#Derbyshire #trailCamera #wildlife
This is intriguing - a mother brown antechinus (Antechinus stuartii) carrying two babies on her back. My understanding is that babies were being born back at the beginning of February, so I’m surprised to see them still being carried four months later.
This is the sort of shot I’ve been trying for with my camera-trap. I hadn’t realised the phenomenon went on so long.
#wildlife #WildlifePhotography #TrailCamera #TrailCameras #photography
#Nature #SanDiego #NaturalHistory #MissionTrails #California #TrailCamera
Coyote on the prowl.
#Nature #SanDiego #NaturalHistory #MissionTrails #California #TrailCamera
I suspect deer can see the infrared from my trail camera.
My neighbor sent me a video of an evening visitor... a lynx! 😍 We live in the suburbs so this is an extremely rare treat.
Our Newfie was deep asleep on the yard though so she missed a golden opportunity to sing the song of her people 😆 #lynx #ilves #trailcamera #turvakamera
And I’m pretty sure this is a brown antechinus (Antechinus stuartii), hunting for insects on the underside of a fallen tree in forest on Sydney’s northern fringes.
I love the way it defies gravity, hanging from the bark by its finger-tips.
Apologies for the flicker - it seems to be a common failing in the infrared lamps in these trail-cameras.
Appears to be a long-nosed bandicoot (Perameles nasuta), captured on one of my trail cameras on Sydney’s northern fringes.
For the last nine months or so, I’ve had this trail-camera focused on a log crossing over a stream, and have been surprised to find that very few mammals seem to use log crossings around here.
I’ve now moved it to this small island in a swamp, and have come up with bandicoots and bushrats on first attempt.