A large number of ultra-wide-angle lenses are used in the film. In these lenses, "10,000" is only a basic order of magnitude. Hundreds of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of animals are included in the lens. The grand scene is self-evident. These shots are a hundred times more realistic and grander than the big scenes created by computer stunts in the movie. The seventh episode "The Prairie" is especially recommended here. Any shot is more than a million orders of magnitude.
Every few minutes, press the pause button, without any processing, it is a perfect desktop.
Human beings, in front of nature, even insects, appear to be so insignificant.
The continuous time-lapse photography images and the seasonal changes of the earth's surface captured by satellites show us the infinite charm of the earth from different angles of time and space.
The 4-meter-long great white shark jumped out of the sea 3 or 4 meters as a whole to prey on seals.
Those 50,000 cranes fly over the Himalayas on their annual migration route.
A dozen otters joined forces to push back a giant Ganges crocodile.
Cynomolgus monkeys that live in Indonesia and can dive.
The 3 million bats hanging upside down in Borneo caves and their excrement piled up to a height of more than 100 meters on the ground, as well as the uncountable number of cockroaches crawling on the excrement.
The number of red-billed quelia finches congregating in the African savanna is 1.5 billion.
The spores of the fungus directly parasitize the body of the insect, causing the insect to die, and then use its corpse as food to produce a gorgeous flower of death.
Crab spiders feed on drowning insects in the pitcher plant, and because they can be hung on a wire, they cannot fall in. The most amazing thing is that it can also hold an air bubble and dive to the depths of the water to catch mosquito larvae without drowning.
There is only one earth for human beings, to protect the earth is to protect ourselves.
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