Camera trap spots endangered elephant mother and calf on the move

S
stenews
Fri, Mar 28, 2025 2:22 AM

Camera trap spots endangered elephant mother and calf on the move
Liz Else, New Scientist
March 26, 2025

See link
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg26535360-200-camera-trap-spots-endangered-elephant-mother-and-calf-on-the-move/
for photos.

Night has fallen; an elephant mother and her calf walk through
Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park, which covers more than 4000 square kilometres
of rainforest in the northern Republic of the Congo. This remarkable
photograph above of the critically endangered African forest elephants
(Loxodonta cyclotis) was captured using a camera trap.

The image is included in photographer Will Burrard-Lucas’s year-long
project showcasing the park’s rarely seen animals. Working with nonprofit
organisation the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Burrard-Lucas
captured the images with a professional-grade digital camera inside a
weatherproof enclosure (shown below), combined with lights and a
motion-detecting trigger.

“This set-up needs to be rugged and reliable, capable of withstanding
extreme weather conditions and the curiosity of wildlife,” says
Burrard-Lucas. He consulted with WCS experts about where to place cameras,
such as near trails through dense vegetation, which tend to be animal
highways.

Burrard-Lucas hopes his images will help efforts to protect endangered
species: “If these images inspire even a few people to learn more, visit as
tourists or take action for conservation, then they have served a purpose.”

https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg26535360-200-camera-trap-spots-endangered-elephant-mother-and-calf-on-the-move/

Camera trap spots endangered elephant mother and calf on the move Liz Else, New Scientist March 26, 2025 See link <https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg26535360-200-camera-trap-spots-endangered-elephant-mother-and-calf-on-the-move/> for photos. Night has fallen; an elephant mother and her calf walk through Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park, which covers more than 4000 square kilometres of rainforest in the northern Republic of the Congo. This remarkable photograph above of the critically endangered African forest elephants (Loxodonta cyclotis) was captured using a camera trap. The image is included in photographer Will Burrard-Lucas’s year-long project showcasing the park’s rarely seen animals. Working with nonprofit organisation the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Burrard-Lucas captured the images with a professional-grade digital camera inside a weatherproof enclosure (shown below), combined with lights and a motion-detecting trigger. “This set-up needs to be rugged and reliable, capable of withstanding extreme weather conditions and the curiosity of wildlife,” says Burrard-Lucas. He consulted with WCS experts about where to place cameras, such as near trails through dense vegetation, which tend to be animal highways. Burrard-Lucas hopes his images will help efforts to protect endangered species: “If these images inspire even a few people to learn more, visit as tourists or take action for conservation, then they have served a purpose.” https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg26535360-200-camera-trap-spots-endangered-elephant-mother-and-calf-on-the-move/