UK PREMIERE: Episode 3 Of Spy In The Wild Narrated By David Tennant Airs Tonight



The third episode of the amazing new wildlife series Spy In The Wild premieres on BBC One in the UK tonight from 8pm. David Tennant narrates the latest offering from award-winning wildlife documentary specialists john Downer Productions. Spy In The Wild saw the creation of over 30 lifelike spycams which infiltrated the environments of wildlife species around the world to uncover never previously seen behaviours and to reveal fascinating animal talents. 

Tonight's episode focuses on animal friendships.


Spy in the Wild (E3) Friendship
BBC One, 8.00pm GMT

The Spy Creatures are on another extraordinary mission as they discover how friendships are a vital part of animal societies. Spy Wolf Cub joins a pack of arctic wolves, where a real cub's survival depends on friendships in one of the harshest environments in the world. Spy Cub is anointed into the pack by a she-wolf that marks him with her own scent.

Spy Warthog meets some real warthogs and discovers the extraordinary relationship they have with mongoose. He even experiences the mongoose's personal grooming service as they explore every nook and cranny. Spy Hippo comes face to face with an angry hippo, before discovering their relationship below the surface with some very fishy skin clinicians. Spy Cobra meets the real meerkat mob and is quickly dispatched with a show of unified force.

A walking and swimming Spy Crocodile finds the nest site of a real crocodile and reveals the extraordinary relationship they have with the tiny dikkop bird, who will not only stand up to the crocodile but joins them in a neighbourhood watch scheme against marauding monitor lizards. Spy Rattlesnake helps uncover the mysteries of prairie dogs - who have the most extraordinary and complex language in the animal world. In the colony, Spy Prairie Dog finds the cutest owls on earth and we learn how they rely upon each other for protection against coyotes.


Chimpanzees take a bath in a jungle pool and show us that their social life is as sophisticated as our own. In the extraordinary climax, the chimps show how human organisation may have begun, as they spectacularly unite to hunt baboons.


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