David Attenborough to present BBC series focusing on Ireland and Britain

entertainment
David Attenborough To Present Bbc Series Focusing On Ireland And Britain
The five-part series, titled Wild Isles, took three years to film
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By Ellie Iorizzo, PA Senior Entertainment Reporter

David Attenborough will present “extraordinary animal dramas and wildlife spectacles” across Ireland and Britain in a new series for the BBC.

The five-part natural history series, titled Wild Isles, aims to emulate what the Planet series did for the wildlife of the world – inspiring people to “safeguard and restore nature for future generations.”

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Filmed over three years, the BBC One series shot using 4K technology will explain the challenges nature faces and what can be done to make Ireland and Britain wilder in the future.

The common puffin during filming of Wild Isles on Skomer Island. Photo: Alex Board/Silverback Films/BBC/PA

Attenborough (96) said: “In my long lifetime, I have travelled to almost every corner of our planet.

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“I can assure you that in the British Isles, as well as astonishing scenery there are extraordinary animal dramas and wildlife spectacles to match anything I have seen on my global travels.”

The natural history series will have an introductory episode explaining why Ireland and Britain are globally important for nature. The remaining four hour-long episodes will celebrate four key habitats – woodlands, grasslands, freshwater and marine.

The series will see new behaviour filmed around the islands, including red deer stags rutting in one of Ireland’s wildest corners and blue fin tuna gathering in the Celtic Sea.

It will also show wild horses battling for access to females in England; black grouse and hen harriers courting in Scotland; mayfly hatching on a river; foxes hunting rabbits at night; and a bee that rides a broomstick.

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The series will capture the Irish and British countryside using aerial photography, and motion controlled time-lapse photography will highlight the passing seasons.

Low light cameras will reveal the nocturnal lives of animal favourites and macrophotography will uncover the miniature worlds of rock pools, ponds and grasslands.

Alastair Fothergill, executive producer, said: “I have always wanted to make a landmark series that really does justice to our own extraordinary wildlife.

“I am sure people will be amazed at what is happening right on their own doorstep”.

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Jack Bootle, head of commissioning, science and natural history, said: “The multi-award winning team at Silverback are creating an eye-opening celebration of British and Irish wildlife that has to be seen to be believed.

“You’ll think a meadow in Somerset is as beautiful as the Serengeti, and the North Atlantic as wild and dramatic as the Antarctic Ocean.”

The series is co-produced by The Open University, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) and World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF).

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