The gecko, the monkey, the ant and the giraffe
Kenya’s ‘whistling acacias’ are so-called because they make a whistling sound as the wind blows over hollow galls at the bases of their thorns. These galls are formed by the trees as a response mechanism to attack by large herbivores.
Ants set up home in the galls and they will viciously defend their territory, even against giraffes, which they attack with a poisonous spray keeping the animals away and protecting the trees.
But the ants are good news for patas monkeys which love to break open the galls and eat the ants. And that’s good news for the dwarf gecko, which likes to make its home in the broken galls.
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Nature
Be captivated, informed and inspired by the world's wildlife.
More clips from The Secret of the Savannah
-
The killer moggy of Oz
Duration: 03:15
-
The wallaby, the quoll and the rat kangaroo
Duration: 04:32
-
Chris Packham's rhino stand-off
Duration: 02:43
-
The giant anteater and the termites
Duration: 03:06
More clips from Secrets of our Living Planet
-
Enter the apple snail—Waterworlds
Duration: 03:04
-
The Pantanal—Waterworlds
Duration: 04:25
-
Why the shark needs the sponge—Waterworlds
Duration: 04:32
-
Chris Packham swims with manta rays—Waterworlds
Duration: 02:15