Orlando Sentinel

Motion cameras capture animals being wild, weird

- By Mead Gruver

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — How does a bighorn sheep say “cheese?”

Some charismati­c critters caught by motion-detecting wildlife cameras seem to know how to strike a pose.

But it’s not just show business. As these devices get ever smaller, cheaper and more reliable, scientists across the U.S. are using them to document elusive creatures like never before.

“There’s no doubt — it is an incredible tool to acquire data on wildlife,” said Grant Harris, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wildlife biologist based in Albuquerqu­e, N.M.

Remote cameras have photograph­ed all from desert cats called ocelots to snow-loving lynx high in the Northern Rockies.

Harris cited images of javelinas, pig-like desert mammals, and coatimundi, members of the raccoon family, captured at higher latitudes in recent years. That could mean global warming is expanding their range northward, he said.

Scientists deploying remote cameras in their work include researcher­s with the Wyoming Migration Initiative, who use global positionin­g to map the movements of elk, mule deer and antelope in and around Yellowston­e National Park.

They only have so many collars to track animals, meaning there’s a limit to the GPS data they can gather, said Matthew Kauffman, a University of Wyoming associate professor and initiative director.

“You see one animal migrating, you don’t know if it’s migrating by itself, if it’s migrating with a calf, or if it’s migrating with 40 other animals,” Kauffman said.

Remote cameras — which can be left in the backcountr­y for days, weeks or even months — help fill in blanks by showing how many animals are on the move over a given period, he said.

Where to position them requires careful forethough­t. Clustering several around a watering hole might produce many images but not a thorough profile of a population.

“There’s this tension between subjectivi­ty in where you put your camera and where it’s statistica­lly sound,” Harris said.

Remote video can also reveal details about animal behavior, including the mewling sounds of migrating mule deer. And livestream­ing cameras for everything from bison in Saskatchew­an, Canada, to the underwater kelp forest off California’s Channel Islands are always popular.

As with all human intrusion into nature, remote cameras have downsides. Animals such as wolverines and bears have been known to attack them, though whether out of curiosity or aggression is hard to say.

The devices have become popular tools to help hunters scout for game, sparking a debate over fairchase ethics. Then there’s the whole subjective thing about going into nature to get away from it all, including surveillan­ce cameras.

Anyway, to answer the question: A bighorn sheep that looks like it’s smiling probably isn’t saying “cheese” but sniffing pheromones and other scents in what’s called a flehmen response, said Harris.

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