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Clipped to a Shark’s Fin, Collared to a Bear or Attached to a Crow’s Tail, Wildlife Cameras Come of Age

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Video technology takes biologists deeper into the secret world of animals.

Michael A. Greenwood, News Editor

When the finishing touches were put on the first Crittercam 20 years ago, the device more or less resembled a camera. It did take pictures, and it was attached successfully to a loggerhead sea turtle. But those early models — 2 ft long, weighing 8 lb and able to capture only 1 h of video — are dinosaurs (maybe even predinosaurs) when compared with the latest generation of animal-borne cameras, which are increasingly compact and now are capable of providing hours of footage and audio, along with a host of other scientific data. “It has evolved tremendously. The change is dramatic,” said...Read full article

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    BioPhotonics
    Dec 2007
    animal-borne camerasBiophotonicsCrittercamFeaturesscientific data

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