skulls.But it's still a squeeze.Bamboos are exploited in a verydifferent way by another forest dweller.Fresh bamboo shoots arean important forest crop.Ai Lao Xiang is of the Hani tribe,from the mountain village of Mengsong. Roasted, the tender shoots hegathers will make a tasty dish.The Hani have many uses for thedifferent bamboos they growand find in the forest around.Though flexible enough to be woven,bamboo has a highertensile strength than steel.Succulent when young,in maturity it's tough and durable,ideal for making a tableand strong enough for a pipe to last a lifetime. The people of southwest Chinahave found an extraordinary number ofways to exploit this mostversatile of plants.THEY SPEAK IN NATIVE LANGUAGEPart of bamboo's phenomenal successis that it's so toughthat few animals can tackle it.Yet, bamboo does come under attack.A bamboo rat.Feeding almost exclusively on bamboo,they live their entire lives intunnels beneath the forest.The thinner species of bambooare easy to attack and pull below.She has a fantastic sense of smelland can sniff out the freshgrowth through the soil.Bamboo spreads along underground stems. By following these, new shoots are found. Once a shoot is detected,she snips it free and dragsit down into her burrow.This female has a family.At just a few weeks old,the youngsters can already tacklethe hardest bamboo stemsand are eager to try.Bamboo's tough reputation is such,that another bamboo specialist wasknown by the Chinese as,"The Iron Eating Animal".The giant panda is famousfor its exclusive diet.Giant pandas are thought tohave originated in southwestChina, millions of years ago,but they are no longerfound in Yunnan.Recently, their specialiseddiet has had dire consequences.Bamboo has a bizarre life cycle, flowering infrequently, sometimesonly once every hundred years or so.But when flowering does occur,it's on a massive scale,and it's followed by thedeath of all of the plants.Sometimes an entirebamboo forest may die.In undisturbed habitat, pandassimply move to another areawhere a different bamboo species grows. But as human activity has fragmentedtheir forest home,pandas find it increasingly hard tofind large enough areasin which to survive.Wild pandas are now found onlyin the forests of Central China,far to the east.But in the hidden pockets of lowland jungle in Yunnan's tropical south,live one of China'sbest-kept wildlife secrets.DEEP BELLOWThe wild Asian elephant.Elephants once roamed acrossChina as far north as Beijing.But it's only in the hidden valleysof Yunnan that they have survived. Elephants are thearchitects of the forest.Bamboos and grasses are theirfavourite foodbut saplings, tree leaves andtwisted lianas are alltaken, with little care.As they move through the forest,the elephants open up clearings, bringing light to the forest floor. This has a major impact on their home. The richest forests are now known to be those which from time to time experience change.The Jinou people are incredibly knowledgeable about their forestsand claim to have uses for most ofthe plants that they find there.They have names for them all,those good for eating and some which even have strong medicinal qualities. By working here, the Jinou playa similar role to the elephants, opening up the forest,bringing space, light and diversity. Green, fast growingspecies are encouraged.Insects are in high abundance here, together with the animalsthat feed on them.Knowledge of the forest enablesthe Jinou to find not just plants,but other tasty forest food too. Forest crabs are common here,feeding on the abundant leaf litter. This will be a tastyaddition to the evening meal.Flowing through Yunnan'ssouthern valleys,the once angry riversare now swollen,their waters slow and warm.These fertile lowland valleysare the home of the Dai.The "People of the Water"live along streams whichoriginate in the surrounding hills. Each family keeps a kitchen garden modelled on the multi-layered structure of the surrounding forests, which the Dai hold sacred.The gardens are made more productive by inter-planting different crops. Tall, sun-loving species give shelter to plants which thrive in the shade. As companions,the plants grow better.Yunnan's forests are home to more than a dozen wild banana speciesand banana crops grow wellin most Dai gardens.The huge banana flowers are richin nectar for only two hours a day, but it's enough to attract a rangeof forest insects, including hornets. With their razor sharp mandibles, they find it easy to robthe flowers of their nectar.But hornets are predators too.They hunt other insects andcarry them back to their nest.An ideal target,but this grasshopper is no easy meal. There may be a price to pay.The Dai men, Po and Xue Ming, take advantage of a hunter's instincts.A hornet sting is agony.But for now it's distracted,intent on cutting awaya piece of grasshoppersmall enough to carry back home. Success!The white featherhardly slows the hornet,and, more importantly,it can be seen.Now the hunter is the hunted.So long as Po andXue Ming can keep up!Back at the nest,the other hornetsimmediately begin to cutthe feather free.But it's too late. The nest'slocation has been betrayed.The relationship between the forest animals and the people who live here was never one of harmony.Yet the fact that the Dai and other ethnic groups considered theseforests to be sacred,has ensured their survivaland now many have been givenextra protection as nature reserves. Ingenuity and hard workpays off at last.The fattened larvae areconsidered a delicacy by the Dai. Although these forests have experienced a great deal of change, they are still host to someancient and incredible relationships. Almost centimetres high,this is the immense flowerof the Elephant yam.Locals call it the"Witch of the Forest".As the stars rise,the witch begins to cast her spell.The forest temperature drops,but the flower starts to heat up.A heat sensitive camera revealsthe flower's temperaturerising by an incredibleten degrees Celsius.At the same time, a noxious stench of rotting flesh fills the forest air. As the flower's heat increases,a cloud of odour rises up.The foul perfumecarries far and wide.It doesn't go unnoticed.Carrion beetles arrive on the scene. The beetles come in searchof a feast of warm decaying flesh, but they've been tricked.Slippery sides ensure they tumble straight into the centreof the monster flower.There's not enough room to spread their wingsand the waxy walls ensurethat there's no escape.But there's nothing sinisterin the flower's agenda.The beetles will beits unwitting helpers.Dawn arrives,but the flower remains unchanged, holding its captives through the day. As the second night falls,the witch stirs again.In a matter of minutes, the flower's precious golden pollensqueezes from the stamensand begins to fall,showering onto the captivebeetles below.Now, at last, the prisonersare free to go.The flower's wall changes texture, becoming roughto provide the ideal escape ladder.Loaded with their pollen parcels, they can now climb to freedom,just as other forest witchesare beginning to open.Seduced by the irresistible perfume, the beetles are sure to pay a visit, so ensuring pollination,and another generation of incredibly big, smelly flowers.As dawn arrives, forest birds claim their territories in the canopy. BIRDSONGBut there's one callwhich stands out among the rest - virtuoso of the forest symphony. STRANGE CALL RINGS OUTIt's a gibbon.UNDULATING CALL CONTINUESLiving on a remote mountainrange in south central Yunnanis one of the few remainingwild gibbon populations in China. The black-crestedgibbons of Wuliangshan.They are confined tothese forest mountains,so remote and steepthat few hunters ever come here. The Wuliangshan gibbons areunusual for their social structure. Most gibbons live in smallfamily groupsconsisting of a mating pairand their offspring.But these gibbons exist in troops. One male can have twoor sometimes three femalesand all of these can have young. Often even the juvenilesstay in the community.BABY SQUEAKSRarely glimpsed,this baby may be only a day old.If it survives infancy,then it has a promising futurein these few valleyswith its close-knit family.GIBBON CALLS RING OUTGibbon song once inspiredthe ancient poets of China,their glorious callsechoing far across the hills.But now, new, strangely quiet forests have come to