
Wildlife Insights is a website compiling millions of camera-trap photographs. Pictured, a jaguar photographed deep inside the Nouragues Natural Reserve, French Guiana. Scroll through to see more wildlife caught on camera.

Camera traps allow researchers to discretely capture photos of wildlife, like this one of a tiger in Bardia National Park, Nepal.

A male Lion in the Zambezi Region of Namibia

The Wildlife Insights platform is supported by Google and the World Wildlife Fund, among others. Pictured, animals by a water hole in the Zambezi region of Namibia, taken by a camera trap.

A spotted hyena in the Zambezi Region of Namibia.

A takin in the Trongsa District of Bhutan. The takin is also known as the cattle chamois or gnu goat

The images on the platform will be available to researchers, and the general public. A pair of marmots caught on camera in Akesai County, China.

A wild boar in the Trongsa District of Bhutan.

Camera traps are triggered by heat or movement. A giant anteater in Manaus, photographed in Brazil

A leopard photographed in the Zambezi Region of Namibia.

Wildlife Insights hopes its platform will encourage collaboration between researchers across the world. A Bornean orangutan with baby, captured by a camera trap in Indonesia.

A curious ocelot getting up close to a camera trap.

The platform uses AI to identify the animals in the images. Pictured, giraffes in the Zambezi Region of Namibia.

A southern pig-tailed macaque at the Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park in Indonesia.

A family of northern plains gray langurs, photographed around a watering hole.

These African elephants look like they're about to trample this camera trap.

A Lowland Tapir at the Central Suriname Nature Reserve, Suriname. Wildlife Insights is currently in beta, and there are plans for more features to be added in future.



