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Iberian Wildlife Series
October 10, 1975

Iberian Wildlife Series

Documentary on Iberian's fauna

The Lords of the Forest I

01. The Lords of the Forest I

The life of the red deer, from birth to maturity.

30min
October 10, 1975
The Lords of the Forest II

02. The Lords of the Forest II

In the forests and thickets of central, southern, and western Spain, in the ecosystem known as the Mediterranean forest, the second part of the deer saga takes place.

25min
October 17, 1975
The Little Killers I

03. The Little Killers I

In the animal community of the Mediterranean forest, small herbivores, plant-eating animals such as mice, garden dormice, rats, squirrels, and rabbits, are abundant. Their populations are kept in check by small and medium-sized predators, extremely useful ones, such as weasels, polecats, genets, and foxes: the little killers.

25min
October 24, 1975
The Little Killers II

04. The Little Killers II

In the Mediterranean forest, small herbivores such as mice, garden dormice, rats, squirrels, and rabbits are abundant. Their populations are kept in check by medium-sized predators such as the weasel, polecats, genets, foxes, lynxes, common buzzards, and booted eagles.

26min
October 31, 1975
The Black Vulture I

05. The Black Vulture I

The great winged scavenger of the Mediterranean forest is the black vulture. In prehistoric times, black vultures must have fed on the remains of wolf feasts.

25min
November 7, 1975
The Black Vulture II

06. The Black Vulture II

The great winged scavenger of the Mediterranean forest is the black vulture. In prehistoric times, black vultures must have fed on the remains of wolf feasts.

28min
November 14, 1975
The Storks I

07. The Storks I

Families of white storks arrived on the Iberian Peninsula in the middle of winter. They return to their old nests and care for their young during spring. In midsummer, they migrate to their African wintering grounds. The European population of white storks has declined significantly.

29min
November 28, 1975
The Storks II

08. The Storks II

Storks have a wide and highly varied dietary range; they eat anything that is not plant matter. Their favorite prey includes frogs, toads, large insects, reptiles, and even chicks of ground-nesting birds.

29min
December 5, 1975
Bonelli's Eagle I

09. Bonelli's Eagle I

The fastest and most acrobatic of European eagles, known to Anglo-Saxon naturalists as the hawk-eagle, nests on the cliff faces and gorges of Mediterranean countries.

31min
December 12, 1975
Bonelli's Eagle II

10. Bonelli's Eagle II

The fastest and most acrobatic of European eagles, known to Anglo-Saxon naturalists as the hawk-eagle, nests on the cliff faces and gorges of Mediterranean countries.

29min
December 19, 1975
The Iberian Wild Goat I

11. The Iberian Wild Goat I

Defeated, before dying, the old wild goat remembers his life: the golden eagle attack in his youth, the harsh winters, the mating display, and the fight that cost him leadership of the herd.

26min
December 26, 1975
The Iberian Wild Goat II

12. The Iberian Wild Goat II

Defeated, before dying, the old wild goat remembers his life: the golden eagle attack in his youth, the harsh winters, the mating display, and the fight that cost him leadership of the herd.

34min
January 2, 1976
The Pirate of the Thicket

13. The Pirate of the Thicket

The most representative bird of prey of European forests is the goshawk. With swift and acrobatic flight, armed with powerful talons, and dressed in splendid, beautiful plumage, the goshawk hunts both birds and mammals. On the Iberian Peninsula, its common prey are rabbits and corvids.

30min
January 9, 1976
Las Tablas de Daimiel I

14. Las Tablas de Daimiel I

Shallow, vast steppe lagoons are of extraordinary importance for migratory waterfowl in Mediterranean countries. Drainage projects have destroyed very important lagoons.

28min
January 16, 1976
Las Tablas de Daimiel II

15. Las Tablas de Daimiel II

Shallow, vast steppe lagoons are of extraordinary importance for migratory waterfowl in Mediterranean countries. Drainage projects have destroyed very important lagoons.