Yunnan.These trees are here to producean important and valuable crop. When the tree bark is scored,it yields copious sticky sap,so bitter and tackythat nothing can feed on it.It's the tree's naturaldefence against attack.It's collected daily,bowl by bowl.It will be boiled and processed into one of the most important materials to a fast developing nation - rubber. The expansion of the rubberforests began in the 's when China, under a world rubber embargo,had to become self-sufficientin this vital product.Beijing turned to the only place where rubber could grow,the tropical south of Yunnan.With efficiency and speed,some of the world's richest forests were torn up and burned.Replaced with mile upon mileof rubber plantation.But there was a problemfor the rubber growers.While Yunnan's uniquenatural forestscan survive on the valleyslopes which stretch to the north... ..just one severe frost will kill off these delicate rubber trees.So Yunnan's terrain puts a limit on how far the plantations can spread, halting at leasttheir northwards advance.The jungles of Yunnanare increasingly under pressure. HORN BEEPSNew roads criss-crossthe tiny remnant forests,the infrastructure needed for trade, industry and, increasingly, tourism. It's a meeting of two verydifferent worlds.ELEPHANT TRUMPETSThat elephants still exist in China is remarkableconsidering the immense pressuresin the world's most highlypopulated country.The or so wild elephantswhich still live hereare now strictly protected.And each year youngare born to the small herds.If elephants were to survive anywhere in China,it could only have been here,in Yunnan.The same mountains which guidethe monsoon rains northand which made Joseph Rock's journeys so treacherous,also guarded Yunnan's forestsand its wildlife.ELEPHANTS GRUNT AND TRUMPETFor the moment, the mountains are still carpeted in a rich green, deceptive in its simplicity.Below the canopy lies perhapsChina's richest natural treasure. Delicate and unique,a complex world of intricate relationshipsbetween animals, plants and people,beneath the clouds.For our troubled but beautiful motherlandVCTT proundly presentsMore information:/vcttIf you have any questionpls feel free to let us know.。
纪录片《美丽中国》第一集“龙之心 ”赏析
纪录片《美丽中国》第一集“龙之心”赏析网上对于《美丽中国》的定位是“由中英联合拍摄的一部关于中国野生动物和自然风光的系列纪录片”,它以精美的画面和独特的视角以及优美的配乐,让人们耳目一新,介绍了南方基本的自然状况、面积、气候等,并自然而然地转入生命物体——南方的粮食作物,水稻。
水稻的历史、当地人对水稻的种植,展现中国水稻梯田的壮阔。
我将在从主题、结构、构图、景别、摄影技巧、运动镜头和固定画面、剪辑、声画关系和音响等几个方面来对其进行分析。
摄影技巧本片的画面极为清晰细腻。
运用省略叠化技术拍摄人们的劳作场景,如果把全部过程展现出来难免使观众产生厌烦之感。
机位景别不改变,省略中间过程的叠镜头,可以简化漫长的过程,并使画面变得活泼不沉闷。
运用超高速摄影可以拍出比一般的摄影机快80倍的镜头。
蝙蝠一段我们都被这一场面震惊。
蝙蝠在水面上舞动着翅膀飞行,水中是它优雅的倒影。
超高速摄影所带来的给与我们的感觉竟是如此的细腻和自然,让我们看到了以前无法观察到的一些场景升格摄影是和超高速摄影相反的。
镜头速度减慢,在农民处理稻穗的那一段放慢,制造了一种浪漫和谐美好气氛。
用水下的摄影机拍摄鸬鹚狩猎的、娃娃鱼的一段和黄金鲤鱼一段,给人平常无法体验到的水下经历。
叙述方面本片对人声的纪录实际上并没有太大体现,因为影片主要通过解说词来叙事的。
有些言语对我们的心里造成一定的打击,看到我们祖国的风光,同时也看到了,我们现在所存在的问题,我们应该通过这部影片提醒自己好好的保护好我们的祖国。
影片的解说词起到了贯穿始终,起到叙说、叙事、段落连接、气氛营造等作用。
音乐本片中音乐在渲染气氛和形象塑造功用比较突出。
本片背景音乐的作曲者是一位英国人,但他将中国元素运用的贴切到位,比如对笛子、古筝、二胡和箫等中国乐器都进行了恰到的好处。
在云南石林一段,笛子独奏制造出一种神秘古怪的气氛。
而在猴子旁边的监视者蛇出场的时候又用音乐制造了一种危险的气氛。
在黑夜猴攀岩一段又用提琴、鼓、扬琴制造轻快节奏塑造了猴子灵活的形象。
纪录片《美丽中国》英文字幕-part9
The Vast Grassland under the Tianshan MountainsNestled among the Tianshan Mountains in China’s Xinjiang, lies the Bayanbulak Grassland, the largest alpine grassland in China. It covers an area of more than 23000 square kilometers. Bayanbulak means “rich spring water” in Mongolian. The surrounding snowy peaks act like a huge reservoir, delivering abundant water resources to the grassland and forming a huge number of lakes and marshes. On the flat grassland, even a small force can alter the direction of a river. Kaidu River, which is composed of melt water from the Tianshan Mountains, has a length of more than 500 kilometers and has more than 10000 bends. Find the right view point, and as the sun sets, it’s possible to see the reflection of nine suns all at the same time. The grassland interior is a paradise for animals. In March each year, juvenile swans set off from India, southern Africa and other distant parts of the world, to live and breed here. for the young swans, as they learn to fly, the Himalayas pose their first challenge.Volcanoes in Wudalianchi Scenic AreaThese volcanoes are more than 200 years away from the last eruption. For volcanoes, more than 200 years is not long at all. They are young volcanoes in China, but they have witnessed the birth of the Wudalianchi Scenic Area. Erupting lava spread out in all directions. Some of it remained here, cooling and solidifying forming a black gray lava plateau measuring hundreds of square kilometers wide, commonly known as the Rock Field. More lava flowed along the terrain, blocking the path of the river below, eventually forming five beaded lakes. The lakes are interconnected, hence they are known as the “Wudalianchi”, namely, Five Connected lakes. With 14 volcanoes nearby, Wudalianchi with its concentration of typical volcanic landforms, is a giant natural volcano museum. After hundreds of years, human beings, birds and animals, and vegetation have together reshaped the appearance of this land. South Globe Mountain has become the symbol of Wudalianchi, not only because it is the oldest of the 14 volcanoes, but also because there is naturally lake at its top. In winter it is covered with snow. But in the sun, the volcanic rock beneath is exposed, creating a black-and-white volcanic spectacle. In the bright sunlight this volcano museum becomes a landscape beyond the imagination.Yardang Kingdom Sculpted by the WindIn Gansu Province in Northwest China, there are more than 5000 mounds on the desolate Gobi Desert. Such a landform is called a Yardang. Walking through the area, you can hear the eerie howling winds. The name “The Place of Devils”, but also carve the Yardang landform into different shapes. Wind speeds here can reach up to Force12. Sometimes as fast and the running speed of a cheetah, the fastest animal on land, and strong enough to lift a 10-meter-high wave. These mounds, which were originally sediment layers at the bottom of the lake, are not strong enough to withstand the insistent winds. The sand and stones picked up by the wind are like weapons, hacking away the rocks surface and carving out a variety of shapes, giving full play to the imagination. A bird’s-eye view reveals a regular layout of the mounds. They are all the same height and direction, and look like a great fleet sailing across the Gobi Desert.。
BBC美丽中国WildChina(2008)第1集中英表格台词剧本
The last hidden world最后的隐世净土China中国数世纪来旅人传诵着关于这片神奇土地For centuries, travellers to China have told tales ofmagical landscapesand surprising creatures以及那些神奇生物的传说Chinese civilization is the world's oldest中国文明是世界最古老的文明and today it's largest而如今是最宏博的with well over a billion people那数十亿的人民It's home to more than 50 distinct ethnic groups现存超过五十个民族and a wide range of traditional life styles以及各式各样贴近自然的often inclose partnership with nature传统生活方式We know that China faces immense social and我们都知道中国面对着着众多社会环境问题environmental problemsbut there is great beauty here too但这里也存在着令人窒息的美丽China is home to the world's highest mountains,中国有着世界最高峰vast deserts ranging from from searing hot从无垠的炙热沙漠to mind numbing cold到麻木大脑的寒冷地带steaming forests以及那蒸笼般的森林中harboring rare creatures隐匿的各种珍稀生物grassy plains beneath vast horizons天际下广阔无垠的草原and rich tropical seas以及富饶的热带海洋Now, for the first time ever现在我们第一次有机会we can explore the whole of this great country深入探索这片伟大的土地meet some of the surprising and exotic creatures that接触栖息于此的珍奇生物live hereand consider the relationship of the people and目睹中国这片神奇土地上wildlife of Chinato the remarkable landscaping which they live人与野生世界的羁绊This is wild China这就是最原味的中国For our troubled but drop-dead beautiful motherland仅以此献给我们多灾多难但美丽依旧的祖国我们的中国探索之旅始于南方的亚热带Our exploration of China begins in the warm subtropicalsouth漓江的渔人和鱼鸟栖坐在竹筏上On the Li River fishermen and birds perch on bambooraftsa partnership that goes back more than a thousand years这个组合已延续千年之久This scenery is known throughout the world这景致已为世人所熟悉a recurring motif in Chinese paintings那是中国水墨永恒的主题and a major tourist attraction和旅人永远的胜地The south of China is a vast area中国南部是片有英国国土eight times larger than the UK九倍之大的广阔土地It's a landscape of hills这里but also of water是山雨的国度It rains here for up to 250 days a year这里一年之中有250天在降雨and standing water is everywhere到处都是积水In a floodplain of the Yangtse River在扬子江的涝原black-tailed godwits probe the mud in search of