Bristol Zoological Society conservationists use hidden, motion-activated cameras (called "camera traps") to take photos of wildlife in several of our projects. Camera traps are an amazing tool to help us study wildlife in ways that would not be possible only using human observers.
Photos taken by camera traps can help us to understand the behaviour, abundance and distribution of many species in their natural habitats. They also help us to work with the human communities who live side-by side with wildlife.
For this year's Festival of Nature, Bristol Zoological Society invites you to join us for an online conservation lecture helping us to search through the newest images collected from our Equatorial Guinea project, and discover the incredible wildlife that lives within the forest.
Photos taken by camera traps can help us to understand the behaviour, abundance and distribution of many species in their natural habitats. They also help us to work with the human communities who live side-by side with wildlife.
For this year's Festival of Nature, Bristol Zoological Society invites you to join us for an online conservation lecture helping us to search through the newest images collected from our Equatorial Guinea project, and discover the incredible wildlife that lives within the forest.
- Catégories
- Chats de Race Savannah
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