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Interesting Trail Cam Study
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5417275" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>I have two different trail-camera studies I'm working on. One involves all buck movement, and I'm primarily looking at trends in peak buck activity by date and then by hour of the day. And I've also been looking at the differences between good acorn and poor acorn years. I'm also able to break the data down by buck age. This study uses data from all camera locations, no matter what the camera is pointed at. My second study involves just buck scraping activity, and only uses cameras pointed at scrapes and only data from bucks that interact with the scrape (data from bucks just "walking by" is excluded). This study is looking at peak dates and times of actual scrape interactions, and the types of scrape interactions that occur (working the overhanging limb, actually working the scrape itself, etc.), as well as differences in these trends by buck age.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5417275, member: 17"] I have two different trail-camera studies I'm working on. One involves all buck movement, and I'm primarily looking at trends in peak buck activity by date and then by hour of the day. And I've also been looking at the differences between good acorn and poor acorn years. I'm also able to break the data down by buck age. This study uses data from all camera locations, no matter what the camera is pointed at. My second study involves just buck scraping activity, and only uses cameras pointed at scrapes and only data from bucks that interact with the scrape (data from bucks just "walking by" is excluded). This study is looking at peak dates and times of actual scrape interactions, and the types of scrape interactions that occur (working the overhanging limb, actually working the scrape itself, etc.), as well as differences in these trends by buck age. [/QUOTE]
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