worms黑尾鹬在泥泞中寻索着虫子But it isn't just wildlife that thrive in thisenvironment并非只有野生动物在这样的环境下茁壮成长the swampy ground provides ideal conditions for the remarkable member of the grass family 沼泽般湿润肥沃的土地为作物家族最显着的成员提供了最理想的环境rice这就是稻米The Chinese have been cultivating rice for at least 8thousand years中国有着至少8000年的稻米种植史It has transformed the landscape他们改变了这块土地Late winter in southern Yunnan is a busy time forlocal farmers对云南南部的农民而言冬末是个繁忙的季节as they prepare the age-old paddy field ready for the coming spring 因为他们要为即将来临的春天整顿这片古老的稻田These hill slopes of Yuanyang county元阳县的山坡以2000M之势plunge nearly 2000m to the floor of the Red RiverValley斜插于红河谷地的河床each contains literally thousands of stack terracescarved out by hand using basic digging tools包含了上千由原始刨掘工具所创造出的梯田Yunnan's rice terraces are among the oldest humanstructures in China云南的梯田是中国最古老人类耕作痕迹中still ploughed as they always have been依旧被耕种使用的土地by domesticated water buffaloes正如千百年来的习俗一样whose ancestors originated in these very valleys源自云南河谷的家养水牛承担了耕作的重任This man-made landscape is one of the most amazing engineering feats of preindustrial China 这片人力开拓的土地是工业化前中国最惊奇宏伟的壮景It seems as if every square inch of land似乎这里的每一寸土地has been pressed into cultivation都被打上了农耕的痕迹As evening approaches当薄暮降临an age-old ritual unfolds另一场古老的仪式上演It's the mating season现在是交配的季节and male paddy frogs are competing for the attentionof females雄禾田蛙们为了吸引异性而卖力高鸣But it dosen't always pay to draw too much attentionto youself但这并非总能为你吸引来关注的目光The Chinese Pond Heron is a crapulous predator中国池鹭是个饕餮掠食者Even in the middle of a ploughed paddy field就算在耕作过的稻田中央nature is red in beak and claw也会上演喙与爪的血腥剧目This may look like a slaughter或许这看上去像一场屠杀but as each heron can swallow only one frog at a time但每只池鹭一次只能吞噬一只蛙the vast majority will escape to croak another day此时剩余的多数派得以逃生并获得了明日再度高歌的机会Terrace paddies like those of YunYang county are foundacross much of southern China元阳县这样广泛种植水稻的This whole vast landscape is dominated by ricecultivation梯田横贯中国南部In heated Guizhou province the Miao minority havedeveloped a remarkable rice culture苗族人在炎热的贵州发展了高度发达的水稻种植With every inch of fertile land given over to ricecultivation苗族人把木屋建立在陡峭低产的山壁上the Miao build their wooden houses on the steepest andleast productive hillsides用其余每寸丰饶的土地来种植水稻In Chinese rural life everything has a use所有东西在中国农村都自有其用处dried in the sun manure from the cowsheds would beused as cooking fuel牛棚里的肥料在太阳下晒干用作煮饭的燃料It's midday and the Song family are tucking into alunch of rice and vegetables中午时分宋家人正饱餐以米和蔬菜为主的中饭Oblivious to the domestic chitchat老祖父宋古永置身于天伦之乐外granddad Guyong Song has serious maters on his mind寻思着重要的事情Spring is a start of the rice growing season春季是稻禾生长的伊始时节the success of the crop will determin how well thefamily will eat next year庄稼的长势决定了来年宋家人的生计so planting at the right time is critical因而选择合适的时机进行耕作是至关重要的The ideal date depends on what the weather will do thisyear时机的选择取决于当年的天气情况never easy to predict而这些却是永难估料的But there is some surprising help at hand但是身边就存在着贴心小帮手On the cielling of the Song's living room a pair of red-rumped swallow newly arrive from their winter migration 宋家厅堂房梁上的是一对刚从冬季迁徙中归来的金腰燕is busy fixing up last year's nest他们正在为装潢新一年度的宅邸而忙碌In China animals are valued does much for their symbolic meaning as for many good they may do 在中国动物们被赋予独特的象征意义并被细心呵护Miao people believe that swallow pairs remain faithfulfor life苗族人笃信成双燕终身相伴不离不弃so their presence is a favor and a blessing因此他们的存在被视为bringing happiness to a marriage and good luck to ahome幸福生活与美满婚姻的象征Like most Miao dwellings, the Song's living room windows look out over the paddy fields 如大多数苗人一样宋家起居室的窗子可以眺望见成片的梯田From early spring, one of these windows is always left open to let the swallows come and go freely 从早春起一扇窗子便为了方便燕子往返穿飞而敞开Each year granddad Gu knows the exact day the swallowsreturn古老爹知晓每年燕子归来的确切时间Miao people believe the birds arrival predicts the 苗族人坚信这些鸟儿的归来预示着春季的来临timing of a season aheadThis year, they were late然而今年他们姗姗来迟so Gu and the other community elders have agreed that rice planting should be delayed accordingly 因而古老爹和其他族中长老一致认为今年的插秧应当推迟As the Miao prepare their fields for planting当苗族人为了插秧而整备田地时the swallows collect mud to repair their nests燕子们或搜集修整巢穴用的泥巴and chase after insects across the newly ploughedpaddies或穿越新耕的稻田追逐昆虫Finally, after weeks of preparation最终经过了几周的准备the ordained time for planting has arrived这个预定种植的时刻来临了but first the seedlings must be uproot from the nurserybeds首先秧苗必须从苗床上连根拔起and bundled up ready to be transported to their newpaddy扎成捆移植到高处山地higher up the hillside那崭新的苗床上All the Song's neighbors have turned out to help withthe transplanting宋家邻里乡亲全员出动帮助移植It's how the community has always worked这是一直来他们的集体协作方式when the time comes, the Songs will return the favor当然一旦时刻来临宋家人也会做出相同行为来报恩While the farmers are busy in the fields当农户们忙碌在田埂间时the swallows fly back and forth with material for theirnest飞燕们则衔着修整巢穴的材料来来往往Many hands make light work人多力量大planting the new paddy takes a little more than an hour插秧的整个过程只持续了仅一个多小时Job done, the villagers can relax当工作完成农户们得以休息at least until tomorrow至少在明天来临之前But for the nesting swallows, the work of raising a family 然而对这些筑巢的飞鸟而言修筑家园的宏大工程has only just begun才刚刚开始In the newly planted fields新耕种的田地里little egrets hunt for foods白鹭在寻找食物The rice paddy harbor tadpoles fish and insects稻田成了虫鱼蝌蚪的乐园and egrets have chicks to feed而白鹭正好以此哺育幼鸟This colony in Chongqing province is established in1996重庆自然保护区建立于1996年when a few dozen birds build nests in the bamboo grovebehind YanGuang village当成群的鸟儿安家在阳光村后方的小竹林Believing they were assigned of luck当地人将其视为幸运的使者local people initially protected the egrets and thecolony grove他们最初小心保护这些白鹭和他们的栖息地But their attitude change when the head of the villagefell ill但当村长病重后他们的态度发生了转变They blame the birds and were all set to destroy theirnests当政府开始介入保护鸟群时when the local government stepped in to protect them他们开始敌视鸟群并着手摧毁巢穴Bendy bamboo may not be the safest nesting place易弯曲的竹子或许并非安家的最佳场所but at least these youngsters won't end up at someone'sdinner但至少这些小家伙们不会成为捕食者的腹中餐These chicks have just had a meal delivered by theirmom这些小家伙刚从母亲嘴里分得美食quite a challenge for litter beaks对新生的小嘴着实是一大挑战Providing their colonies are protected介于他们的栖息地是受保护的wading birds like egrets are among the few wild creatures which benefit directly from intensive rice cultivation 像白鹭这样的候鸟是少数直接从发达的水稻种植中获益的鸟类Growing rice needs lots of water水稻生长需要大量的水but even in the rainy south, there are landscapes where water is surprisingly scarce 但即便是在多雨的南方有些土地也面临缺水的危机This vast area of southwest China相当于法国和西班牙国土加起来那么大the size of France and Spain combined的中国西南的广阔土地is famous for its clusters of conical hills因为宛如被干燥中空的谷地隔离开来的巨大蛋盒般like giant upturned egg carton seperated by dry emptyvalleys连绵的锥形山脉而闻名于世This is the karst这就是喀斯特地貌a limestone terrain which has become the defining imageof southern China石灰石地貌俨然成为南部中国的标志性特征Karst landscapes are often studded with rocky outcrops喀斯特地貌通常以突起的裸岩状态分布forcing local farmers to cultivate tiny fields这迫使当地农民只得在破碎的小块土地上耕作The people who live here are among the poorest in China当地人是中国最贫穷的居民之一In neighboring Yunnan province在毗邻的云南省limestone rocks have taken over entirely遍布着石灰石This is the famous Stone Forest这就是着名的石林the product of countless years of erosion无数年侵蚀作用的产物producing a maze of deep gullets and sharp-edgedpinnacles造就了无数的狭道与巅峰Limestone has a strange property that is dissolves inrain water石灰石有一个独性那就是能被雨水分解Over many thousands of years, water has corrode its way deep into the heart of the bedrock itself 在数千年的漫长光阴中水的侵蚀深入到岩床的心脏地带This natural wonder has a famous tourist spot这一自然奇观成为了着名的旅游景点receiving close to 2 million visitors each year每年的访客数量多达200万人The Chinese are fond of curiously shaped rocks中国人特别喜好奇形怪状的岩石and many have been given fanciful names并以为嶙峋怪石冠上千奇百怪的名字为乐No prices for guessing what this one is called但没人来猜测这个块怪石的名字But there is more to this landscape than meets the eye但百闻不如置身这片奇妙山地亲身一见China has literally thousands of mysterious caverns在中国醒目的喀斯特地貌下concealed beneath the visible landscape of the karst隐匿着无数的神秘洞穴Much of this hidden world has never been seen by humaneyes这些隐秘世界大多不为世人所知And it's only just now being explored而现在他们将被展现在世人眼前For a growing band of intrepid young Chinese explorers奇险洞穴中再现了一场终极的探险caves represent the ultimate adventure主角是一群日渐成长初生牛犊般的年轻探险家Exploring a cave is like taking the journey throughtime探索一个洞穴犹如一场穿越时空的探险a journey which endless raindrops would have followedover countless centuries常年积水叮咚伴随着无止境般的旅途Fed by countless drips and trickles水滴潺潺落下the subterranean river carves ever deeper into the rock地下河流深切入岩The cave river's course