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You re on Candid Camera: Wilderness camera traps used to explore wild horse welfare

Horsetalk.co.nz You’re on Candid Camera: Wilderness camera traps used to explore wild horse welfare Share One of the many wild horse images captured in the Australian study. Photo: Harvey et al. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11072101 Researchers have successfully used photographs and videos collected from camera traps to make welfare assessments of free-roaming wild horses. The researchers were able to identify a majority of the horses captured by the cameras, having applied a previously developed protocol for scientifically assessing the welfare of each animal. “Camera trapping was successful in detecting and identifying horses across a range of habitats, including woodlands where horses could not be directly observed,” Andrea Harvey and her fellow researchers reported in the journal

People | David Elliott News, Features and Galleries | The Sydney Morning Herald

People | David Elliott News, Features and Galleries | The Sydney Morning Herald We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss

Wollondilly playground upgrades to become reality through latest round of bushfire funding

Wollondilly Council Wollondilly Council has welcomed the commitment of $920,120 in bushfire recovery funding to construct shade shelters at seven facilities across the Shire and to upgrade the playground at Picton Botanic Gardens as an inclusive play space. The upgrades will be delivered through Stage Two of the Bushfire Local Economic Recovery Fund co-funded by the Australian and NSW Governments. Mayor Robert Khan said that the addition of shade shelters in Warragamba, Tahmoor, Bargo, Oakdale, Thirlmere, Buxton and The Oaks and the inclusive play space will offer residents safe and friendly places to gather, share their experiences and move forward together.

It s official – rorting is okay if you win the election

It s official – rorting is okay if you win the election
smh.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from smh.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Stop this cruelty now and bring the children home

Stop this cruelty now and bring the children home We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss June 10, 2021 12.05am Normal text size Credit: If the US and New Zealand are willing to resettle the Biloela family then they are obviously refugees and not a threat to anyone (“Not coming home: Tamil family likely to be resettled overseas”, June 9). The Australian government should stop this intransigence and act with the compassion people expect of it. Melanie Vertoudakis, Camperdown Could this government inflict any more pain on the Biloela family? Yes. The vengeance of this government towards this sick three-year-old child and her family knows no bounds.

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