When researchers set up trail cameras, they never know what they will pick up. One team in Peru received directly from a Disney film.
Like the New York Times reportedA cameravall at the Cocha Cashu Biological Station in the Amazon was intended to check birds in the area.
It appears that this tropical research facility hid a bizarre interspecies -friendship between one Opossum and an Ocelot.
The research team initially thought that the Ocelot stalked the Opossum, just to see them again a little later. Strangely enough, the Opossum was completely relaxed in the presence of a predator, and the Ocelot showed no coercion to eat his companion.
“Like two old friends who walk home from a bar,” said Isabel Damas-Moreira, a behavioral economist at German Bielefeld University.
Here the plot is getting thicker, because this curious behavior was not a coincidence; Three more cases of Opossum-Ocelot agreement were discovered in the archive images, and a subsequent test with the help of the smell of an Ocelot showed that the opossums are being taken properly with the smell of their feline friend.
The theory is that the Opossum uses the smell of the Ocelot for “chemical camouflage” to hide from great predators. They can also go on what the Ocelot leaves behind, also in view of the hunt. As for the Ocelot of the setup, it is possible that the natural resistance of Opossum against Gif offers a defense against the Pit -Adder.
Collaboration between species is not as strange as it sounds. For example, the American fish and nature service has been observed a coyote and a tie Working together in the wild. Captive Cheetahs are also doing well with Dog friends.
The story is not just a charming story; It perfectly illustrates the value that trail cameras can have in conservation research. Cameras have recorded images of some of the most elusive species of the planet and offer valuable insights into the behavior and needs of wildlife in the wild in a non-invasive way. The more we know about a kind, the more effective Local efforts It can be to protect it.
In this case it was an opportunity discovery that discovers some interesting opportunities for future study.
Such as Dr. Ettore camerlenghi told New York Times: “You are looking for one thing and ultimately find something else, which sometimes turns out to be even more interesting than what you were originally looking.”
Become a member of our Free newsletter for Good news And Useful tipsAnd don’t miss it This cool list From simple ways to help yourself while helping the planet.
#Cameras #deep #Amazon #Rainforest #catch #stunning #moment #duo #friends #walk #home #bar

