His love of nature ____ when he was just a boy. He was interested ____ fossils and he had a big ____ of them. It was no surprise that he decided to study Natural ____ at Cambridge University. When he began his ____ at the BBC, in 1952, there weren’t many programmes about ____. Sir David changed that with a series of ____ called Zoo ____. For the first time, film ____ travelled all ____ the world and brought back black and white films showing ____ in their natural ____. Sir David produced a lot more ____ documentaries after that. They were all very popular. Life on Earth had millions of viewers worldwide His work still ____ viewers of all ages, all over the ____. The films are now in full ____, HD and even 3D. With the help of ____, we can see the world through the eyes of a ____ flying high in the sky, a fish swimming deep in the ocean or a very small ____ on a tree A number of plants, ____ and birds have Sir David’s name. That’s a great way to say a big ‘thank ____’ to the ____ who spends so ____ of his time caring for nature and protecting it.

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