"It's an interesting study that we are doing with this little log right here because sort of trying to understand how human actions, which is the making of this canal, can affect wildlife, and we don't tend to think of that stuff we think of the bigger corridors," William Freund said. William describes the log as a micro-corridor crucial as the main Florida wildlife corridor.
The trail camera we came to service on Dinner Island Ranch looks over a cypress log spread across an artificial canal. And, so, the cameras show the compassion, the depth of character and feelings that these animals have." "We think that a panther, what it does is it kills, and it has babies, right? So that's our mentality for predators and even bears. "Humans tend to be very shallow of how we think of - especially predators," William Freund said. The power of the movement triggered trail cameras giving viewers an intimate look into the lives of animals big and small. The first two films ever produced by the fStopFoundation, The Need for Connectivity and Wildlife in our Backyard, won numerous awards.