Last Chance To See

Chlidonias

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does anyone have any information on this series? Stephen Fry is hosting a catch-up tv series of Douglas Adams' radio series and book. Is it still being made, or is it done already? Any other info? It will be very interesting I think, given the changed (mis)fortunes of several of the species involved.
 
Me too, checked if the series available on Amazon etc..?
 
This series has been in works for a few years now. Stephen Fry recently broke his arm while filming in South America - I assume that has delayed production.
 
I was having a flick through the book "Last Chance To See" and ended up reading it all over again cover to cover because Douglas Adams is such a funny writer. The trip he and Mark Carwardine took around the world to see the various endangered species was in 1988. Fast forward twenty years, and the differences between their numbers then and now is surprising.

Stephen Fry says this on the link that Sun Wukong provided:
Mark and I will be seeing which animals are now extinct (a quarter of those he and Douglas chose for the book are now said to be gone for good)
...but as can be seen from the figures below, only one of them is actually extinct (and a second almost so) -- not quite a quarter of them!!

Komodo dragon - then "about five thousand"; now between 2500 and 3500 (which was probably actually the number when Adams and Carwardine made their trip too - in other words, its remained stable)

Northern white rhino - then twenty-two in the wild in Zaire, eight in Czechoslovakia, and "a small number" at San Diego Zoo [funnily enough, neither Zaire nor Czechoslovakia exist under those names any more]; now probably extinct in the wild, five captive in the Czech Republic and two at San Diego

Mountain gorilla [actually just a side-trip while they were in Zaire to see the rhinos] - then "about 280"; now about 720

Kakapo - then forty; now ninety-one

Baiji (Yangtze dolphin) - then (supposedly) 200; now extinct

Final destination was the the Mascarenes to see the Rodrigues fruit bat (then "in their hundreds"; now between 1500 and 2000), but they also covered the echo parakeet (then fifteen; now around 300), the Mauritius kestrel (then less than a hundred; now around 800) and pink pigeon (then twelve in the wild; now about 360)
 
A synopsis of the whole series is available here:

Mark Carwardine - BBC TV series

Interestingly, they have chosen not to go back to Mauritius, which is a shame because as Chlidonias's numbers show, the species previously featured have become some of conservation's biggest success stories.
 
Stephen Fry and Mark Carwardine are only just coming to NZ this month to shoot the NZ section of the series....so looks like the tv show screening will still be some time off
Stephen Fry and the giant parrot - New Zealand news on Stuff.co.nz
Critically endangered kakapo, tuatara and other threatened New Zealand species will feature in a British television series by writer and actor Stephen Fry.


The BBC series celebrates 20 years since the late Douglas Adams' Last Chance To See book and radio series, which profiled eight species worldwide facing extinction, including New Zealand's native nocturnal parrot, the kakapo.

Tourism New Zealand is supporting Fry's visit this month, along with wildlife photographer and zoologist Mark Carwardine, who worked on the original radio series and book.

The pair planned to film kakapo on Codfish Island (Whenua Hou), near Stewart Island, kiwi in Northland's Waipoua Forest, black robin on the Chatham Islands, giant weta and tuatara at Karori Wildlife Sanctuary in Wellington, and kea in Fiordland. A one-hour episode dedicated to their New Zealand visit would be shown in prime time on BBC2 late next year.

"This is an excellent opportunity for us to push New Zealand's profile in the UK," Tourism New Zealand chief executive George Hickton told the Sunday Star-Times.

"Tourism New Zealand is working closely with the BBC to make sure Stephen and his crew have the opportunity to experience more of New Zealand beyond our native wildlife, so the programme gives viewers a real taste of what a New Zealand holiday has to offer."

The new five-part Last Chance To See series aimed to portray the issues surrounding some of the planet's most threatened species and various techniques conservationists used to help them survive, as well as check out how the original wildlife had fared two decades on.

At the time there were fewer than 50 kakapo, but the population had since grown to 90 birds with a bumper breeding season predicted for this summer. Although most of the other featured animals and birds had increased their numbers, the Yangtze River dolphin had been labelled functionally extinct after an extensive search in 2006.

Karori Wildlife Sanctuary also had some positive news to share with Fry and his film crew for their New Year's Eve visit. The first tuatara eggs laid on the mainland in more than a century were due to hatch any time over the next month or two in the predator-free reserve. Sanctuary educator Tom Lynch said four tuatara nests containing an unknown number of eggs had so far been discovered, including one accidentally uncovered in October, and a second with 14 eggs that had to be moved because the female burrowed underneath one of the sanctuary's roads. The breeding programme was the result of relocations of 200 tuatara from Stephens Island.
 
It shouldn't be too much longer until this series airs now. On saturday, the BBC was screening an advert for the show with the message "coming soon". I'm going to guess that it'll be next month
 
It shouldn't be too much longer until this series airs now. On saturday, the BBC was screening an advert for the show with the message "coming soon". I'm going to guess that it'll be next month

It starts on the 6th September at 8pm in the UK
 
Just watched the Aye Aye episode on iPlayer, well worth a look, at the very least, download them for watching later before they expire on iPlayer :D

Amazonian Manatee
BBC iPlayer - Last Chance to See: Amazonian Manatee

Northern White Rhino (Lovely Mountain Gorillas instead!)
BBC iPlayer - Last Chance to See: Northern White Rhino

The Aye Aye (plus lots and lots of lemurs and wonderful Madagascan stuff)
BBC iPlayer - Last Chance to See: Aye-Aye

I must admit though, the general perception (not mine) of Stephen Fry seems to be of some sort of polymath demigod genius... If you thought that, you certainly won't after watching these.
 
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