29min
January 23, 1976
The Living Projectile

16. The Living Projectile

The fastest of all living animals is the peregrine falcon. In vertical or diagonal dives, it reaches speeds of over 350 km/h.

29min
January 30, 1976
The Valley of the Eagles

17. The Valley of the Eagles

Four species of eagles live in Spain: the golden eagle, the imperial eagle, Bonelli's eagle, and the booted eagle. The imperial eagle is on the brink of extinction; the other three have greatly declined in number.

29min
February 5, 1976
Taiga, the Goshawk

18. Taiga, the Goshawk

Through the medieval rules of falconry, the bird is tamed and trained until its will is won over.

28min
February 6, 1976
The Fawn I

19. The Fawn I

Starting from a close-up of the magnificent trophy, the life of the deer is reconstructed.

27min
February 13, 1976
The Fawn II

20. The Fawn II

The life of the magnificent deer is like a river: from when he was nothing more than a cub chased by a lynx, protected by his mother from wolf attacks, to his final days brought down in a hunt.

28min
February 20, 1976
El Hosquillo, Bears

21. El Hosquillo, Bears

Deep in the Cuenca mountain range, occupying a great tectonic trench of pine forests crossed by a crystalline river, lies an experimental hunting reserve of ICONA. Among the park's research and study programs, the conservation and reintroduction plan for the brown bear in its native regions stands out.

29min
February 27, 1976
Falconry I

22. Falconry I

Peregrine falcons and other raptors have been domesticated by humans since ancient times to hunt various species of birds and mammals.

26min
March 26, 1976
Falconry II

23. Falconry II

In the Middle Ages, the taming and use of high-flying falcons was known as "altanería."

26min
April 2, 1976
The Shrike

24. The Shrike

One of the most fearsome pirates of the Mediterranean forest is a small bird barely larger than a sparrow. Capable of capturing mice, birds, and other small vertebrates with its hooked beak, it swoops like a cyclone even against scorpions, and does not hesitate to attack snakes.

29min
April 9, 1976
The Last Vultures of Europe

25. The Last Vultures of Europe

In this episode, besides vultures, different species appear, among which the eagle (imperial and short-toed), storks, wolves, azure-winged magpies, and mouflon are worth highlighting. "The Last Vultures of Europe" is one of Félix Rodríguez de la Fuente's most acclaimed productions. This documentary about vultures received recognition at the Monte Carlo International Television Festival in 1975.

49min
November 5, 1976
The Golden Eagle I

26. The Golden Eagle I

An in-depth look at the Spanish golden eagle, from the courtship display to the moment the eaglets leave the nest.

27min
November 26, 1976
The Golden Eagle II

27. The Golden Eagle II

An in-depth look at the Spanish golden eagle, from the courtship display to the moment the eaglets leave the nest.

23min
December 3, 1976
The Garden Dormouse I

28. The Garden Dormouse I

In this first part, all the processes of reproductive biology and rearing of the young of the species also known as the hill rat are described.

27min
December 10, 1976
The Garden Dormouse II

29. The Garden Dormouse II

Second part on the life of the garden dormouse, or hill rat. The garden dormouse is one of the most beautiful rodents in our fauna. Perhaps that is why it is one of the most coveted prey for many predators, though its "slowness" compared to raptors, snakes, and other predators such as the polecat also plays a role.

26min
December 17, 1976
The Griffon Vulture I

30. The Griffon Vulture I

A carrion bird of steppe and mountain, the griffon vulture saw its ecological opportunities increase on the Iberian Peninsula as historical deforestation created bare spaces suitable for the prospecting flight of this winged scavenger.

32min
January 7, 1977
The Griffon Vulture II

31. The Griffon Vulture II

Second part on the existence of the griffon vulture as a carrion bird.

30min
January 14, 1977
The Bee-eater I

32. The Bee-eater I

Birds of African origin, bee-eaters spend part of the spring and summer in Spain. Sporting a beautiful multicolored plumage, these birds feed primarily on insects captured in mid-flight.

