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Wild Japan

Thursday, 29 January 2026

Japan is a crowded country but stull has many diverse wildlife and landscapes. Many of the animals have adapted and continue to thrive alongside humans.  This documentary is a very sweet and beautifully created piece of work and features narration by Michelle Dockery.  You will witness frogs and their amazingly complex nests, the tadpoles feeding off it before they make their way out into the world.  Then there are the macaques raiding the local farms for the fresh produce (well, everyone has to eat, don’t they?).  These and many other animals will thrill and engage you for 20 minutes. I particularly liked the underwater sequences - simply phenomenal.  It leaves me wondering how on earth it was done. Enjoy!

How Snares Penguins Get Clean after Living in their Muddy Forest Home

Sunday, 25 January 2026

The wonderfully eccentric Snares penguin is always up for a spot of self-care.  In their New Zealand forest habitat they thrive, but there is something that happens in a forest that wouldn’t if they were, say, to live in ice-bound conditions further south.  Mud.  Forests are muddy. 

The clingy mud (which they themselves have helped to generate as they waddle through the forest) could be a threat to them. If the feathers are clogged, regulation of body temperature is very difficult and so this might kill the penguin if they don’t get their feathers clean soon.  So, they go to the baths and give themselves a proper scrub, after which they lay on a special wax to their feathers!

Watch the delightful video below.

Should I Feed the Birds in My Garden?

There are lots of videos doing the rounds that feeding birds in our gardens helps to spread disease.  Not only that, it favours some of the more aggressive species of birds to thrive to the detriment of others.  What exactly does help the birds in our gardens?

As landscapes changed – bird-feeding spread.  Here, Joel Ashton tells, with great clarity, the steps that can be taken to help stop the spread of disease.  It is also very sensible advice.  For example, the blue-tit is quite an assertive bird and people think that it is hogging the feeding stations – as well as the  nest boxes we place in the gardens, too.  As a fan of the blue tit, I was relieved to find that it is not the thug in the garden that many people think it is.

Bird behaviour changes when resources are limited.  So a lot of birds behave badly – but of course that is a human interpretation of their actions.  Gardens are shared spaces, and competition is normal – the birds don’t quite see things as we do.  A simple tip is to spread different types of feeding stations around the garden to avoid the birds having to feed shoulder-to-shoulder.

Watch the video below – it’s a great watch wherever you are.

Please Help Keep Ark in Space Online!

Sunday, 18 January 2026

You may or may not know this but Ark in Space is curated by just one person – and that person would be me! There are a number of expenses that the site incurs each month and so, with my cap in my hand, I’m going to beg a favor.

If you enjoy Ark in Space, please consider helping out with the cost of running the site.  As you can guess, it takes a lot of time and effort, too!

Below this post you will see a button which will enable you to make a contribution safely and securely. You can give as little or as much as you like – I’m not going to limit your choices! Anything will be gratefully received and will help to ensure that I can carry on bringing you all the great features, photographs and videos about the natural world that makes the site what it is.

So, if you read or watch something that you have really enjoyed, please think about sending us a small donation. Thanks!

Best regards

Robert-John


PS: The donation page is set to US dollars as that is where we get most of our traffic from. So, if you are outside the USA please remember to calculate the amount from your currency first!

Image Credit

Picture of the Month - Geoffroy's Tamarin

Geoffroy’s tamarin (Saguinus geoffroyi) is a small New World monkey native to Central America, particularly Panama and parts of Costa Rica. This picture was taken at Gatun Lake in Panama. It is easily recognised by its distinctive black-and-white fur and reddish nape. Living in social groups, Geoffroy’s tamarins are active, agile and highly vocal, using a range of calls to communicate. Their diet is omnivorous, consisting of fruit, insects, nectar and small vertebrates. They play an important role in seed dispersal within tropical forests. Although adaptable, they are threatened by habitat loss and deforestation.


They can seem a bit grumpy – like the one in the picture - mainly because of their sharp facial markings and intense expressions. Geoffroy’s tamarins often look stern or suspicious, especially when alert. Behaviour-wise, though, they’re not especially bad-tempered. They’re lively, curious and quite social, but they can be noisy and feisty, particularly when defending territory or competing for food. So while they may look grumpy, it’s more a case of “serious face” than a genuinely grumpy personality.


