The Yukon Wildlife Cams YouTube channel is full of motion activated trail camera footage of Yukon wildlife. “I relish the opportunity to edit single location compilations,” they write, “which highlight the diversity that make the interconnectedness of the natural world so intriguing.”
Turn up your volume to hear any ambient forest sound. From the caption:
“From predators to prey and omnivores to herbivores, appearing in this compilation from July to early November are the following species: moose, red fox, grizzly bear, mule deer, coyote, black bear, Canada lynx, silver fox (a color morph of the red fox species), wolf (stark black), snowshoe hare, porcupine, red squirrel, Canada’s national bird, the gray jay, and a wolverine.”
“These clips represent about 25% of my captures during this period of time with the majority of exclusions (simply to avoid repetition) being red fox, coyote, mule deer, porcupine, and hare.”
Here’s another video from the channel, over five minutes that document bull moose, grizzly and black bears, lynx, wolves, a wolverine, and other animals from spring through summer and into fall:
Watch more mostly quiet animals cams in nature, including:
• Setting up 150 wildlife camera traps in Michigan
• How many animals use this log to cross the stream?
• Un albero un anno (One tree one year)
• One year on a forest trail in Northern Minnesota
• Great horned owl vs. raccoon in an owl nest
• Inside a badger sett: Three cubs filmed with hidden cameras
Plus: Tracking Los Angeles mountain lions with camera traps.
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