Camera sets in wild areas around Albany including Grafton Lakes and Thatcher state park.
Suburban camera sets with a pink flamingo in front
Sites in the Albany pine bush and various suburban woodlots
In duration catched dholes between Jan 25, 17 to Feb 20,17
Project to monitor dholes through camera trapping.
A test of different corridor models as described and published in
LaPoint, Scott, et al. "Animal behavior, cost-based corridor models, and real corridors." Landscape Ecology 28.8 (2013): 1615-1630.
Deployment names signify rather the location was selected based on Animal Defined (AD), Circuit Scape (CS), Least Cost Path (LCP), or control (NC, no corridor).
Camera trapping data from the Albany area collected around 2011 and 2012 by Roland Kays and the NY State Museum. Data includes suburban sets in the woods around Albany and wild sets, mostly out by Grafton state park. Some of the suburban sets include a test of alternative animal movement corridor models as detailed in LaPoint et al 2013. Some of the other data is unpublished. There are also some cameras that were placed in front of a plastic flamingo to see how animals would respond to novel objects.