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Bringing Cutting-Edge Technology to Wildlife Conservation

Wildlife Insights streamlines decision-making by providing machine learning models and other tools to manage, analyze and share camera trap data. With access to reliable data, everyone can make better decisions to help wildlife thrive.

UPLOAD

A Quicker Way to Upload and Share

Anyone collecting camera trap photos can upload them to Wildlife Insights. Photos are stored online so you can access them from anywhere, from any device or computer, even out in the field.

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IDENTIFY

Let a Computer do the Tagging

Animals in your photos are automatically identified using machine learning technology. Thousands of images can be tagged within minutes, saving you time to do the important work.

About our AI AI performance

ANALYZE

Create Maps and Graphs to Share

Access our suite of tools to analyze wildlife trends. Wildlife Insights can help your team make better decisions and share compelling findings.

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DISCOVER

Explore Wildlife, Worldwide

Dive into millions of camera trap images from around the world and explore projects in your region.

Explore Data

People around the world are using Wildlife Insights

“In 1 hour… we had ~50 students successfully verify all blank images and species identifications from a 130,000+ image camera trap survey!”

WWF Colombia is working in partnership with local communities, to support a Jaguar conservation corridor in Guaviare, Colombia. This region has been identified as an important corridor for jaguars and as part of a longer range corridor that extends from Mexico to Argentina. 

Colombia's Camera Trapping Network and Humboldt Institute run a large-scale, rapid assessment to understand biodiversity of medium and large mammals and birds in the region.

The Zoological Society of London (ZSL) is working with a local community in Taytay, Palawan, Philippines, to develop community-led camera trapping methods for endemic species using local ecological knowledge to target camera placement.

Founded in 2019 as the first nationwide mammal survey, the Snapshot project aims to capture the diversity of mammals across the United States to help inform conservation efforts. Now in the third year, Snapshot has expanded beyond the U.S. to hundreds of locations across Europe.