28min
January 28, 1977
The Bee-eater II

33. The Bee-eater II

The secrets of the bee-eater's life, from the courtship display to the ritualized fights the chicks engage in to maintain the hierarchical order within their nests, including the threat of their great enemy: the hobby.

28min
February 4, 1977
The Wolf

34. The Wolf

An episode explaining the wolf's relationship with humans from its origins.

33min
February 18, 1977
Zoological Olympics I

35. Zoological Olympics I

Iberian wildlife boasts several champions in different sporting disciplines; in this episode, Félix Rodríguez de la Fuente measures the speed of the fox, the Iberian wolf, and the peregrine falcon, among others.

22min
March 4, 1977
Zoological Olympics II

36. Zoological Olympics II

Nature has its own ranking of athletes, and in this episode Félix Rodríguez de la Fuente studies the abilities of each one.

22min
March 11, 1977
Migratory Birds

37. Migratory Birds

Spain is a stopover and nesting site for several migratory species. In autumn, shortly after the storks and herons leave us, geese, cranes, and wild ducks arrive on our lands.

27min
July 21, 1977
The Woodpeckers I

38. The Woodpeckers I

These birds, belonging to the order Piciformes, build their nests by drilling into wood. Among woodpeckers, some are practically omnivorous, such as the great spotted woodpecker. Others, like the green woodpecker, feed on wood-boring larvae and ants, using their extremely long protractile tongue.

26min
January 3, 1978
The Woodpeckers II

39. The Woodpeckers II

In this episode, we observe that woodpecker chicks develop quickly.

28min
January 10, 1978
The Woodpeckers III

40. The Woodpeckers III

Woodpeckers are insectivores and contribute to the health of the forests where they nest.

33min
January 17, 1978
The Wild Boar I

41. The Wild Boar I

Among the large mammals of our wildlife, wild boars are without a doubt the most abundant and thriving. The high number of offspring that sows successfully raise, along with their omnivorous diet, help maintain such high population levels.

28min
January 24, 1978
The Wild Boar II

42. The Wild Boar II

The natural predators of wild boars are lynxes, eagles, and wolves, although a large number of animals are also killed during driven hunts.

29min
February 3, 1978
The Wise Vulture

43. The Wise Vulture

In this episode, we will learn firsthand how the Egyptian vulture is capable of using tools to perform tasks essential to its survival, specifically stone pebbles that it picks up from the ground with its beak and uses as instruments to break ostrich eggs.

39min
February 10, 1978
The Beautiful Killer

44. The Beautiful Killer

The genet is a predatory mammal of nocturnal habits that lives throughout Africa, the Iberian Peninsula, and southwestern France.

30min
February 17, 1978
The Hunting Game I

45. The Hunting Game I

Among the most aggressive carnivores are undoubtedly the mustelids. In a small burrow, a polecat fights to the death with an enormous rat.

28min
February 24, 1978
The Hunting Game II

46. The Hunting Game II

As soon as the young polecats finish nursing, their parents carry the animals they capture into the burrow to feed their offspring.

33min
March 3, 1978
The Family Clan

47. The Family Clan

Today's episode shows us how a wolf pack lives from the birth of the pups until they leave the den. The wolf cubs grow rapidly and change color, from completely black to more brownish tones. Félix Rodríguez de la Fuente shows us how these tender pups prepare for their lives as great hunters. There is great tension between two of the greatest hunters of our wildlife, the golden eagle and the wolf, and this forms the plot of this episode dedicated to the family clan of the Iberian wolf.

30min
March 31, 1978
Innocent Killers

48. Innocent Killers

In this episode we can see that the Mediterranean forest is home to abundant small herbivores, such as mice, garden dormice, squirrels, and rabbits. Their populations are kept in check by small and medium-sized predators, extremely useful ones, such as weasels, ferrets, genets, and foxes.

