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Highlights
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere - Husker Collage Clip
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere
Lilo & Stitch - Frog's POV Clip
Lilo & Stitch
Squid Game: Season 3 - Final Round Teaser Clip
Squid Game
Crime 101 - Official Poster
Crime 101
Zootopia 2 - Flash Is Back Clip
Zootopia 2
Wayward Season 1 - Mae Martin and Brandon Jay McLaren
Wayward
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere - Official Teaser Clip
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere
Song Sung Blue - Hugh Jackman as Mike Sardina
Song Sung Blue
100 Nights of Hero - Emma Corrin Character Poster Video
100 Nights of Hero
Now You See Me: Now You Don't - Jesse Eisenberg as J. Daniel Atlas
Now You See Me: Now You Don't
Murderbot Season 1 - Teaser Clip
Murderbot
Stranger Things Season 5 - David Harbour and Millie Bobby Brown
Stranger Things
A Minecraft Movie - Danielle Brooks Exclusive Interview
A Minecraft Movie
The Night Manager Season 2 - First Look at Olivia Colman as Angela Burr
The Night Manager
Africa's Trees of Life

Africa's Trees of Life (2016) - Season 1 Episodes and Ratings

Season 1 Episodes

1. The Sausage Tree

October 15th, 201644 min

The anchor of the film is an iconic tree – the Sausage Tree. Large fruits and crimson flowers keep the herbivores well fed when all around the vegetation is withered and dry. Bees collect pollen and nectar and, at the same time, fertilize the flowers. Placed on the branches, we see birds, baboons, vervet monkeys and squirrels drinking the abundant nectar. Below them, puku, impalas and bushbuck eat the fallen flowers.

2. Acacia Camel Thorn

October 15th, 201643 min

The slow-growing Camel Thorn Acacia, one of southern Africa’s most common trees, has drooping, often contorted, branches and a rounded or umbrella-shaped crown. Its common name refers not to a true camel, but instead to the Afrikaans’ name for the giraffe, “camel-horse.” The tree is identifiable by the sweet-scented, bright yellow, ball-like flowers that are found on many acacias. The Camel Thorn, like most acacias, has bipinnately compound leaves, but it is easily discerned from its cousins by its larger leaves and large, light-gray, velvety seedpods shaped like crescent moons. The pods are highly nutritious and are eaten during the dry season by livestock and large native herbivores such as the elephant, black rhino, gemsbok, eland, greater kudu, and of course, giraffe.

3. Marula Tree

October 15th, 201644 min

The history of the marula tree goes back thousands of years. Archaeological evidence shows the marula tree was a source of nutrition as long as ago as 10,000 years B.C. Marula, Scelerocarya birrea, subspecies caffera, is one of Africa' botanical treasures. In the Pomongwe Cave in Zimbabwe, it is estimated that 24 million marula fruits were eaten. Not only the fruit, but also the nut, are rich in minerals and vitamins. Legends abound on the multiple uses of the tree, the bark, the leaves, fruit, nut and kernels. Most well known as the fruit that 'drives elephants mad' when dropped to the ground and lightly fermented, marula is a much-loved tree in the veld in Africa. It was a dietary mainstay in South Africa, Botswana and Namibia throughout ancient times.