Local wildlife filmmaker Casey Anderson placed a camera in a cave in 2015. He recovered it in 2025. Now he reflects on risk, ...
It sounds fantastical, but it’s a reality for the scientists who work at the world’s largest particle collider: In an underground tunnel some 350 feet beneath the France–Switzerland border, a huge ...
Destroyed habitats, poaching, and prey depletion have dramatically reduced tiger habitats around the world. Today, tigers occupy just 5–10% of their historical habitats. But on the Indonesian island ...
Camera traps installed high in the rainforest canopy in Malaysian Borneo have filmed a bounty of threatened primates, hornbills and a host of tree-dwelling animals feasting on figs. Biologists from ...
There was a time when the only good bird for science was a dead bird. Then came camera traps. “If you put a band on an eagle, you might as well kiss it goodbye,” said Rob Domenech of Raptor View ...
Outgrowth of the 9th International Mammalogical Conference held in Sapporo, Japan, in Aug. 2005. Cf. pref. A history of camera trapping / Thomas E. Kucera, Reginald H. Barrett -- Evaluating types and ...