Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Scientists put motion cameras along the US-Mexico border to spy on wildlife. The footage is spectacular — and telling.

Videos reveal the hidden lives of animals in the borderlands and how the wall affects them.

puma 1
puma 1
A puma, or mountain lion, seen by a motion-sensing camera near the border wall.
Courtesy of Ganesh Marín
Benji Jones
Benji Jones is an environmental correspondent at Vox, covering biodiversity loss and climate change. Before joining Vox, he was a senior energy reporter at Business Insider. Benji previously worked as a wildlife researcher.

The border wall between the US and Mexico is, of course, a barrier meant to prevent human migrants from crossing into America as they seek work, family, or refuge from violence.

It’s also a significant barrier to ranging wildlife.

The border wall, a centerpiece of President Donald Trump’s agenda, cuts through a rugged, unique ecosystem home to hundreds of native species, from jaguars and pumas to black bears and deer. These animals often need to move to survive, whether to find a source of water or a mate.

We know the wall is impassable for many species, potentially lowering their chance of survival. How exactly the border affects this rich ecosystem, however, has largely been a mystery.

A new study, among the first of its kind, finally offers some answers — by essentially spying on animals near the border. For the research, ecologist and lead author Ganesh Marín, then a doctoral researcher at the University of Arizona, set up 85 motion-sensing cameras in northeastern Sonora, Mexico, along and south of the US border in Arizona and New Mexico. Throughout the course of the research, when animals walked by, the cameras began recording.

Over roughly two years, from 2020 to 2022, the cameras captured hundreds of hours of footage, including more than 21,000 clips with mammals, said Marín, a National Geographic Explorer and postdoctoral scientist at the nonprofit Conservation Science Partners.

“This place is so special because you see these tropical species, like ocelots and jaguars, at the same time as beavers and black bears,” Marín told me earlier this year when I was reporting on borderland jaguars.

Related

Some of the recordings are pretty incredible. In this clip, for example, a young puma, or mountain lion, makes a chirping sound, likely calling for its mother.

Or check out this jaguar approaching the camera. This particular cat is known as Bonito. Scientists first detected this cat in 2020 and can identify him by his markings.

Marín’s cameras detected another jaguar, as well, called Valerio. He was seen by cameras multiple times in a protected area known as Cuenca Los Ojos just south of the border in Sonora.

The camera traps caught black bears and their cubs…

…bobcats and coyotes…

…and even an ocelot, an elusive predatory cat.

Analyzing the videos ultimately revealed several important details about wildlife in the borderlands. Marín found that large mammals, such as black bears and deer, as well as some smaller herbivores, spend less time near the border than in other, more remote stretches of his study region. That suggests these animals avoid border infrastructure.

Other species, like the pronghorn, which have been seen on the US side of the border, didn’t appear in his cameras at all. That may be because they have trouble crossing a highway that runs roughly parallel to the border in Sonora, according to Marín and his co-author, John L. Koprowski, a biologist at the University of Wyoming.

Meanwhile, smaller common predators like coyotes and bobcats appeared more tolerant to human activity: They were more likely to use habitats with cattle, cars, and dirt roads, according to the footage.

The study adds to a growing body of research showing that the border and infrastructure around it is disrupting wild animal communities.

“Amazing wildlife is present in the borderlands due to the binational efforts to protect and restore the flow of life between both countries,” Marín said in an email. “We should not define this beautiful region and the creatures that roam by the existence of an imposed division.”

Climate
The surprising truth about loggingThe surprising truth about logging
Climate

The reality behind Trump’s push to log more public forests is weirdly complicated.

By Benji Jones
Climate
If these whales go extinct, we’ll know who to blameIf these whales go extinct, we’ll know who to blame
Climate

Just 51 of these whales are left on Earth. Trump officials may have just doomed them.

By Benji Jones
The Highlight
We’re discovering new species faster than ever — and it might be our best chance to save themWe’re discovering new species faster than ever — and it might be our best chance to save them
The Highlight

How scientists (and the rest of us) are finding 16,000 new species a month.

By Bryan Walsh
Climate
These animals can cause big trouble. Why are states unleashing them by the millions?These animals can cause big trouble. Why are states unleashing them by the millions?
Climate

Introduced species can wreak havoc on native ecosystems. Many states are flooding their waterways with them.

By Benji Jones
Climate
Scientists finally have something hopeful to tell us about monarch butterfliesScientists finally have something hopeful to tell us about monarch butterflies
Climate

A first look at new research from the forests of central Mexico.

By Benji Jones
Climate
The strange reason why bears are attacking people in JapanThe strange reason why bears are attacking people in Japan
Climate

And what it reveals about wildlife encounters in the years to come.

By Benji Jones