is channeled by the beds oflimestone石灰岩河床将洞穴的河道分割成千沟万壑A weakness in the rock can not allow the river toincrease its gradient flowrate石灰岩薄弱处被河水冲刷差距的陡坡处水量激增providing a real challenge for the cave explorers为洞穴探险带来相当的挑战The downward rushes halted when the water table isreached水流到达地下水位后便停止下流Here the slow flowing river carves tunnels with a morerounded profile这里缓缓流动的河流切割出一条圆形隧道This tranquil world is home to specialized cave fishes这静谧的世界是穴居鱼的家like the eye-less Golden Barb比如无目金鲃China may have unique kinds of cave evolved fishes中国或许拥有地球上种类最为繁多的than anywhere else on Earth洞穴进化鱼Above the water table在地下水位线ancient caverns abandoned by the river slowly fill upwith stalactites and stalagmites远古洞穴溢满的河水中充斥着石笋和钟乳石Stalactites form as trickling water deposites tinyquantities of rock含有沉积物的水流over hundreds or thousands of years在千万年间“滴水成石”Stalagmites grow up where lime laid and drips hit thecave floor含有石灰质的水滴落石床形成石笋So far, only a fraction of China's caves have been thoroughly prospected 迄今为止被探索发掘的中国洞穴是中国大地上的九牛一毛and caves are constantly discovering new subterraneanmarvels而被发掘的洞穴不断为我们展现地底奇观many of which are subsequently developed intocommercial show caves许多在后来被开发成了商业景点Finally escaping the darkness探索者沿着洞穴河流出山谷的轨迹逃离了黑暗the cave river and its human explorers emerge in a 在远离出发地的河谷valley far from where their journey beganor now the adventure is over这场冒险拉上了帷幕Rivers which issue from caves源自洞穴河流are the key to survival in the karst country为喀斯特地区提供了生命之泉This vertical gorge in Guizhou province贵州的垂直峡谷is a focal point for the region's wildlife成为了当地野生动物的密集焦点This is one of the world's rarest primates这是世界上最珍稀的灵长类之一Francois's langur白颊黑叶猴In China, they survive in just two southern provinces在中国他们只残存于两个南部省份Guizhou and Guangxi贵州与广西always in ragged limestone terrains多半栖息于崎岖的石灰岩地貌地带Like most monkeys, they're social creatures正如大多数猴子一样他们是社会性生物and spend a great deal of time grooming each other并且他们乐于耗费大把时间为彼此整理仪容Langurs are essentially vegetarian with a diet of buds, fruits, and tender young leaves 叶猴是个不折不扣以嫩芽、嫩叶、水果为食的素食主义者Babies are born with ginger fur叶猴宝宝裹着姜黄色的毛发出生which gradually turns black from the tail end这些毛发随着生长逐渐从尾部开始变成黑色Young infants have a vise-like grip叶猴宝宝虎钳般的爪used for cling on to mom for dare life帮助他们附着在妈妈身上以保证安全As they get older随着年龄的增长they get bolder and take more risks他们越发胆大,并开始常识更多刺激Those have survive spend a lot of time travelling这些是经历诸多冒险后的幸存者Yet experienced adults know exactly where to findseasonal food尽管经验丰富的成年叶猴深知in different parts of their range到守备范围内不同区域的哪里去寻觅当季的食物In such steep terrain在如此陡峭的地带travel involves a high level of climbing skill旅途顺利包含了高超的攀爬技巧These monkeys are spectacularly good rock climbers fromthe time they learnt to walk这些猴子打会走路起就是卓越的攀岩专家In langur society叶猴族群females rule the roost是母系社会and take the lead when the family is on the move并且是举家迁徙的领队人物One section of cliff峭壁一侧woops is a trickle of mineral-rich water分泌的水是富含矿物质的which the monkeys seem to find irresistible这对猴子们而言是不可抗拒的诱惑These days there are few predators in the Mayanghe Reserve which might pose a risk to baby monkey 如今麻阳河自然保护区已鲜有危及猴宝宝的捕食者but in past centuries, this area of south China然而在过去的数个世纪was home to leopards, pythons, and even tigers中国南部的这个地区是豹子巨蟒甚至老虎的家To survive dangerous night prowlers为了在暗夜潜行者的利爪下存活the langurs went underground叶猴们前往地底using their rock climbing skills to seek shelter in inaccessible caverns 用他们的高超的攀爬技巧爬到洞穴上方寻找庇护所Filmed in near darkness using a night vision camera夜视镜在近乎黑暗的坏境下记录下the troop clambers along familiar ledges叶猴一家爬上了worn smooth by generations before them被数代猴族磨蚀光润的石壁的情景During cold winter weather当冬日寒冷来袭the monkeys venture deeper underground猴子们则冒险潜入where the air stays comparatively warm空气相对保持温暖的地下At last, journeys end,旅途的终点a coated niche beyond the reach of even the most高悬的庇护所使得最激进的捕食者都束手无策enterprising predatorBut it's not just monkeys that find shelter in caves并非只有猴子们在洞穴中寻找遮蔽These children are off to school这些孩子们刚放学In rural China, that may mean a long trek each morning在中国农村每天早上都意味着一段passing through a cave or two on the way穿越一两个洞穴的艰苦跋涉But not all pupils have to walk to school然而并非所有孩子都要徒步上学These children are boarders这些孩子是寄宿生As the day pupils near journey's end当孩子们快要到达学校时the boarders are still making breakfast住宿生还在做早饭In the school yard, someone seems to have switched the校园内仿若被关掉了灯一般黑暗lights offBut this is no ordinary play ground但这里其实并没有正规的操场and no ordinary school以及正规的学校Its house只不过是座inside a cave洞穴中的房屋而已A natural vault of rock keeps out the rain天然拱顶阻隔了雨水so there is no need for a roof on the classroom为教室省去了屋顶Zhongdong cave school is made up of 6 classes中东洞穴学校由六个班级with a total of 200 children共200名学生组成As well as a school, the cave houses 18 families如同这所学校般这个洞穴住宅区together with their livestock是18户人家和他们牲畜的聚居地This could be the only cave dwelling cows on Earth这或许是世界上唯一在洞穴中饲养的牛了With school work over, it's play time at last放学后是游戏的时间In southern China, caves aren't just used for shelter在中国南方洞穴不仅用于遮蔽they can be a source of revenue for the community他们也能为当地人带来恩惠People have been visiting this cave for generations数代的人持续受到洞穴的恩泽The cave floor is covered in guano洞穴地底覆盖了满满鸟粪so plentiful that 10 minutes' work can fill these仅仅十分钟时间就能让农人满载而归farmer's basketsThis used as a valuable source of fertilizer这是一种宝贵的天然肥料鸟粪的源头能听到河水上空的鸟鸣A clue to the source of the guano can be heard abovethe noise of the riverThe sound originates high up in the roof of the cave噪音因为山洞而被放大The entrance is full of swifts入口处聚满了雨燕They are very sociable birds他们是社交性动物more than 200,000 of them share this cave in southernGuizhou province约200000多的共享贵州南部的洞穴The biggest swift colony in China中国最大的雨燕栖息地These days, Chinese house swifts mostly nest in theroofs of buildings如今中国的家燕多数将巢穴建在建筑物的屋顶but rock crevasses like these were their original home但其实在房屋被发明出来之前long before houses were invented这样的岩缝才是他们原本安家的地方Though the swifts depend on the cave for shelter尽管雨燕依靠洞穴遮蔽they never stray further than the limits of daylight他们却必定在日落前归巢as their eyes can't see in dark因为他们的眼睛无法在黑夜中看清事物However, deep inside the cavern然而洞穴深处are the creatures are better equipped是一群更适应地下for subterranean life隐秘生活的居民A colony of bats is just waking up一群蝙蝠刚刚醒来using ultrasonic squeaks to orientate themselves inthe darkness他们运用超声波在黑夜中确定自己的方位Night is the time to go hunting夜晚是狩猎时间Rickett's mouse-eared bat is the only bat in Asia whichspecializes in catching fishesRickett鼠耳蝠是亚洲蝙蝠中唯一tracking them down from the sound reflection of ripples on the water surface 通过在水面依靠声波对涟漪的反射追踪游鱼的蝙蝠种This extraordinary behavior was only discovered in thelast couple of years这种非凡的技巧仅在数年前被发现and has never been filmed before现在首次被记录下来展示给世人If catching fish in the dark is impressive如果说在黑暗中追捕游鱼是如此的不可思议imagine eating a slippery minnow with no hands while hanging upside down 想象下倒挂状态下不用爪子吞食滑溜溜的米诺鱼是怎样的神奇场景Dawn, over the karst hills of Guilin拂晓降临至桂林的喀斯特山地These remarkable hills owe their peculiar shapes这些山地的嶙峋奇秀归功于to the mildly acid waters of the Li River漓江那弱酸性的水质whose meandering course over eons of time has corrodeaway their basis亿万年的侵蚀褪去了他们的本来面目until only the rocky course remained只剩下坚硬的河道残留下来Li is one of the cleanest rivers in China漓江是中国最清澈的河流之一a favorite spot for fishermen with their trainedcormorants是捕鱼者和他们训练有素的鸬鹚最爱的捕获点The men, all called Huang, come from the same village这帮七八十岁的男人全部姓黄now in their seventies and eighties他们来自同一个村落they've been fishermen all their lives他们毕生都以捕鱼卫生Before they release the birds在释放鱼鸟之前they tie a noose, loosely around the neck他们在鸟的脖子上松松的系一条套索to stop them swallowing any fish they may catch以防止鸟儿私自将捕到的鱼吞进肚子里Chancing and dancing, the Huangs encourage their birds 伴随着即兴的舞蹈,黄老汉鼓励着他的鸟儿们to take the plunge跳入水中Underwater在水下the cormorant's hunting instinct kicks in鸬鹚的狩猎本能暴发turning them into fish seeking missiles他们化身为水下的游鱼追踪导弹Working together,一只鸬鹚小分队搭档合作齐心协力a good cormorant team can catch a couple of dozendecent-sized fish in a morning一早上便能收获颇丰The birds return to the raft with their fish becausethey've been trained to do so鸟儿们被训练过只能带着鱼儿回到筏子From the time it first hatched从出生的那一刻起each of these cormorants has been reared to a life ofobedience to its master鸬鹚们就开始被训练为忠仆The birds are, in effect, slaves这些鸟儿是高效的奴隶But they are not stupid但是它们并不是白痴It's said the cormorants can key the tally of the fishthey catch据说鸬鹚能够记住它们捕获的鱼的数目at least up to seven至少能记住七条So unless they get a reward now and then,they simply withdraw their labor 除非它们不时得到打赏当然这不过是收回一点自己的劳动成果罢了The fishermen of course keep the best fish forthemselves渔夫理所当然得把最好的鱼留给自己The cormorants get the leftover tiddlies鸬鹚则能享受剩余的部分项圈摘除后鸟儿们终于能享用它的战利品了 With its collar removed,the bird can at last swallow its prize 项圈摘除后鸟儿们终于能享用它的战利品了With its collar removed,the bird can at last swallow its prizeBest of all,when it isn't meant to have...