33min
April 7, 1978
The Cormorant

49. The Cormorant

While the crew sails through the waters of the Cabrera sub-archipelago, they discover a small cormorant chick that has fallen into the sea and seems doomed to die.

28min
April 14, 1978
Nocturnal Raptors I

50. Nocturnal Raptors I

In this episode we can see Félix and his crew, including biologist Carlos Sanz, capturing different owls and nocturnal raptors to implant a technological tracking system hidden in their plumage in order to observe their habits and behaviors.

25min
April 28, 1978
Nocturnal Raptors II

51. Nocturnal Raptors II

In this episode we can see Félix and his crew, including biologist Carlos Sanz, capturing different owls and nocturnal raptors to implant a technological tracking system hidden in their plumage in order to observe their habits and behaviors. We can also see these raptors in full action, and the footage shows us the attributes that make them efficient hunters of the dark: mimetic plumage, silent flight, razor-sharp talons, and prodigious eyes.

27min
May 5, 1978
The Corvids I

52. The Corvids I

Corvids, like all omnivores, are extraordinarily intelligent. Their courtship behavior, nest building, social conduct, and hunting techniques are highly elaborate.

31min
May 12, 1978
The Corvids II

53. The Corvids II

Corvids, like all omnivores, are extraordinarily intelligent. Their courtship behavior, nest building, social conduct, and hunting techniques are extraordinarily elaborate.

33min
May 26, 1978
Operation Fox I

54. Operation Fox I

Another animal in danger of extinction, the Iberian fox. In this episode we can observe its life and habits.

30min
June 2, 1978
Operation Fox II

55. Operation Fox II

The foxes captured unharmed by eagles are released equipped with electronic transmitters that allow their movements to be tracked from up to eight kilometers away. Thanks to this tracking system, we reconstruct the life of the Iberian fox.

37min
June 9, 1978
Cabrera, Island Paradise I

56. Cabrera, Island Paradise I

The Cabrera sub-archipelago, located in the Balearic archipelago, is made up of a group of islands and islets that are home to a multitude of bird species of extraordinary scientific importance.

28min
June 16, 1978
Cabrera, Island Paradise II

57. Cabrera, Island Paradise II

The Cabrera sub-archipelago, in the Balearic Islands, is made up of a group of islands and islets that are home to a multitude of ornithological species of extraordinary importance.

34min
June 23, 1978
The Imperial Eagle I

58. The Imperial Eagle I

Courtship displays, nest building, incubation; the early life of the eaglets and departure from the nest in the three most important strongholds of the species, located in the Central Range, Extremadura, and Coto de Doñana.

30min
June 30, 1978
The Imperial Eagle II

59. The Imperial Eagle II

One of the most beautiful and scarce raptors in the world is the imperial eagle, which has its last refuge on the Iberian Peninsula. According to the latest census conducted by the Ministry of the Environment, there are an estimated 250 pairs of these raptors on the Iberian Peninsula, mostly inhabiting its southwestern quadrant.

30min
July 7, 1978
The Social Hunter

60. The Social Hunter

The wolf is a predator that lives and operates within perfectly hierarchical groups. Four years of studying and filming a wolf pack allow us to observe the most delicate patterns of social behavior.

25min
November 23, 1978
The Conquest of Water I

61. The Conquest of Water I

In mountain rivers, crystal-clear and pure rapids, larvae of certain insects such as dragonflies, caddisflies, diving beetles, mayflies, and other species that spend a phase of their life in the water abound, to hunt and feed at the expense of these invertebrates.

28min
February 16, 1979
The Conquest of Water II

62. The Conquest of Water II

The white-throated dipper is capable of diving in churning, fast-flowing waters to capture the larvae and adult insects on which it feeds. The Pyrenean desman, an insectivore related to moles, can remain underwater for over a minute.

26min
February 23, 1979
Doñana National Park I

63. Doñana National Park I

After the dry season, the Guadalquivir marshland restarts its biological cycle with the first autumn rains. Two natural events take place: the bellowing of the deer and the arrival of the greylag geese.

