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NATURE: Soul of the Ocean DVD

$24.99
Item #: WE7602DV

Howard Hall, one of the world's foremost underwater filmmakers, brings to NATURE a lifetime of insights into how life in the ocean really works - in surprisingly cooperative communities built on age-old partnerships.

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Howard Hall, one of the world's foremost underwater filmmakers, brings to NATURE a lifetime of insights into how life in the ocean really works - in surprisingly cooperative communities built on age-old partnerships.


Coral reefs turn out to be cosmopolitan cities where relationships thrive: a specialist shrimp, a baby damsel fish, and a porcelain crab all share the protection of an anemone; an urchin and a crab form an unlikely pair; fan corals each support their own kind of seahorse. They're all part of a vast system that only exists because everything is connected. From great whales to turtles, to sharks and tiny blennies, the ocean is full of creatures that need and support each other.

Producer: Bill Murphy, Janet Hess, Michele Hall
Executive Producer: Fred Kaufman
Production Company: Howard Hall Productions; The WNET Group; Mark Fletcher Productions; Terra Mater Studios
Copyright Year: 2023
Rating: TV-PG
Director: Howard Hall Productions, The WNET Group
Narrator: Noma Dumezweni
Writers: Mark Fletcher, Howard Hall
Number of Discs: 1
Length: 60 minutes
Number of Episodes: 1

Item can only be shipped to US destinations.


Highlighted Customer Reviews


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Robin reviewed NATURE: Soul of the Ocean DVD
5.0 star rating
Magnificent!!
Review by Robin review stating Magnificent!!
Gives one a whole new perspective on the undersea world!!!
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Kodi reviewed NATURE: Soul of the Ocean DVD
5.0 star rating
Stunning photograph, remarkable stories
Review by Kodi review stating Stunning photograph, remarkable stories
This is one of my favorite Natures, ever. I want to show it to my biology students, since it has some great science hidden in the sheer magic of the experience. The ocean is always spectacular and colorful, but much of the focus is on how living things interact. People too often forget that extinction is far more than a single species. This makes it clear that we would also potentially be losing other organisms, as they are so mutually dependent.

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