最美妙的莫过于得到额外的打赏These days,competition for modern fishing techniques而如今现代捕鱼技术的激烈竞争means the Huangs can't make a living from traditional cormorant fishing alone 意味着使黄老汉已不能仅靠鸬鹚捕鱼这一传统的手段谋生了And this 1300-year old tradition这一流传了1300多年的传统is now practiced mostly to entertain tourists如今只能成为取悦游客的表演But on Caohai lake in nearby Guizhou Province但在贵州省附近的草海湖上an even more unusual fishing industry is alive and well一种与众不同的捕鱼业正在蓬勃发展Geng Zhongsheng is on his way to set out his net forthe night庚钟胜正在去为夜间布网的路上Geng's net is a strange tubular contraption with aclosed off end老庚的怪网是一种一头扎起来的管状装置More than a hundred fishermen make their living fromthe lake上百渔夫依靠这个Its mineral-rich waters are highly productive水质富矿的高产湖泊为生and there are nets everywhere并在此布下天罗地网The next morning, Geng returns with his son to collecthis catch第二天清早老耿和他的儿子回来收获他们猎物At first sight, it looks disappointing乍看之下收获平平Tiny fishes, lots of shrimps, and some wriggling bugs小鱼.虾米.和扭个不停的虫子Geng doesn't seem too down hearted然而老耿看上去来并不那么消沉The larger fish are kept alive大鱼被保持存活the only way they'll stay fresh in the heat这是唯一在酷暑下保鲜的办法Surprisingly, some of the bugs are also singled outfor special treatment令人吃惊的是一些虫子也被专门挑捡出来They are the young stage of dragonflies它们是蜻蜓的幼虫predators that feed on worms and tadpoles以蠕虫和蝌蚪为食的掠食者Nowhere else in the world are dragonfly nymphsharvested like this这里是世界上蜻蜓卵收获最丰的地方Back home, Geng spreads his catch on the roof to dry回到家后老耿把他的获物在屋顶上摊开晒干It's being in China, nothing edible would be wasted在中国,但凡能吃的东西都不会被浪费There is a saying in the far south在遥远的南方有这样一种说法"We will eat anything with legs, except a table;“长腿的唯桌子不吃and anything with wings, except a plane."长翅膀的独飞机不啃”Within a few hours, the dried insects are ready to be backed up and taken to market 几个钟头后这些晒干了的昆虫便会被带到市场上卖掉Its the dragonfly nymphs that fetch the best price其中蜻蜓蛹能卖到最好的价格Fortunately, Caohai's dragonflies are abundant andfast breeding幸运的是草海的蜻蜓资源非常丰富且高速再生so Geng and his fellow fishermen have so far had littleimpact on their numbers所以老耿和其他的渔民远不会危及它们的数量But not all wildlife is so resilient但绝非所有野生动物都这样生机勃勃This buddhist temple near Shanghai这所上海附近的佛庙has an extraordinary story attached to it有一段与之相关的传奇故事In May 20072007年5月A Wild China camera team filmed this peculiar Swinhoe'sturtle一支狂野中国摄制组在这所寺庙的鱼塘里in the temple's fishpond拍摄到了这只罕见的斑龟According to the monks, this turtle had been given to the temple during the Ming dynasty 据寺庙的和尚所说这只龟在明朝期间被赐予寺庙over 400 years ago至今已有400余年历史了It was thought to be the oldest animal on Earth它被认为是地球上最老的动物Soft shell turtles are considerd a god-made delicacyby many Chinese软壳龟被很多从中国人视为神赐的馈赠and when it was filmed在被记录下的时候this was one of just three Swinhoe's Turtles left alivein China它已是中国仅存的三只斑龟之一The rest of its kind他的同胞们having been rounded up and eaten被当作食物剿杀殆尽Sadly, just a few weeks after filming悲痛人心的是在拍摄后的短短几周后this ancient creature died这只远古的生物与世长辞了The remaining individuals of its species are currentlykept in seperate zoos他的其他同类现在被散养在不同动物园保护着and Swinhoe's Turtle is now reckoned extinct in thewild据测算现在斑龟在自然界中已经灭绝了In fact, most of the 25 types of fresh water turtlesin China事实上中国25种淡水龟中are now vanishingly rare多数都已然濒危The answer to extinction杜绝物种灭绝的唯一途径is protection就是加以保护And there is now a growing network of nature reserves through southern China 这里有贯穿中国南方的不断壮大的自然保护区网络Of these, the Tianzi Mountain Reserve at Zangjiajie isperhaps the most visited by Chinese nature lovers其中张家界天子山那由沙石构成的高耸的who come to marvel at the gravity-defying landscape ofsoaring sand stone pinnacles塔状反重力地貌最受中国自然爱好者的青睐Winding between Zhangjiajie's peaks蜿蜒在张家界的山峰间清澈见底的溪流crystal clear mountain streams are home to what isperhaps China's strangest creature居住着一种中国最奇怪的生物This bizarre animal这种奇异的动物is a type of newt属于蝾螈的一种the Chinese Giant Salamander中国大鲵In China, it is known as the baby fish在中国它被称之为娃娃鱼because when distressed, it makes a sound like a crying infant 这名称源自当他悲伤时发出的类似婴儿哭泣的声音It grows up to a meter and a half long成年体长1~1.5米making it the world's largest amphibian这使它成为世界上最大的两栖类动物Under natural conditions, a Giant Salamander may livedecades在自然条件下一只大鲵可以活到十岁But like so many Chinese animals但是和很多其他中国动物一样it is considered delicious to eat它被视为美味佳肴Despite being classed as protected species尽管被列为国家级保护动物giant salamanders are still illegally sold for food大鲵仍然被当作食物非法买卖and the baby fish is now rare现在娃娃鱼已经非常稀有and endangered in the wild在自然界濒临灭绝了Fortunately in a few areas like Zhangjiajie,幸运的是在像张家界这样的一些地方Giang Salamanders still survive under strict officialprotection大鲵在政府的严格保护下得以幸存The rivers of Zhangjiajie flow northeast into theYangtse floodplain张家界的河流向东北注入known as the land of fish and rice以鱼米之乡文明的长江平原On an island in a lake in Anhui province在安徽省一个湖泊的小岛上a dragon is stirring一只小龙蠢蠢欲动This is the ancestral home of China's largest and 这里是中国最大最稀有爬行动物的古老家园。
BBC美丽中国5字幕
BBC美丽中国5字幕CD5Protected by the Great Wall in the north, and fed by the Yellow and Yangtze rivers, China's eastern heartland is the centre of a flourishing civilization which spans more than5,000 years.To outsiders this is a mysterious land. It contains dazzling man-made structures. And it's home to some of China's rarest and most charismatic creatures. The people who live here, the Han Chinese, comprisethe largest ethnic group in the world, and their language, Mandarin, is the world's oldest and most widely spoken language. In the last 50 years China has seen massivedevelopment, bringing many environmental problems. But the relationship of the Chinese to their environment and its creatures is in fact deep, complex and extraordinary. In this programme we will look for clues to this ancientrelationship and what it means for the future of China.Our journey starts at the very heart of China, Beijing. China's capital is a vast metropolis , home to 15 million people. This bustling modern city seems an unlikely place for traditional beliefs and customs. But beneath thecontemporary veneer , it's possible to see glimpses of a far older China. Every morning, people head to the parks around the Forbidden City , to continue a custom which is centuries old.Many Chinese keep birds as companions, specifically a type of laughing thrush from southern China. But they know that cooped up indoors, birds may become depressed. So they try to brighten their day by meeting other birds. This surprising scenein the heart of modern Beijing is a clue toChina's oldest spiritual ambition, the harmonious co-existence of man and nature. But from the 1950s onwards , this ancient belief was to be severely challenged. After a century of humiliation andintervention by foreign powers, Chairman Mao sought torebuild China's dignity. Mao believed strongly in self-reliance, achieved through using all of nature's resources. Mao's first concern was to feed the Chinese people byturning as much land as possible over to grain production, destroying non-cereal crops and uprooting fruit trees in the process. A campaign to eliminate crop-raiding sparrows backfired when insect-eating birds were also targeted, causing an increase in insect pests .Efforts to make China self-reliant in steel resulted in 10% of the country's forests being felled to feed the furnaces. This had a profound impact on China'senvironment, with effects, in some cases, lasting until thepresent day. Mao's policy towards the countryside has been described in the phrase, Man must conquer nature. Quite different from the ancient concept of harmonious co-existence with nature.As modern China engages with the outside world, which of these attitudes seems likely to prevail ? T o find the answers, we'll travel to the far reaches of the heartland to see how its traditional cultures and unique creatures arefaring today. Beijing has always depended on the NorthChina Plain, a rich farmland twice the size of the UK.The fertility of this plain derives from further west, from the Loess Plateau . The mineral-rich soil of the Loess Plateau isincredibly fertile . People have lived here for thousands of years, hollow ing their homes out of the soft soil. The caves might lack the glamour of Beijing, but people can survive here. Warm, secure, but best of all, well fed.As a result of centuries of farming, the landscape has become scarred with thousands of water-worn gullies. But this charismatic a.有迷人魅力的a charismatic leader.一位极具魅力的领导人。