30min
March 2, 1979
Doñana National Park II

64. Doñana National Park II

We can see how the Guadalquivir marshlands begin their biological cycle with the first autumn rains. Throughout the year, European and African migratory species find refuge here: ducks, geese, herons, little egrets, spoonbills, avocets, gull-billed terns... they nest and breed in these marshlands. Here too the imperial eagle breeds in April, and in summer the fallow deer's mating displays take place.

31min
March 9, 1979
Doñana National Park III

65. Doñana National Park III

The Guadalquivir marshland, like all estuaries and wetlands in warm climates, reaches very high levels of nutrient production for the millions of African birds that choose Doñana to nest.

29min
March 16, 1979
Doñana National Park IV

66. Doñana National Park IV

During the second half of July, the dried-out beds of the marshland begin to crack. The most striking event in the Doñana reserve is the rutting of the fallow deer, which in a way heralds the arrival of the autumn rains.

29min
March 23, 1979
The Little Winged Hunters I (The Hobby)

67. The Little Winged Hunters I (The Hobby)

The hobby is a small migratory falcon that nests in Europe and winters in Africa and Madagascar. It is so fast and resilient in flight that it can catch swifts and swallows.

27min
March 30, 1979
The Little Winged Hunters II (The Kestrel)

68. The Little Winged Hunters II (The Kestrel)

A study of the kestrel's behavior, its nesting process, rearing and emancipation of the chicks, and its prodigious hunting techniques.

25min
April 6, 1979
The Little Winged Hunters III (The Sparrowhawk)

69. The Little Winged Hunters III (The Sparrowhawk)

The sparrowhawk is one of the most common little winged hunters in forested areas: its nesting process, rearing of the chicks, hunting, and emancipation of the young make up this episode.

26min
April 20, 1979
The Steppe Birds I

70. The Steppe Birds I

The Castilian steppe was created by man, just like the vast bare plains of Extremadura, Aragon, and lower Andalusia. Originally, these wide plains were covered by holm oak, cork oak, and oak forests.

33min
April 27, 1979
The Steppe Birds II

71. The Steppe Birds II

In April, the mating display of the great bustards takes place. The bearded old males, weighing up to 17 kilograms, acquire striking tones in their plumage and display large, bristly beards.

26min
May 4, 1979
The Steppe Birds III

72. The Steppe Birds III

The rearing of great bustard chicks from hatching to emancipation had never been filmed in the wild. These enormous birds are tiny and helpless at the start of life. Feeding mainly on insects, they grow rapidly.

30min
May 11, 1979
The Last Lynx

73. The Last Lynx

A huge, old lynx roams a Spanish mountain range, trying to capture some prey, but his attacks on rabbits, partridges, and carrion crows all fail. The old lynx recalls the different hunting techniques that brought him success in his youth, as evening falls.

24min
May 18, 1979
The Rodents I

74. The Rodents I

The most adaptable of mammals, after man, are the rodents: rats, mice, voles, dormice... they proliferate in fields and cities, and can be useful or extraordinarily harmful.

Rodents are small mammals endowed with great intelligence and adaptability. This episode is dedicated to squirrels.

30min
October 5, 1979
Rescued from Extermination

75. Rescued from Extermination

According to data provided by paleontologists, the fallow deer and the mouflon disappeared from the European continent with the last ice age. The mouflon found refuge on the island of Corsica, the fallow deer in Asia Minor. It was climatic conditions that were the enemies of both species.

35min
October 19, 1979
The Rodents II

76. The Rodents II

For the study of rodents, they have been divided into two parts: common or urban rodents such as the rat, and wild ones such as the garden dormouse, voles, field mice, fat dormice, etc.

29min
October 26, 1979
The Red-Legged Partridge

77. The Red-Legged Partridge

The common or red-legged partridge, the favorite quarry of millions of hunters, is a bird of singular beauty, strength, and bravery.

