Our nature reserves are great places to see wildlife, but you could spend all day outside and still only get glimpses into the lives of the many animals that call these wild places home. To help look after our wildlife, it's important to know what species are present and what they're doing. Across the UK, we're using trail cameras to answer some of these questions.
Here's a small selection of the stories we've revealed...
Alderney Wildlife Trust
Alderney have been using trail cams to record water rail activity around their ponds, including birds stretching, hopping and getting ready for big migration flights.
Water rail cam Alderney (https://vimeo.com/407997791)
©Alderney Wildlife Trust
Kent Wildlife Trust
Kent have been using trail cameras at Ham Fen for the past few years to view the activities of the reintroduced beavers, an animal that is crepuscular – mostly active at dawn and dusk. These snapshots into their lives are helping to build a better picture of the activity of these fairly elusive animals.
Beaver trail cam Kent (https://vimeo.com/409481219)
©Kent Wildlife Trust
Beaver trail cam chewing - Kent (https://vimeo.com/409496023)
©Kent Wildlife Trust
The Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire & Northamptonshire
At Trumpington Meadows, swift box cams have captured some fascinating behaviour including a swift transferring a nice tasty bolus of spiders and insects into a chick’s mouth, plus multiple shots of the parasitic louse flies that live on these birds crawling all over the parents.
Swift nest cam - feeding (https://vimeo.com/409487369)
© The Wildlife Trust BCN
Swift nest cam - parasite (https://vimeo.com/409485577)
©The Wildlife Trust BCN
Leicestershire & Rutland Wildlife Trust
The Rutland Ospreys nest cam reveals the stories of these fish-loving birds of prey. Since 2010 the same female, an un-ringed Scottish bird nicknamed 'Maya', has occupied the nest. In 2015 she paired with a ringed male (known as ‘33’ due to his ring number) and they have bred together every year since. This star pair have successfully raised 14 chicks, including the 150th chick for the Rutland Osprey Project in 2019.
Rutland osprey nestcam (https://vimeo.com/409506798)
© Leicestershire & Rutland Wildlife Trust
Shropshire Wildlife Trust
Camera traps have been an essential tool in helping Shropshire Wildlife Trust's Stuart Edmunds prove the presence of pine martens in the county, where they were presumed extinct for decades. The first Shropshire pine marten appeared on camera in July 2015, in woodland previously deemed unsuitable habitat for the elusive mammals.
Pine marten trail cam (https://vimeo.com/409710990)
©Stuart Edmunds, Shropshire Wildlife Trust
Pine marten trail cam montage (https://vimeo.com/409817928)
©Stuart Edmunds Shropshire Wildlife Trust
Pine marten trail cam 2 (https://vimeo.com/409837020)
© Stuart Edmunds Shropshire Wildlife Trust
![Two hedgehogs caught on a camera trap](/sites/default/files/styles/spotlight_default/public/2020-06/hedgehogs.jpg?h=def380be&itok=5shVGutj)
Hedgehogs ©Stuart Edmunds
How to use trail cams
Mammal expert Stuart Edmunds shares his top tips for using camera traps in your garden
![Peregrine webcam](/sites/default/files/styles/spotlight_default/public/2018-05/new%2520camera%2520view%2520Derby%2520cathedral%2520195px.jpg?h=3fbc7038&itok=FeTOSSCD)