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S1 • E1
Wildlife glimpsed includes tropical birds; the world's smallest monkey, the pygmy marmoset; and the largest snake, the anaconda.

S1 • E2
Part 2 of "The Flight of the Condor" travels along South America's Andes Mountains, following a 2000-mile stretch of desert along the Pacific Ocean. Scenes of vampire bats, sea lions, guano birds, the Colca River canyon and Lake Titicaca.

S1 • E3
More rare animals, birds and plants such as Magellanic penguins, the flightless steamer duck and the giant fulmar are seen. The world of guanacos, coscorola swans, the thin-tailed rayodito and wild flowers among others are explored.

S1 • E4
The local ecology of Amate fig trees in Belize, including the tiny wasps they depend on for their fertilization.

S1 • E5
Large rock outcroppings on Africa's Serengeti plains.

S1 • E6
A 300-mile archipelago in the Caribbean is threatened by industrialization.

S1 • E7
A tropical rain forest in Costa Rica.

S1 • E8
Frederick II of Hohenstaufen studies animal behavior in the 13th century.

S1 • E9
Early studies of animal behavior by the naturalists John Ray, Charles-Georges Le Roy, and Daines Barrington.

S1 • E10
Early studies of the animal mind by naturalists and zoologists.

S1 • E11
Experiments by Ivan Pavlov, John B. Watson, B. F. Skinner, and William Thorpe begin to reveal how animals learn.

S1 • E12
Karl von Frisch, Julian Huxley, Konrad Lorenz, and others investigate animal communication.

S1 • E13
Animal behavior in social groups.

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