Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - How to photograph amphibians with "scientific photography"?

How to photograph amphibians with "scientific photography"?

Most of the shots in the animal world are follow-up, generally focusing on broadening the horizons on land.

There are also hidden shooting, such as fixing the camera somewhere in the jungle, shooting every day, and then editing and synthesizing.

The BBC has a documentary "Animal Camera", which once introduced how scientists observe and record animals in the sky-installing a lipstick-sized miniature camera on a sculpture, which can shoot it soaring in the air from the perspective of sculpture. The peeping lens can go deep into the hive and see the bees' every move clearly. Thermal camera can track and shoot the whereabouts of warm-blooded animals such as elephants and lions in the dark by detecting the heat emitted by animals. The camera installed in the high-tech remote control model can go deep into the lions and shoot the life-and-death struggle of fierce animals or affectionate parent-child shots. Slow-motion camera can slow down the moving speed of animals by 1000 times, take the action of 1 second as 15 minutes, and record the details that can't be observed by naked eyes. Diving robots can dive thousands of meters into the deep sea and photograph the wonders of the sea floor. Most of the shooting techniques in the animal world are similar to this.