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Research Shows We Know Less About the Daily Life of Wildlife Than Expected

Global Camera Study Focused on 400-plus Mammal Species on Six Continents

Researchers analyzed camera trap data on more than 400 mammal species from 20,080 camera sites across 38 countries on six continents, totaling 8.9 million observations.

Image Credit: Photo courtesy of the University of Rhode Island

March 12, 2025 Kimbra Cutlip

While children as young as 5 learn that raccoons and bats are active at night and giraffes and kangaroos like to romp around in the daytime, apparently, most animals haven’t been to kindergarten.

A new study that included work by University of Maryland researcher Travis Gallo found that more than half of mammals don’t adhere to “diel” classifications in accepted scientific literature about their activity at various times of the day. Many, it turns out, switch up their behavior based on environment and nearby human activity.

The study, recently published in Science Advances, was led by researchers from the University of Rhode Island who analyzed camera trap data on more than 400 mammal species from 20,080 camera sites across 38 countries on six continents. In total, the researchers collected 8.9 million observations of animals ranging from American bison to African polecats in environments that included deserts, rainforests, savannas, the Arctic tundra and even cities.

They found that existing classifications for an animal’s diel activity were accurate for only 39% of all species studied. In addition, 74% of the animals observed switched traits, with some becoming more nocturnal and others more diurnal. Because the study looked at data from both urban and wild locales, the researchers were able to detect a global human footprint that impacted nearly a third of animal species. Some urban-adapted animals, like the striped skunk, snowshoe hare, gray fox and North American porcupine, became more nocturnal with increasing human footprint.

Gallo, an assistant professor of environmental science and technology, was not surprised by that shift, because for years he has studying if and how animals adjust their daily rhythms to adapt to environmental change, especially in urban environments. The new findings track with a study he published in 2022 that characterized the diel behavior of eight mammals in 10 U.S. cities, showing that some species adjust their activity to manage risks associated with urbanization. That data was included in the current study along with other data from Gallo and more than 200 authors.

Read full story in Maryland Today