Scientists use motion activated cameras to study wildlife in their habitats. But processing the camera footage is time-consuming because it involves sifting through massive amounts of images.
Wildlife is abundant in this remote and fragile ... a polar bear found something new—Audun Rikardsen’s camera and motion sensor. The bear sniffed the camera, pawed at it, and knocked it ...
Prairie Protection Colorado has sued the U.S. Department of Agriculture three times in six years for supporting lethal ...
Adjacent to the University of Rhode Island's main campus, North Woods encompasses 225 acres of forest, wetlands, and ...
It had been decades since an echidna had been spotted on the island of Lungtalanana, northeast of Tasmania. Not much was ...
Seshachalam wildlife census to assess tiger migration from Nallamala, using camera traps and DNA analysis for conservation ...
His studies of animals in motion drove him to experiment with photography, and he fashioned a camera that could take 12 pictures per second of a moving object. The technique, called ...
Dancing butterflies, a hidden hare, and a French Fry’s-eye-view of hungry pigeons make up the winners of the British Wildlife ...