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The eels are highly prized by the locals |
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These Solomon Islanders hand feed them, not to fatten them up for dinner |
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but to encourage them to stick around |
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By scavenging on whatever's decaying here |
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the eels clean the islanders' precious pools of drinking water |
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And over time, the honorary guests have become tame |
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One day, these adult freshwater eels will return to the sea to spawn |
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after which they'll die |
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For now, they're as good as pets |
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Away from the coast, animals are thin on the ground |
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The Solomons have only a quarter of the reptiles and birds that New Guinea has |
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For mammals like echidnas and kangaroos |
[00:46.710] |
the water proved too great a hurdle |
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But some mammals did make it here |
[00:52.070] |
When it comes to reaching new islands |
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flying must surely have been the easiest way to get there |
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But the 60 miles between New Guinea and the Solomons still proved a formidable challenge for many winged creatures |
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With their four-foot wingspans |
[01:07.710] |
giant fruit bats succeeded where other fliers failed |