Why You Need a Wildlife Camera
Without one, you may never know who else lives on your property. Or who’s eating your bush beans.
Sally Naser, who oversees the wildlife cameras for The Trustees of Reservations in Massachusetts, loves to catch a glimpse of a bobcat on camera, as they’re famously aloof.Credit.Sally Naser/CR Wildlife Cams
By Margaret Roach
Published March 3, 2021Updated March 4, 2021
Whose backyard is it, anyway? When a wildlife camera is on duty, with its heat- or motion-triggered shutter at the ready day and night, the answer can be startling.
Sally Naser calls the animals recorded on the dozens of cameras she monitors for The Trustees of Reservations in Massachusetts “our wildlife neighbors.” At home, in our gardens, we may call them cute or our herbivorous enemies. But more often than not, we don’t see them.
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