Sentences with phrase «camera traps captured»

Camera traps captured images and footage of 12 Sumatran tigers, including two females with cubs, in the Bukit Tigapuluh forests.
That summer, one of our camera traps captured incredible images of the family near a watering hole.
Chimpanzees in West Africa exhibit stone - throwing behaviors, camera traps captured.
Camera traps captured a badger burying an entire cow by itself, a group of researchers reported in the journal Western North American Naturalist.
A camera trap captures a panda walking through the snow in the Wolong Nature Reserve in Sichuan, China

Not exact matches

While the atoms are trapped, they emit light, which the scientists captured using a charge - coupled - device camera.
The scene, which is the first documented case of such an attack, was captured at the Lazovsky State Nature Reserve in southern Russia by a camera trap used to monitor Siberian tigers.
During the third event, in September 2012, another algal bloom created so much dead algae that it clogged the researchers» sediment traps, but was captured by a time - lapse camera.
AIC model weights indicated little difference between capture and recapture probabilities, suggesting no behavioural effect of camera trapping.
Although all snow leopards were identified as unique individuals based on camera trap pictures, the sexing of adults would perhaps not have been possible for many individuals (except females with young), had we not been capturing them for collaring.
For felid species with individually distinct fur patterns, such as tigers Panthera tigris [8], jaguars Panthera onca [10]--[12], snow leopards Panthera uncia [13], leopards Panthera pardus [14], cheetahs Acinonyx jubatus [15] and ocelots Leopardus pardalis [16], [17], data from camera - trapping can be analysed using capture - recapture models to estimate abundances and population dynamics [2].
We often see agility, dance and play in snow leopards in zoos but this is the first time such a photograph has captured wild snow leopards and we congratulate the team at the Mongolia Snow Leopard Conservation Foundation and the Snow Leopard Trust who are doing long term camera trapping snow leopard conservation in the mountains of Mongolia.
The film is just as much about the ownership of women's bodies as it is about an alien invasion — ScarJo's blank face and slight, twitchy physicality are incredible to watch, as the men she encounters (many of them non-actors who were captured with hidden cameras) leer at her, make conversation, and eventually get sprung by the same trap they clearly wish to set for Scarlett.
These include those captured by our series of camera traps (part of our lodge - funded scientific research project) including pumas, ocelots, margays, ant eaters and many more.
Despite all this, camera traps don't always capture their quarry.
New photos captured by a camera trap, however, have given conservationists hope for the species on the island.
Camera traps — which have been placed throughout Sabah, Borneo, as part of a Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research project — captured photos and video of several different otter species.
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.
But with the help of some motion - sensing camera traps set up on the island, researchers who had hoped to capture images of rare leopards and orangutans ended up finding something no one had expected to see and a species never before photographed — Miller's grizzled langurs.
The camera traps also captured images of other otters including this Cynogale bennettii.
The very short video from a nature - trap camera seems to capture both sides of the story as well.
These scenes, captured in rare video footage by camera traps in Thailand's Western Forest Complex, show that threatened species can be brought back from the brink.
By installing motion - sensing camera traps in the forests, the Wildlife Conservation Society managed to capture this haunting scene of the gorillas in the wild — and though a bit grainy, it might be the most candid peek behind the veil of mystery that still surrounds them.
Check out more images from the camera traps and the vulnerable and endangered species it captured.
The system has also led to some unexpected results: Conservationists «rediscovered» the Sumatran short - eared rabbit — which hadn't been seen in more than 80 years — thanks to a photo captured by the camera traps.
Camera - traps installed along a wooded overpass spanning the Trans - Canada Highway captured this remarkably clear shot of the elusive lynx, safe from the traffic speeding below its paws.
Meanwhile, the Zoological Society of London has implemented Google CloudML to tag the millions of images captured by camera traps in the wild.
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