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1 NARRATOR:The last hidden world, China. For centuries, travellers to China have told tales of magical landscapes and surprising creatures. Chinese civilisation 文明, 文化is the world's oldest and today, its largest, with well over a billion people.It's home to more than 50 distinct 1 截然不同的, 完全分开的 2 清晰的, 明白的, 明显的ethnic group同种同文化的民族and a wide range宽波段;大量程range of traditional lifestyles, often in close partnership with nature.We know that China faces immense social and environmental problems. But there is great beauty here, too. China is home to the world's highest mountains, vast deserts ranging from searing hot to mind-numbing cold. Steaming forests harbouring rare creatures.Grassy plains beneath vast horizons. And rich tropical seas.Now for the first time ever, we can explore the whole of this great country, meet some of the surprising and exotic creatures that live here and consider the relationship of the people and wildlife of China to the remarkable landscape in which they live.This is Our exploration of China begins in the warm, subtropical south.On the Li River, fishermen and birds perch on bamboo rafts, a partnership that goes back more than a thousand years.This scenery is known throughout the world, a recurring motif in Chinese paintings. And a major tourist attraction.The south of China is a vast area, eight times larger than the UK. It's a landscape of hills but also of water.It rains here for up to 250 days a year, and standing water is everywhere.In the floodplain of the Yangtze River, black-tailed godwits probe the mud in search of worms.But isn't just wildlife that thrives in this environment. The swampy ground provides ideal conditions for a remarkable member of the grass family.Rice. The Chinese have been cultivating rice for at least 8,000 years. It has transformed the landscape.Late winter in southern Yunnan is a busy time for local farmers as they prepare the age-old paddy fields ready for the coming spring.These hill slopes of the Yuanyang County plunge nearly 2,000 metres to the floor ofthe Red River valley.Each contains literally thousands of stacked terraces carved out by hand using basic digging tools.Yunnan's rice terraces are among the oldest human structures in China. Still ploughed, as theyalways have been, by domesticated water buffaloes, whose ancestors originated in these very valleys.This man-made landscape is one of the most amazing engineering feats of pre-industrial China.It seems as if every square inch of land has been pressed into cultivation.As evening approaches, an age-old ritual unfolds.It's the mating season and male paddy frogs are competing for the attention of the females.But it doesn't always pay to draw too much attention to yourself.The Chinese pond heron is a pitiless predator.Even in the middle of a ploughed paddy field, nature is red in beak and claw.This may look like a slaughter but as each heron can swallow only one frog at a time, the vastmajority will escape to croak another day.Terraced paddies like those of the Yuanyang County are found across much of southern China.This whole vast landscape is dominated by rice cultivation.In hilly Guizhou Province, the Miao minority have developed a remarkable rice culture.With every inch of fertile land given over to rice cultivation, the Miao build their wooden houseson the steepest and least productive hillsides.In Chinese rural life, everything has a use. Dried in the sun, manure from the cow shedswill be used as cooking fuel.It's midday, and the Song family are tucking into a lunch of rice and vegetables.Oblivious to the domestic chit-chat, Granddad Gu Yong Xiu has serious matters on his mind.Spring is the start of the rice growing season. The success of the crop will determine how well thefamily will eat next year, so planting at the right time is critical.The ideal date depends on what the weather will do this year, never easy to predict.But there is some surprising help at hand. On the ceiling of the Songs' living room, a pair ofred-rumped swallows, newly arrived from their winter migration, is busy fixing up last year's nest.In China, animals are valued as much for their symbolic meaning as for any good they may do.Miao people believe that swallow pairs remain faithful for life, so their presence is a favour and a blessing, bringing happiness to a marriage and good luck to a home.Like most Miao dwellings, the Songs' living room windows look out over the paddy fields.From early spring, one of these windows is always left open to let the swallows come and go freely.Each year, granddad Gu notes the exact day the swallows return.Miao people believe the birds' arrival predicts the timing of the season ahead.This year, they were late. So Gu and the other community elders have agreed that rice planting should be delayed accordingly.As the Miao prepare their fields for planting, the swallows collect mud to repair their nests and chase after insects across the newly ploughed paddies.Finally, after weeks of preparation, the ordained time for planting has arrived.But first the seedlings must be uprooted from the nursery beds and bundled up ready to be transported to their new paddy higher up the hillside.All the Songs' neighbours have turned out to help with the transplanting.It's how the community has always worked. When the time comes, the Songs will return thefavour. While the farmers are busy in the fields, the swallows fly back and forth with material fortheir nest.Many hands make light work. Planting the new paddy takes little more than an hour. Job done, the villagers can relax, at least until tomorrow. But for the nesting swallows, the work ofraising a family has only just begun. In the newly planted fields, little egrets hunt for food.The rice paddies harbour tadpoles, fish and insects and the egrets have chicks to feed. This colony in Chongqing Province was established in 1996, when a few dozen birds built nests inthe bamboo grove behind Yang Guang village.Believing they were a sign of luck, local people initially protected the egrets and the colony grew.But their attitude changed when the head of the village fell ill. They blamed the birds and were allset to destroy their nests, when the local government stepped in to protect them. Bendy bamboo may not be the safest nesting place, but at least this youngster won't end up as someone's dinner.These chicks have just had an eel delivered by their mum, quite a challenge for little beaks.Providing their colonies are protected, wading birds like egrets are among the few wild creatureswhich benefit directly from intensive rice cultivation.Growing rice needs lots of water.But even in the rainy south, there are landscapes where water is surprisingly scarce.This vast area of southwest China, the size of France and Spain combined, is famous for its clusters of conical hills, like giant upturned egg cartons, separated by dry empty valleys.This is the karst, a limestone terrain which has become the defining image of southern China.Karst landscapes are often studded with rocky outcrops, forcing local farmers to cultivate tiny fields. The people who live here are among the poorest in China.In neighbouring Yunnan Province, limestone rocks have taken over entirely.This is the famous Stone Forest, the product of countless years of erosion, producing a maze of deep gullies and sharp-edged pinnacles. Limestone has the strange property that it dissolves in rainwater.Over many thousands of years water has corroded its way deep into the heart of the bedrock itself.This natural wonder is a famous tourist spot, receiving close to two million visitors each year.The Chinese are fond of curiously-shaped rocks and many have been given fanciful names.No prizes for guessing what this one is called! But there's more to this landscape than meets the eye. China has literally thousands of mysterious caverns concealed beneath the visible landscape of the karst. Much of this hidden world has never been seen by human eyes and is only just now being explored.For a growing band of intrepid young Chinese explorers, caves represent the ultimate adventure.Exploring a cave is like taking a journey through time. Ajourney which endless raindrops will have followed over countless centuries. Fed by countless drips and trickles, the subterranean river carves ever deeper into the rock. The cave river's course