31min
October 26, 1979
Iberian Nocturnal Raptors

78. Iberian Nocturnal Raptors

Filmed in full action thanks to electronic equipment, the nocturnal raptors show us their attributes as efficient hunters of the darkness.

The long-eared owl, the barn owl, the tawny owl, and the little owl are several of the nocturnal raptor species that soar through our skies.

31min
November 2, 1979
The Sierras of Cazorla and Segura I

79. The Sierras of Cazorla and Segura I

In the middle of March, snow covers the sierras of Cazorla and Segura. The golden eagle performs its mating displays in the pristine sky. The otter seeks a den for her own litter; fallow deer, mouflon, and red deer bring their young into the world.

25min
November 9, 1979
The Sierras of Cazorla and Segura II

80. The Sierras of Cazorla and Segura II

In early June, the great herd of wild goats ascends through the black pine forest in search of fresh pastures. The pair of bearded vultures feeds the single chick in their nest. The cascade of griffon vultures descends upon a fallow deer carcass.

28min
November 16, 1979
On the Brink of Extinction I

81. On the Brink of Extinction I

In some of our mountains, animals on the brink of extinction survive, specifically the bearded vulture, the brown bear, and the capercaillie, which find their refuges on the peaks of the Pyrenees and in the Pyrenean mountain forests.

32min
November 23, 1979
On the Brink of Extinction II

82. On the Brink of Extinction II

In some of our mountains, animals on the brink of extinction survive, specifically the bearded vulture, the brown bear, and the capercaillie, which find their refuges on the peaks of the Pyrenees and in the Pyrenean mountain forests.

26min
November 30, 1979
On the Brink of Extinction III

83. On the Brink of Extinction III

In some of our mountains, animals on the brink of extinction survive, specifically the bearded vulture, the brown bear, and the capercaillie, which find their refuges on the peaks of the Pyrenees and in the Pyrenean mountain forests.

32min
December 7, 1979
Prisoners of the Forest I

84. Prisoners of the Forest I

The immense forest that covered the Iberian Peninsula in still-historical times has been destroyed to the point of turning Spain into a steppe nation. In the last remaining woodlands, disconnected from one another, animals that cannot abandon these forest refuges survive. Capercaillies, bears, goshawks, deer, dormice, and many other forest species are meticulously described in harmony with their habitat.

32min
May 27, 1980
Prisoners of the Forest II

85. Prisoners of the Forest II

A new chapter begins in the mountains of the Iberian Peninsula: the bellowing season.

32min
June 1, 1980
Man and the Wolf

86. Man and the Wolf

This episode summarizes the daily life at the filming camps of the Man and the Earth crew, always immersed in the heart of nature, and the coexistence between man and wolf.

26min
May 2, 1981
Iberian Diurnal Raptors

87. Iberian Diurnal Raptors

Spain is the richest nation in Europe for birds of prey: black vultures, griffon vultures, Egyptian vultures, bearded vultures, several species of eagles, common buzzards, harriers, falcons, goshawks and sparrowhawks, hobbies and kestrels, distributed across the different natural regions of Iberia.

30min
May 9, 1981
The Kingfisher

88. The Kingfisher

The sub-archipelago of Cabrera, located in the Balearic archipelago, is made up of a group of islands and islets that are home to a multitude of bird species of extraordinary scientific importance.

23min
May 16, 1981
The Flamingos

89. The Flamingos

The shallow, saline waters of the Fuente de Piedra lagoon welcome a large number of flamingos year after year, the last refuge on the Iberian Peninsula for this rare bird, which is currently protected by law.

25min
May 23, 1981
The Living River I

90. The Living River I

Over the course of two episodes, we follow the course of a mountain river. On its uninterrupted journey, the waterways become a mirror in which animals linked to the currents appear.

24min
May 30, 1981
The Living River II

91. The Living River II

Second part dedicated to following the course of a mountain river, where a number of animals linked to the currents appear.

25min
June 6, 1981
Logo

92. Episode 92

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November 12, 1976