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* AnAesop: The baby sea turtle episode has one: you have to understand nature before you can try to help it. Alison gets it in her head, as do Chris and Martin, that they need to save the hatching baby turtles from the natural predators. They do so by picking them up and getting them to the water, against Ttark's protests. In the end, Ttark reveals that thirty percent of the eggs survive without human interference, enough to keep the sea turtles from being endangered; the Kratt brothers admit they got carried away. What really helps is when they cleaned litter off the beach like plastic bags and netting, which can trap the turtles before they get a fair chance at life. They also note that humans love turtle eggs, so education is another way to make sure sea turtles don't become endangered.
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* AnAesop: AnAesop:
** The baby sea turtle episode has one: you have to understand nature before you can try to help it. Alison gets it in her head, as do Chris and Martin, that they need to save the hatching baby turtles from the natural predators. They do so by picking them up and getting them to the water, against Ttark's protests. In the end, Ttark reveals that thirty percent of the eggs survive without human interference, enough to keep the sea turtles from being endangered; the Kratt brothers admit they got carried away. What really helps is when they cleaned litter off the beach like plastic bags and netting, which can trap the turtles before they get a fair chance at life. They also note that humans love turtle eggs, so education is another way to make sure sea turtles don't becomeendangered.endangered.
** In “Weird Creatures”, Ttark hammers it home that just because an animal may be considered “weird” according to human categorization and prejudice, that doesn’t mean it’s any way “unnatural”.
** The baby sea turtle episode has one: you have to understand nature before you can try to help it. Alison gets it in her head, as do Chris and Martin, that they need to save the hatching baby turtles from the natural predators. They do so by picking them up and getting them to the water, against Ttark's protests. In the end, Ttark reveals that thirty percent of the eggs survive without human interference, enough to keep the sea turtles from being endangered; the Kratt brothers admit they got carried away. What really helps is when they cleaned litter off the beach like plastic bags and netting, which can trap the turtles before they get a fair chance at life. They also note that humans love turtle eggs, so education is another way to make sure sea turtles don't become
** In “Weird Creatures”, Ttark hammers it home that just because an animal may be considered “weird” according to human categorization and prejudice, that doesn’t mean it’s any way “unnatural”.
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* InsistentTerminology: The Kratts usually refer to any and all members of the animal kingdom as “creatures” rather than “animals”.
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'''''Kratts' Creatures''''' is a 1996 educational children's series hosted by Chris and Martin Kratt. In this show, the Kratt brothers travel around the world and teach children about the world of animals, with help from a fifteen year old girl named Allison (Shannon Duff) and an animated anthropomorphic. . . [[CartoonCreature something]] named Ttark.
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'''''Kratts' Creatures''''' is a 1996 educational children's series hosted by Chris and Martin Kratt. In this show, the Kratt brothers travel around the world and teach children about the world of animals, with help from a fifteen year old girl named Allison (Shannon Duff) and an animated anthropomorphic. . . [[CartoonCreature something]] named Ttark.
Ttark (Creator/RonRubin).
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!Tropes
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