is channelled by the beds of limestone.A weakness in the rock can allow the river to increase its gradient and flow-rate, providing a real challenge for the cave explorers. The downward rush is halted when the water table is reached.Here the slow-flowing river carves tunnels with a more rounded profile.This tranquil world is home to specialised cave fishes, like the eyeless golden barb.China may have more unique kinds of cave-evolved fishes than anywhere else on earth.Above the water table, ancient caverns abandoned by the river slowly fill up with stalactites and stalagmites.Stalactites form as trickling water deposits tiny quantities of rock over hundreds or thousands of years. Stalagmites grow up where lime-laden drips hit the cave floor.So far, only a fraction of China's caves have been thoroughly prospected and cavers are constantly discovering new subterranean marvels, many of which are subsequently developed into commercial show caves.Finally escaping the darkness, the cave river and its human explorers emerge in a valleyfar from where their journey began.For now, the adventure is over. Rivers which issue from caves are the key to survival in the karst country.This vertical gorge in Guizhou Province is a focal point for the region's wildlife.This is one of the world's rarest primates, Fran鏾is' langur.In China they survive in just two southern provinces, Guizhou and Guangxi, always in rugged limestone terrains. Like most monkeys, they are social creatures and spend a great deal of time grooming each other.Langurs are essentially vegetarian with a diet of buds, fruits and tender young leaves. Babies are born with ginger fur, which gradually turns black from the tail end. Young infants have a vice-like grip, used to cling on to mum for dear life.As they get older, they get bolder and take more risks. Those that survive spend a lot of time travelling. The experienced adults know exactly where to find seasonal foods in different parts of their range.In such steep terrain, travel involves a high level of climbing skill. These monkeys are spectacularly good rock climbers from the time they learn to walk.In langur society, females rule the roost and take the lead when the family is on the move.One section of cliff oozes a trickle of mineral-rich water which the monkeys seem to find irresistible. These days there are few predators in the Mayanghe Reserve whichmight pose a risk to a baby monkey.But in past centuries, this area of south China was home to leopards, pythons and even tigers.To survive dangerous night prowlers, the langurs went underground, using their rock-climbing skills to seek shelter in inaccessible caverns.Filmed in near darkness using a night vision camera, the troop clambers along familiar ledges worn smooth by generations before them. During cold winter weather, the monkeys venture deeper underground where the air stays comparatively warm.At last, journey's end. A cosy niche beyond the reach of even the most enterprising predator. But it's not just monkeys that find shelter in caves.These children are off to school. In rural China that may mean a long trek each morning, passing through a cave or two on the way. But not all pupils have to walk to school. These children are boarders.As the day pupils near journey's end, the boarders are still making breakfast. In the schoolyard, someone seems to have switched the lights off.But this is no ordinary playground, and no ordinary school. It's housed inside a cave!A natural vault of rock keeps out the rain so there's no need for a roof on the classroom.Zhongdong cave school is made up of six classes, with a total of 200 children.As well as the school, the cave houses 18 families, together with their livestock.These could be the only cave-dwelling cows on earth. With schoolwork over, it's playtime at last.In southern China, caves aren't just used for shelter, they can be a source of revenue for the community. People have been visiting this cave for generations. The cave floor is covered in guano, so plentiful that 10 minutes' work can fill these farmer's baskets.It's used as a valuable source of fertilizer. A clue to the source of the guano can be heard above the noise of the river. The sound originates high up in the roof of the cave.The entrance is full of swifts. They're very sociable birds.More than 200,000 of them share this cave in southern Guizhou Province, the biggest swift colony in China. These days, Chinese house swifts mostly nest in the roofs of buildings, but rock crevices like these were their original home, long before houseswere invented.Though the swifts depend on the cave for shelter, they never stray further than the limits of daylight, as their eyes can't see in the dark. However, deep inside the cavern, other creatures are better equipped for subterranean life. A colony of bats is just waking up, using ultrasonic squeaks to orientate themselves in the darkness.Night is the time to go hunting. Rickett's mouse-eared bat is the only bat in Asia which specialises in catching fishes, tracking them down from the sound reflection of ripples on the water surface.This extraordinary behaviour was only discovered in the last couple of years, and has never been filmed before. If catching fish in the dark is impressive, imagine eating a slippery minnow with no hands while hanging upside down.Dawn over the karst hills of Guilin. These remarkable hills owe their peculiar shapes to the mildly acid waters of the Li River, whose meandering course over eons of time has corroded away their bases until only the rocky cores remain. The Li is one of the cleanest rivers in China, a favourite spot for fishermen with their trained cormorants.The men, all called Huang, come from the same village.Now in their 70s and 80s, they've been fishermen all their lives. Before they release the birds, they tie a noose loosely around the neck to stop them swallowing any fish they may catch.Chanting and dancing, the Huangs encourage their birds to take the plunge.Underwater, the cormorant's hunting instinct kicks in, turning them into fish-seeking missiles.Working together, a good cormorant team can catch a couple of dozen decent-sized fish in a morning.The birds return to the raft with their fish because they've been trained to do so.From the time it first hatched, each of these cormorants has been reared to a life of obedience to its master. The birds are, in effect, slaves. But they're not stupid.It's said that cormorants can keep a tally of the fish they catch, at least up to seven.So unless they get a reward now and then they simply withdraw their labour. The fishermen, of course, keep the best fish for themselves. The cormorants get the leftover tiddlers. With its collar removed, the bird at last can swallow its prize. Best of all, one it isn't meant to have!These days, competition from modern fishing techniques means the Huangs can'tmake a livingfrom traditional cormorant fishing alone.And this 1,300-year-old tradition is now practised mostly to entertain tourists. But on Caohai Lake in nearby Guizhou Province, an even more unusual fishing industry is alive and well.Geng Zhong Sheng is on his way to set out his nets for the night. Geng's net is a strange tubular contraption with a closed-off end. More than a hundred fishermen make their living from the lake.Its mineral-rich waters are highly productive, and there are nets everywhere. The next morning, Geng returns with his son to collect his catch.At first sight, it looks disappointing. Tiny fishes, lots of shrimps, and some wriggling bugs.Geng doesn't seem too downhearted. The larger fish are kept alive, the only way they'll stay fresh in the heat. Surprisingly, some of the bugs are also singled out for special treatment.They're the young stage of dragonflies, predators that feed on worms and tadpoles.Nowhere else in the world are dragonfly nymphs harvested like this. Back home, Geng spreads his catch on the roof to dry. This being China, nothing edible will be wasted. There's a saying in the far south, We will eat anything with legs except a table, "and anything with wings except a plane."Within a few hours, the dried insects are ready to be bagged up and taken to market.It's the dragonfly nymphs that fetch the best price. Fortunately, Caohai's dragonflies are abundant and fast-breeding.So Geng and his fellow fishermen have so far