Not exact matches
I remember as a kid, my brothers and I would set a huge
trap to
catch the little Irish man, including placing a video
camera nearby so we could have it all on film.
The team set up
camera traps to
catch the raccoons in action and monitor how 60 other species responded to the piles.
National Geographic contributor Michael Nichols
caught this leopard, but only just, as it crossed an infrared beam and so triggered a
camera trap Nichols had hidden deep in the rainforest of Nouabalé - Ndoki National Park in the Republic of the Congo.
In three weeks in 1998, in the neighboring forest of Tsimaloto, he
caught three fossa in live
traps and documented another three with motion - sensitive
cameras.
Images of the rabbit had previously been
caught by motion sensitive «
camera traps».
As chimpanzees avoid human contact, CHRISTOPHE BOESCH explains, the research team conducted the study by setting up
camera traps to
catch chimpanzee behavior on video.
Wild snow leopard A snow leopard in its remote habitat,
caught on
camera trap in Kyrgyzstan.
Even when «
Trapped»
catches a rally for the protest group Operation Save America, the
camera's attitude is civil, observant.
What was most interesting (and potentially important for your
trapping work), however, is that the population of cats
caught by the motion - activated
camera was different than the population counted when the counters walked and counted the cats they saw.
The elusive Cape Leopard is also regularly
caught on our
camera trap.
Read more about Extreme Exposure: Deadly Leopard Seal Tries to Feed Live Penguins to Photographer (Video) Michael Nichols Uses Technology and Daring to
Catch Animals in His
Camera Trap (Video) Pushing the Limits of Extreme Nature Photography (Video) The Daredevil Photographers Behind Tiger Swimming and Erupting Volcanoes in «Extreme Exposure» Speak (Slideshow)
Camera traps set up by the team of scientists meant to capture images of clouded leopards, orangutans and other wildlife, captured instead pictures that
caught them all by surprise.