Watch: ‘Awesome’ grizzly bear suspicious of trail camera

A grizzly bear in Canada was caught on a trail camera recently casting a suspicious “side-eye” glance at the device, providing viewers with an up-close look at the animal.

A grizzly bear in Canada was caught on a trail camera recently casting a suspicious “side-eye” glance at the device, providing viewers with an up-close look at the animal.

The accompanying footage, captured in late September, was featured for the first time Sunday by David Troup on his Yukon Trail Cams Facebook page.

“Awesome Yukon grizzly giving the camera a double-take,” Troup wrote.

Troup, who monitors motion-sensor cameras in the Yukon Territory, acknowledged to FTW Outdoors that there’s “not much to chew on” with this particular clip “other than a gorgeous bear offering the camera a little side eye.”

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But the clip reveals a bears’ natural instinct to investigate objects and/or sounds that might seem out of place.

Reads one of dozens of comments: “Just shows how aware wildlife are of their surroundings. No matter what travels on this trail, they check out the camera. Their hearing is so sharp to hear that camera turn on.”

Troup is still reviewing footage captured during the summer and fall, searching for gems to feature through the winter.

Early last month he featured a clip showing a large grizzly bear walking across snow with. The camera angle was such as to reveal the undersides of its remarkably “huge feet.” (See second image and click here to view the video.)

In September, Troup featured a clip showing a grizzly bear standing to scratch its back against a tree before running toward the camera, passing within feet of the device, revealing. its massive claws. (Third image; click here for the video.)

After his latest post, Troup was asked if bears have destroyed any of his cameras.

His response: “I use metal security boxes that house the cameras; it keeps them secure although they get repositioned.”

Troup added that infrared sensors are exposed, but to date animals have not damaged his sensors.

–Images courtesy of David Troup

Watch: Grizzly bear on snow shows off remarkably ‘huge feet’

Trail-cam footage captured recently in Canada’s Yukon Territory shows a large grizzly bear walking across the wintry landscape with paws the size of snowshoes.

Trail-cam footage captured recently in Canada’s Yukon Territory shows a large grizzly bear walking across a wintry landscape with paws the size of snowshoes.

“Look at those huge feet!” David Troup exclaimed Saturday on Facebook.

While massive paws might be standard issue for such an immense creature, a camera must be uniquely situated to capture footage of its moving paw bottoms in such close detail.

As viewers will note, the bear pauses after walking past the camera to stand on its hind legs and sniff a tree previously marked by grizzly bears and black bears.

Troup told FTW Outdoors that his motion-sensor camera captured the footage in late September, but he held off on posting the clip until Saturday.

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Troup explained that he’s still sorting through a backlog of summer and fall footage to share with his Yukon Trail Cams Facebook followers throughout the winter.

“I bring in about half my cameras for winter as wildlife activity slows down but human activity increases with easier access to more remote spots via snow machine, skis, and snowshoes,” he said.

In September, Troup posted a clip showing a large grizzly bear charging in slow motion just feet from one of his cameras, revealing its powerful gait and enormous claws. (Click here to watch the viral video.)

Beforehand, the bear stands and scratches its back against a tree trunk in an impressive display of scent marking.

Troup said that camera location was about a mile from where his “huge feet” footage was captured.

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How many wolves can you spot in these photos?

Zoologist Roland Kays on Sunday tweeted a trail-cam image showing members of a Michigan wolf pack in the darkness and asked his followers how many animals they could spot.

Zoologist Roland Kays on Sunday tweeted an image showing members of a Michigan wolf pack in the darkness and asked followers how many animals they could spot.

We’re asking the same question, using the same trail-cam image and two others that show a different number of wolves (see immediately below).

Can you spot the wolves in all three images? (Answers are provided at the end of the post, with red circles showing animals that aren’t as clearly visible.)

The images were captured on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula via motion-sensor cameras monitored by Diana Lafferty, Assistant Professor of Wildlife Ecology at Northern Michigan University.

The top image was captured in September 2020; the other two were captured in 2019.

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They show members of the Echo Lake wolf pack, which inhabits a territory that spans about 30 square miles across wilderness and rural communities near Marquette, Mich.

The five-member pack hunts as a social unit and preys on white-tailed deer and smaller mammals.

The top image was captured as part of an ongoing trail-cam research project run by NMU Master’s student Tru Hubbard and Lafferty.

Kays, in his Twitter post, tagged Snapshot USA, a collaborative camera-trapping project he leads at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Science, along with Bill McShea of the Smithsonian Institution and researchers from other states.

Below are the answers (five wolves in the first image, four in the last two) and we apologize if the animals were too easy to spot.