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Nature, The Elephant and the Termite

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Nature, The Elephant and the Termite

Nature, The Elephant and the Termite

Wednesday, Nov. 3, at 8 PM

Repeats Thursday, Nov. 4, at 1 AM

 

In arid regions across southern Kenya, the waterhole, created by elephants and termites, is central to life. It is where animals visit to drink and where some creatures are born and die. Every visit is charged with tension; a waterhole is the perfect place for predators to wait in ambush. That is the traditional view, but there is an entire community of creatures that call the waterhole home, many of whom live at an elephant’s toenail height such as frogs, dung beetles and chameleons.

This is the remarkable story of the relationship between Africa’s largest and smallest and the unique wildlife community they support. Peabody Award-winning filmmakers Mark Deeble and Vicky Stone (Nature: The Queen of Trees) and their small, dedicated team spent two years of their lives camped out at a waterhole in Kenya to record life at Africa’s great wildlife meeting place.

Nature
Preview of The Elephant and the Termite
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Elephants and termites create lifesaving waterholes for thousands of other creatures.