had little impact on their numbers. But not all wildlife is so resilient.This Buddhist temple near Shanghai has an extraordinary story attached to it. In May 2007, camera team filmed this peculiar Swinhoe's turtle in the temple's fish pond.According to the monks, the turtle had been given to the temple during the Ming dynasty, over 400 years ago. It was thought to be the oldest animal on earth.Soft-shelled turtles are considered a gourmet delicacy by many Chinese, and when it was filmed, this was one of just three Swinhoe's turtles left alive in China, the rest of its kind having been rounded up and eaten.Sadly, just a few weeks after filming, this ancient creature died. The remaining individuals of its species are currently kept in separate zoos and Swinhoe's turtle is now reckoned extinct in the wild.In fact, most of the 25 types of freshwater turtles in China are now vanishingly rare.The answer to extinction is protection. And there is now a growing network of nature reserves throughout southern China.Of these, the Tianzi Mountain Reserve at Zhangjiajie is perhaps the most visited by Chinese nature lovers, who come to marvel at the gravity-defying landscape of soaring sandstone pinnacles.Winding between Zhangjiajie's peaks, crystal clear mountain streams are home to what is perhaps China's strangest creature.This bizarre animal is a type of newt, the Chinese giant salamander. In China it is known as the baby fish because when distressed it makes a sound like a crying infant.It grows up to a metre and a half long, making it the world's largest amphibian. Under natural conditions, a giant salamander may live for decades. But like so many Chinese animals, it is considered delicious to eat.Despite being classed as a protected species, giant salamanders are still illegally sold for food and the baby fish is now rare and endangered in the wild.Fortunately, in a few areas like Zhangjiajie, giant salamanders still survive under strict official protection. The rivers of Zhangjiajie flow north east into the Yangtze floodplain, known as The Land of Fish and Rice.On an island in a lake in Anhui Province, a dragon is stirring. This is the ancestral home of China's largest and rarest reptile, a creature of mystery and legend. Dragon eggs are greatly prized.These babies need to hatch out quick! It would seem someone is on their trail.For a helpless baby reptile, imprisoned in a leathery membrane inside a chalky shell, the process of hatching is a titanic struggle.And time is running out. It's taken two hours for the little dragon to get its head out of the egg.It needs to gather its strength now, for one final, massive push. Free at last, the baby Chinese alligators instinctively head upwards towards the surface of the nest and the waiting outside world.But the visitors are not what they seem.She Shizhen and her son live nearby. She has been caring for her local alligators for over 20 years, so she had a fair idea when the eggs were likely to hatch.Back home, she's built a pond surrounded by netting to keep out predators, where her charges will spend the next six months until they're big enough to fend for themselves.For the past 20 years, small-scale conservation projects like this are all that have kept China's 150 wild alligators from extinction.Just south of the alligator country, dawn breaks over a very different landscape.The 1,800-metre-high granite peaks of the Huangshan or Yellow Mountain. To the Chinese, Huangshan's pines epitomise the strength and resilience of nature.Some of these trees are thought to be over 1,000 years old.Below the granite peaks, steep forested valleys shelter surprising inhabitants. Huangshan macaques, rare descendants of the Tibetan macaques of western China, are unique to these mountain valleys where they enjoy strict official protection.After a morning spent in the treetops, the troop is heading for the shade of the valley.A chance for the grown-ups to escape the heat and maybe pick up a lunch snack from the stream.As in most monkey societies, social contact involves a lot of grooming.Grooming is all very well for grown-ups, but young macaques have energy to burn. Like so much monkey business, what starts off as a bit of playful rough-and-tumble, soon begins to get out of hand.The alpha male has seen it all before. He's not in the least bothered. But someone, or something, is watching, with a less than friendly interest.The Chinese moccasin is an ambush predator with a deadly bite. This is one of China's largest and most feared venomous snakes. But the monkeys have lived alongside these dangerous serpents for thousands of years.They use this specific alarm call to warn each other whenever a snake is spotted.Once its cover is blown, the viper poses no threat to the monkeys, now safe in the treetops.And life soon returns to normal. By late summer, the rice fields of southern China have turned to gold. The time has come to bring in the harvest. Nowadays, modern high-yield strains are grown throughout much of the rice lands, boosted by chemical fertilizers and reaped by combine harvesters.This is the great rice bowl of China, producing a quarter of the world's rice. Insects, stirred up by the noisy machines, are snapped up by gangs of red-rumped swallows, including this year's youngsters, who will have fledged several weeks ago.This could be their last good feast before they head south for the winter. Mechanized farming works best in the flat-bottomed valleys of the lowlands.To the south, in the terraced hills of Zhejiang Province, an older and simpler lifestyle persists.It's 7:00 in the morning and Longxian's most successful businessman is off to work. In the golden terraces surrounding the village the ears of rice are plump and ripe for harvesting.But today, rice isn't uppermost in Mr Yang's mind. He has bigger fish to fry. Further up the valley, the harvest has already begun. Yang's fields are ripe, too, but they haven't been drained yet.That's because for him, rice is not the main crop. The baskets he's carried up the hillside give a clue to Yang's business.But before he starts work, he needs to let some water out of the system. As the water level drops, the mystery is revealed. Golden carp.Longxian villagers discovered the benefits of transferring wild caught carp into their paddy fields long ago.The tradition has been going on here for at least 700 years. As the water level in the paddy drops, bamboo gates stop the fish escaping.The beauty of this farming method is that it delivers two crops from the same field at the same time.Fish and rice. Smart ecology like this is what enables China to be largely self-sufficient in food, even today. Back in the village, Yang has his own smokehouse where he preserves his fish ready for market. Longxian carp have unusually softscales and a very delicate flavour, perhaps as a result of the local water. Meanwhile, outside the smokehouse, there's something fishy going on.To mark the harvest, the village is staging a party. Children from Longxian school have spent weeks preparing for their big moment.Everyone from the community is here to support them. The rice growing cycle is complete.By November, northern China is becoming distinctly chilly. But the south is still relatively warm and welcoming. Across the vast expanse of Poyang Lake, the birds are gathering.Tundra swans are long-distance migrants from northern Siberia. To the Chinese, they symbolise the essence of natural beauty.The Poyang Lake Nature Reserve offers winter refuge to more than a quarter of a million birds from more than 100 species, creating one of southern China's finest wildlife experiences.The last birds to arrive at Poyang are those which have made the longest journey to get here, all the way from the Arctic coast of Siberia.The Siberian crane, known in China as the white crane, is seen as a symbol of good luck.Each year, almost the entire world population of these critically endangered birds make a 9,000-kilometre roundtrip to spend the winter at Poyang.Like the white cranes, many of south China's unique animals face pressure from exploitation and competition with people over space and resources.But if China is living proof of anything, it is that wildlife is surprisingly resilient. Given the right help, even the rarest creatures can return from the brink. If we show the will, nature will find the way.。