This picture is by Charles J. Sharp, shared here with a Creative Commons license.

The Gelada: Unique Primate from the Roof of Africa

Monday, 12 January 2026

High up in the Ethiopian mountains lives the Gelada.  It lives nowhere else and although its closest living relative is the baboon, with its hairless face and short muzzle the gelada looks more like a chimpanzee.  Isolated in these remote Ethiopian Highlands (often called The Roof of Africa) this primate has developed a way of existence (one might call it a culture) all of its own.

To begin with the gelada is a graminivore which means that it only eats grass.  Fortunately, the highlands in which they live are cooler and a lot less arid than many parts of Ethiopia and they rarely experience any kind of food shortage.  They will also become granivorous when the grass is in seed.  In fact, they actively prefer the seed to the grass – it is probably a welcome change.

Watch a Clever Chimp Find Hidden Honey – Incredible Wildlife Footage

Sunday, 11 January 2026

Chimps love honey – and who could blame them? However, our close relative cannot, as we do, pop down to the shops and buy some over the counter. They have to do it the traditional way – and as such things can get a little messy, not to mention a little dangerous. In this video from the BBC, narrated by Sir David Attenborough, one chimp decides that it must be honey for lunch – and she is willing to go to extremes to get it.


Unfortunately for the bees, the chimp is quite adept at getting what she wants, using a variety of different wooden “tools” in order to extract the honey.  How on earth does she know how to do this? At one point, a chimp did learn and passed it on. Down the generations these skills have been honed until now they make it looks very easy. You can see in this video a young chimp learning through imitation and although he doesn’t seem to be doing too well, I bet in a few years he will have mastered the art.  It’s just a shame that what took the bees years to create is destroyed in minutes.  It seems they are closer to us than we might imagine, after all.


Watch the chimps hunt for honey below.


Barnacle Geese in Slow Motion Flying Over Edinburgh, Scotland

Tuesday, 6 January 2026

This is amazing footage.  Occasionally barnacle geese, usually keen to keep to the British coastline when in flight, as forced inland because of poor weather.  When they do, the lucky inhabitants of cities like Edinburgh will be lucky enough to witness the flight of a whole flock as they make their way further north.  The sight is something to behold from the ground, so just imagine if you were in the sky with the geese! Well, imagine no more because thanks to John Downer Productions, you can now see these remarkable  birds doing what they do best.  If this seems familiar, you may have seen it while watching the Earthflight TV series, which was called Winged Planet in the US.  The result is more than a little jaw meets floor to say the least.


Edinburgh’s sites are not the only thing barnacle geese might see as they complete their annual migration. The Svalbard population (the most likely to be in our video) of barnacle geese migrates annually between the high Arctic and western Scotland. They breed during the short summer in Svalbard, where predator pressure is low, then begin their autumn migration in September, flying south across the Norwegian Sea. The geese winter mainly in south-west Scotland, particularly the Solway Firth, with smaller numbers dispersing along the east coast and occasionally over Edinburgh. In spring (April–May), they return north via the Norwegian coast to Svalbard, completing a round journey of around 3,000 kilometres. This remarkable migration is typically undertaken in tight family groups, forming the distinctive V-shaped skeins often seen crossing Scottish skies.

 

New Species Discovered in 2025: Animals, Plants and Fungi

Monday, 5 January 2026

Did you know that a new species can be named by qualified scientists all over the world, as long as they follow international rules? Probably, a more amazing fact is that new species are still being discovered on a daily basis.  The Natural History Museum in London helped to identify 262 species in 2025 alone. The global number runs into the thousands.


The species do not have to be around – many of the new species that are identified each year are fossilised remnants.  However, in 2025 the Natural History Museum helped with animals including a toad whose tadpoles skip the tadpole phase, and some dazzling new jewel butterflies (one or two of which were around, but alas may not be any more).


To discover more about how many species were discovered last year, watch the Natural History Museum video below.


