![](https://pressplay.app/images/blank-backdrop.jpg)
7. The Future
No release date yet
Over 80 years of wildlife filmmaking, the BBC Natural History Unit has chronicled the greatest changes in a continent that the world has ever seen. With more than a billion people, Africa might now be at its tipping point, but it is also the one continent that has not lost its biggest animals – despite the fact that mankind has lived here longer than anywhere else on the planet! So, in a quest to save Africa’s most iconic species, what lessons learned from the rest of the world can we bring back to our ancestral homeland?
![](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/w1280/wBoktDJU0t1Qye4zvTrkmaVR51a.jpg)
6. Africa: The Future
No release date yet
A behind-the-scenes look at the show reveals what it takes to make a natural-history series.
![](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/w1280/2XCnFwQjjenbynmREdtIFMGJxP2.jpg)
5. Sahara
No release date yet
In the Sahara, Grevy's zebras, camels and barn swallows seek water to survive.
![](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/w1280/ca6md3HbSnh9RLjpQCDFk0IfULK.jpg)
4. Cape
No release date yet
Two great ocean currents collide off South Africa and have a huge impact on life in the area.
![](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/w1280/wiDuyL3a1bXSZJ5Z5rq4Eiuml0K.jpg)
3. Congo
No release date yet
In the Congo, chimpanzees steal honey, tiny frogs hide their eggs and large male elephants face off.
![](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/w1280/n1R8tiVIJwXs58EpUWSqALeejf8.jpg)
2. Savannah
No release date yet
Among the animals featured are lions, lizards, catfish-hunting birds and elephants.
![](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/w1280/3pF8pVnNy0kI2tK9Lgs740icf8e.jpg)
1. Kalahari
No release date yet
Two deserts in Africa's southwest corner are teeming with unique wildlife.