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Images: Wildlife caught on camera

Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are yielding serious science as well as amusing photos.

This 2017 photo from a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service motion-activated camera shows a black bear at the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are yielding serious science as well as amusing photos. From ocelots in the desert to snow-loving lynx high in the Northern Rockies, remote cameras are exposing elusive creatures like never before. ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this 2015 photo from a Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit motion-activated camera, an adult bull elk walk in the Teton Wilderness Area of Wyoming. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are yielding serious science as well as amusing photos. ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this 2017 photo from a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service motion-activated camera, a vulture comes in for a landing at the Sevilleta National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are yielding serious science as well as amusing photos. From ocelots in the desert to snow-loving lynx high in the Northern Rockies, remote cameras are exposing elusive creatures like never before. ASSOCIATED PRESS
This 2017 photo from a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service motion-activated camera shows a moose at the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are yielding serious science as well as amusing photos. From ocelots in the desert to snow-loving lynx high in the Northern Rockies, remote cameras are exposing elusive creatures like never before. ASSOCIATED PRESS
This 2013 photo from a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service motion-activated camera shows a bighorn sheep at the Kofa National Wildlife Refuge in Arizona. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are yielding serious science as well as amusing photos. ASSOCIATED PRESS
This 2017 photo from a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service motion-activated camera shows an osprey poses at the Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge in Virginia. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are yielding serious science as well as amusing photos. From ocelots in the desert to snow-loving lynx high in the Northern Rockies, remote cameras are exposing elusive creatures like never before. ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this 2014 photo from a Wyoming Migration Initiative motion-activated camera, a pike elk and a cow elk pose for a selfie in the Absaroka Mountains of Wyoming. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are getting smaller, cheaper and more reliable, and scientists across the United State are using them to document elusive creatures like never before. ASSOCIATED PRESS
This 2011 photo from a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service motion-activated camera shows an elephant seal in the Channel Islands National Park off the coast of Southern California. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras devices are getting smaller, cheaper and more reliable, and scientists across the United State are using them to document elusive creatures like never before. ASSOCIATED PRESS
This 2017 photo from a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service motion-activated camera shows a Florida panther at Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge. Motion-detecting wildlife cameras are yielding serious science as well as amusing photos. ASSOCIATED PRESS
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