On Jan. 21, at 12:22 a.m. local time, in the silence and darkness of Chile's Patagonia region, a camera trap used to monitor wildlife for a project run by the University of Magallanes (UMAG) captured, ...
The goals of my camera trap projects are clearly defined. The first and most important goal is documenting as many species of wildlife as possible. The second goal, and the reason my cameras are set ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Sergey Gorshkov, Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 Esteemed wildlife photographer ...
Camera traps are ubiquitous in conservation. They’re deployed to monitor biodiversity, study animal behavior, observe habitats over long periods of time, and enforce effective conservation action on ...
There are a few things that are in the front of my mind when I hop out of the truck and start walking into the forest doing a camera trap project. I don’t want to step on any snakes, I don’t want to ...
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (October 30, 2024) – The first-ever camera trap study of the Central Cardamom Mountains Landscape has recorded 108 species, 23 of which are listed at risk (Vulnerable or above) on ...
MISSOULA – On a hillside in northwest Montana, Mahdieh Tourani secures a camera to a tree. She gives the straps anchoring the camera a good tug, and when it doesn’t move, she steps back to admire her ...
Snapshot USA is an annual project that aims to collate camera-trap data on mammals from across the country. Since it was launched in 2019, the project has received data from universities, Native ...
A marten scampers across the snow. A bear inspects a pole used to measure snow depth. A moose stares straight down a night-vision camera, its eyes ghost-white. These are among the tens of thousands of ...
Technologies like camera traps and drones have made monitoring wildlife in forests easier than ever. However, a new study has found that in a protected area in northern India, these devices also end ...
On a remote beach at the Pacific coast of Costa Rica, two very different species are meeting – sea turtles and jaguars. Each year, thousands of turtles return here to lay their eggs, while the jaguars ...