Royal Penguins: Macquarie Island’s Resilient Residents

Friday, 2 January 2026


In the subantarctic region of the Southern Ocean, roughly halfway between New Zealand and Antarctica lies Macquarie Island. Although it is closer to New Zealand, Australia, in fact, owns the island.  Not that the royal penguin cares – it has called the island its (only) home for tens of thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands of years, relying on its rocky shores and tussock-covered slopes for breeding, nesting, and raising its chicks in one of the most remote and windswept environments on Earth.  As such, it is the only place on Earth (apart from two small islets about 30 miles away where around 1,000 breed) that the royal penguin mates and reproduces. Image Credit


Image Credit

So, why the name? This is almost always the first question that people ask when they first come across the royal penguin.  We’re not really sure when they acquired their common name, but it is likely that it was at around the same time that they were first recorded by European sealers in 1810 (and that was an oh dear moment for the species, to say the very least).  The sealers were no doubt struck by the bird’s bright yellow crest, which resembles a crown or royal ornament.  They were also struck (with no doubt at all), by the opportunity the royal penguin presented to make some money. More about that sad chapter later.

Good News for the Kākāpō, New Zealand’s Flightless Parrot?

Thursday, 1 January 2026

Once thought to be functionally extinct, the kākāpō — New Zealand’s iconic, flightless parrot — may be heading for its largest breeding season on record. Image Credit


Conservationists expect all 84 breeding females in the population to lay eggs this season, a remarkable milestone for a species that numbered just 51 individuals in 1995. Today, the population stands at around 273 birds, the result of decades of intensive conservation work.


The surge in breeding activity is linked to an unusually large crop of rimu fruit, a critical food source that triggers kākāpō reproduction. When food is abundant, the birds are far more likely to mate and lay eggs. What’s particularly intriguing is that the fruit will not be fully ripe until after chicks hatch - yet the birds appear to “predict” the coming abundance and begin breeding in advance.


That said, success is far from guaranteed. Eggs must still hatch, chicks must survive, and juveniles must reach independence - a process that will not be fully assessed until late 2026. The species’ slow breeding cycle and long lifespan mean recovery is measured in decades, not years.


There are also lingering concerns about genetic diversity. The severe population bottleneck has led to fertility issues and increased vulnerability to disease, challenges conservationists continue to manage as best they can.


Still, the outlook is hopeful. If even a portion of this breeding season succeeds, it could mark another significant step away from extinction for one of the world’s rarest parrots - and a powerful reminder of what long-term conservation efforts can achieve.


Born into Peril: The Turtle Hatchlings’ Dash to the Ocean

Will these turtle hatchlings reach the sea without being captured by predators, and will they withstand the power of the waves once they get there?


On the beaches of Africa, a clutch of tiny turtle hatchlings emerges from the sand, driven by instinct alone. The journey before them is short in distance, but immense in danger. Every movement draws attention, and every second increases the odds stacked against them.  Although this video from the BBC does not explicitly state this, I have an idea that these are hatchlings of the Leatherback sea turtle (Dermochelys coriacea).


To say that they have the odds stacked against them is something of an understatement. Above, yellow-billed kites circle patiently, their sharp eyes trained on the shifting sand. Nearby, crows watch from a distance, intelligent and opportunistic, waiting for the moment to strike. At ground level, ghost crabs scuttle across the beach, perfectly adapted ambush predators ready to seize any hatchling that strays too close. Together, these hunters form a gauntlet that few will pass unscathed.


Of course, there is always one hatchling that emerges last. Smaller, slower, just a heartbeat behind the others. Naturally, our attention fixes on this one. We root for it, silently urging it forward, as if encouragement alone might tilt the balance in its favour. But what are the odds?


Even reaching the shoreline is not the end of the trial. The surf itself is a formidable barrier, its waves capable of dragging a fragile body back onto the sand or tumbling it helplessly in the shallows. And beyond the breaking waves, the danger does not disappear. A moment’s hesitation can be fatal, as a shadow passes overhead and a pair of sharp talons plunges down from the sky.


This is nature at its most uncompromising. No quarter is given, no second chances offered. Yet enough hatchlings survive to keep the species alive, just as they have for millions of years. Each successful dash to the sea is a small victory, not just for the turtle, but for life’s stubborn persistence against overwhelming odds.


Narrated in the measured, reverent tones we associate with Sir David Attenborough, this scene reminds us that survival in the natural world is never guaranteed — it is earned, moment by perilous moment.


Watch the video below:


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