In the Sonoran Desert, any water is precious. This little seep provides water for many desert critters, including this sleepy male black bear. I suspect he was down amongst the saguaro cacti to feed on their many ripe red fruits that have fallen to the ground.
Tag: ecology
Little Bear cools off
It’s been a pretty dry monsoon season so far here in the Sonoran Desert. The main waterholes used by local wildlife in my area are drying up due to sparse rains. The low water level at what we’ve been calling Little Bear Pool didn’t stop this black bear from taking a soak to cool down. Thankfully, more rain is forecasted for this week.
A black bear marks trees and inspects a camera
The bear scat trail cam site (see previous post about the mama bear and her scat) has continued to be active, most recently with male black bears coming through and marking two different trees and smelling the old scat. I have two trail cams there now, both on trees that are not bear marking trees. Recently, a curious bear decided to check out one of the cameras. This isn’t the first time a bear decided to mess with one of my cameras, but no damage was done and it shows how curious and aware bears are of their surroundings.
Mountain Lions
One of my new camera trap locations recently caught an adult female mountain lion and one of her yearling offspring:
Of Mountain Lions …
When I first learned about game cameras I was immediately interested in how such camera traps could catch activities of wildlife undisturbed by human presence. I was also excited by the possibility of catching images or video of large predators in action, specifically mountain lions. I am no hunter and do not support trophy hunting or predator hunting and abhor these practices for many reasons. That said, so-called ‘game cameras’ are an essential tool for wildlife research and monitoring.
It took me several years to learn how to find the right place to set a camera trap that would catch large predators like mountain lions, but I finally caught on and learned to see their activity by tracks and associated preferred haunts.
Here are a few mountain lion videos that my camera traps have captured this year.
Mountain Lion & Fawn:
Mountain Lion in the Desert Heat:
Bear, Skunk, Bobcat and Mountain Lion:
Mountain Lion on the Move:
First Mountain Lion of 2018: