Media coverage in the Philippines [1] provided the filming location of the hornbill sequence. [Link 1][Link 2]
1
Wrinkle-lipped free-tailed bat
Chaerephon plicatus
LC
Gomantong & Sukau, Borneo, Malaysia
Visual ID, based on rounded ears seen at 3:41 [Link 1]
2
Treehopper
Aethalion reticulatum
NE
Yasuni National Park, Ecuador
2
Ant sp.
-
?
Yasuni National Park, Ecuador
2
Assassin bug sp.
-
?
Yasuni National Park, Ecuador
2
Stingless bee sp.
[genus Oxytrigona]
?
Yasuni National Park, Ecuador
3
Indian dhole
Cuon alpinus adjustus
EN
Kabini, Karnataka, India
Filmed by Prakash Matada according to Instagram comment [1] [Link 1]
3
Chital
Axis axis
LC
Kabini, Karnataka, India
4
Temminck's tragopan
Tragopan temminckii
LC
Tangjiahe National Nature Reserve, China
Location inferred from credits.
4
Golden pheasant
Chrysolophus pictus
LC
Tangjiahe National Nature Reserve, China
Location inferred from credits.
5
Kermode bear
Ursus americanus kermode
LC
Great Bear Rainforest, British Columbia, Canada
5
Pink salmon
Oncorhynchus gorbuscha
NE
Great Bear Rainforest, British Columbia, Canada
Visual ID
6
Eastern chimpanzee
Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii
EN
Kibale National Park, Uganda
"In a 29-month survey, researchers observed and recorded 20 instances of wild chimps crossing a busy road in Sebitoli, in the northern part of Uganda's Kibale National Park. They watched 122 chimps cross the highway used by 90 vehicles an hour, many speeding at 70 to 100 kilometres an hour.
"It's the first report on how chimpanzees behave crossing a very busy asphalt road, says Marie Cibot of the National Museum of Natural History in Paris. 'We've described chimpanzee behaviour facing a dangerous situation never described before,' she says, pointing out that earlier studies looked at narrower, unpaved and less busy roads." [Link 1]