Wildlife Cameras that are really good

Links to other wildlife cameras around the world.
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Mamicja
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Re: Wildlife Cameras that are really good

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Mamicja
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Biker
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Post by Biker »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXKJbyLjmlk

this Golden Eagle without rings at noon, with his nice neighbors

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Great pictures from Norway. Thank you Mamicja
*Please don't feed the trolls!*
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Mamicja
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Post by Mamicja »

:hi:
January 23rd

Today on the Bird Island
What they are eating there?
https://en.zooom.no/bird-island/live
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Liz01
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Post by Liz01 »

January 24

:hi:

24.01.2018 Mom is feeding her albatross chick



Camera Link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8rY0Fgrjpg

today
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it's weighed
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Liz01
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Post by Liz01 »

They disturb mom and chicks very often. :slap:
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Biker
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Post by Biker »

Liz01 wrote:They disturb mom and chicks very often. :slap:
oh no, Liz01! They take care for them. In the heat they brought the shower for cool down.

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Video: The bird enjoyed.
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mogga
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Post by mogga »

Here is the Panama Fruit Feeder Cam at Canopy Lodge | Cornell Lab.
Interesting gorgeous birds.

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHX9l2cvw-E
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Liz01
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Post by Liz01 »

Liz01 wrote:They disturb mom and chicks very often. :slap:
Biker wrote:oh no, Liz01! They take care for them. In the heat they brought the shower for cool down.
There are birds since 160 million years!! They already lived before us! without our help !!What have we done that they can not live without us?
Today I could see well, how stressed the female is. It came again someone for care. Every day.. for me it is not normal!
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Post by Biker »

Chapeau!

So much irony on such a serious topic.

Or shall i seriously research in detail for answers for you?
It may take longer, the list will be very long.
It is obviously and not to deny that we all do enormous much to harm the environment and the wildlife (one more the other less but we all every single day in our life)

Therefore: engagement against the loss of species is never false!
Birds Ringing, mounting of transmitters and so on is also stress in a way. (and also danger: transmitters eg can be dangerous in certain circumstances for stork legs)
But the result counts, if it helps birds that threatened in any way.

There are a lot of possibilities, to help the threatened animals. It is up to anyone to rate them, but success speaks for itself.
The team in Dunedin is very successful.

In this sense: keep it up!

Greetings to New Zealand :2thumbsup:
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Liz01
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Post by Liz01 »

Biker wrote: So much irony on such a serious topic. ...
You interpret my opinion as ironic!?
I did not know, that I cann't have a different opinion!
Who says your opinion is the right one?
Biker wrote:Or shall i seriously research in detail for answers for you?
Thanks Biker, I can read and think by myself!

EDIT:The irony is, that the animals are unable to survive without the help of humans. It would be better to design the habitat so, that they have the opportunity, to survive without our help again. That would be really help for the animals.

In the future I will keep my opinion for myself!
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mogga
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Post by mogga »

Your dispute has become a direction that's not helpful, Liz01, Biker.
Both of you said things that are illustrative for others to read.
Maybe the solution is somewhere in between.
If we want to help animals, disturbance is an important parameter that has to be as little as possible. We all know that.
I don't know the disturbance in this case. Maybe it could be less. Of course, that is always better for whatever animal.
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Post by Biker »

:hi: mogga
thank you for your interest.
There is no disput. I never argue; everyone has their own opinion; can express this if he wants or not, if he wants no more.

Concerning Dunedin: They do much there, besides of direct "taking care" of brooding birds
look here:
http://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/native-an ... oss-toroa/

I can not judge from here how much "disturbance" is needed to protect and preserve this Albatross colony. I prefer to let it judge the experts there.

- The Royal Albatross Centre, The Otago Peninsula Trust, and the Department of Conservation combine to protect and preserve the Albatross of Taiaroa Head and have initiated many research projects alongside the University of Otago. -

about projects of Department of Conservation to preserve and protect habitat and environment.
http://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/
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Post by Liz01 »

Mogga :hi:
Thank you for your opinion. :2thumbsup:
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mogga
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Post by mogga »

:hi: Liz01, Biker

I didn't watch this livecam so far. Now I do, it's interesting. 8-)

I had a conversation about disturbance with an ornithologist some weeks ago. That's why I am interested in this subject.
He was posting a newspaper article at his twitter-account. The article was about a mistle thrush that has been spotted in North America in December. It was a sensation, normally they don't see a mistle thrush in this region.

I answered the ornithologist that it might have been better not to publish this, because now the birders from all over America will probably come to that area to observe and take photos of the bird. Poor bird, what a stress, I thought! :laugh:

The ornithologist told me, it's no problem, there is a code of birding ethics. He gave me the link: http://listing.aba.org/ethics/

I hope people know this birding ethics. :whistling:
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Post by Solo »

mogga wrote: ....there is a code of birding ethics. He gave me the link: http://listing.aba.org/ethics/
I hope people know this birding ethics. :whistling:
mogga, Ty very much :thumbs:
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Post by lianaliesma »

We are living in a dangerous age. Human beings dominate nature, before they have learned to control themselves. -Albert Schweitzer
I have been studying the traits and dispositions of the so-called "lower animals" versus the traits and dispositions of man. The result humiliates me. - Mark Twain
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Liz01
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Post by Liz01 »

Lianaliesma :hi: Thanks for the links :2thumbsup:

I've captured a very nice feeding

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Post by Liz01 »

Here is a video from the Northern Albatross Nest

A sweet change of guard :innocent:

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Mamicja
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