Artificial intelligence can dramatically speed up the painstaking work of tracking wildlife with remote cameras, cutting analysis time from months or even a year to just days while producing nearly ...
As part of a broader effort to harness technology for conservation and resource management, a project by The Safari ...
Hosted on MSN
Turning camera traps into real-time sentinels: Interview with Conservation X Lab’s Dante Wasmuht
By Abhishyant Kidangoor 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 ...
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 ...
Hosted on MSN
How a SWPA 2026 winner used old Canon DSLRs and camera traps to take stunning wildlife shots
The winners at the Sony World Photography Awards 2026 have been revealed, and once again the prestigious contest, which this year attracted 430,000 entries from over 200 countries and territories, was ...
A rare leopard recovery is underway in a coastal region north of Cape Town, but scientists warn the population remains highly ...
If you liked this story, share it with other people. The Central Cardamom Mountain Landscape (CCML), part of the Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot, has long been known to harbor hundreds of animal and ...
Around five years ago after I started my camera trapping adventures through Guanacaste Wildlife Monitoring I found myself alone, deep in a forest in Guanacaste. After a two-hour hike through a ...
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 ...
In an attempt to protect the iconic Sri Lankan leopard living outside protected areas, the Wild Cats Subcommittee of the ...
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 ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results