![]() ![]() Food Security and Health Depend on Biodiverse Ecosystems Taylor Ricketts’ work focuses on the question: How do we meet the needs of both people and nature in an increasingly crowded, changing world?.But where does one begin a search for information when Google lets you down? It’s why policymakers, conservation champions, health practitioners and many others seek data and research to help them make important environmental decisions that have a huge impact on food security, global health, climate change, security and even human rights and good governance. That is, Earth’s natural environment provides for our well-being. Scientists and researchers spend their professional lives gathering evidence that helps prove what many of us intuitively know. ![]() Nature is a Treasure Trove for Human Well-being And there is the plethora of research that supports it.Biodiversity and Food Security Are Inextricably Linked Biodiversity underpins the ecosystem goods and services that enable sustainable development.The website brings together decades of research on the sustainable management of wildlife, with a particular focus on hunting in the tropical forests of the Congo Basin and the Amazon. CIFOR's New Bushmeat Site The Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) launched a new website on bushmeat, or wild species that are hunted for food.DNA Detective Dogs Saving Pangolins Sniffing her way through the forests of Nepal and Vietnam, Athena, an Australian Shepherd mix, and her trainer are working to save the world's most-trafficked mammal-the pangolin.So enjoy the trip and the camera, the only mistake you did is not getting much more familiar with the camera, but you can learn it in Africa as there are a lot of not so exiting waiting moments that you can use to test things out. Here a test video done with the R5c, 200mm at 2.8, 1/100, 8K 50fps slowed down to 25fps on a Gimbal all done with AF tracking: I want to see under the sun the R5 recording at 120fps…… at some point it will be so hot. ![]() Plus, with long lens you need a really good fluid head so no need for IBISīit better DR although not world changing Wider is wobble wobble, above it creates more problem than solving. Ibis for video is good only from around 30 to 100mm rest is useless. Following jets is a big issue and the R5c has no issue. I have sometime issues with IBIS and the 100-500 while video as it sometimes jumps especially if you pan fast. Prerecording you can have the camera always prerecording so you can react later instead of missing a key moment (it has limitation as no RAW ☹) but works in XF-AVC This is a life saver as is much better to judge how the AF works and if you need to bump it or correct something. XF-AVC much easier to edit that R5 h265 Log3 files.įocus peaking even in AF. Guess what the R5c is probably one of the best “semi affordable” wildlife film camera that come close to REDs and here is why it is better than the R5:Ĩk 60fps RAW (so key to have 60 fps for slow motion, if you watch thinks like Our Planet and so on are basically all in slow motion)ĥ.9k 60fps RAW in S35 giving you reach if you need/preferĤk 60fps is much better quality than the pixel binned R5Ĥk 120fps is better quality than R5 plus you can record audio, R5 cannot.ģk S16 RAW up to 120fps even more reach and slow motion REDs do not have IBIS, consume tons of big battery, need rigging, but REDs have the resolution/sharpness/fps that are key factor for wildlife. Why? Because high res (8k) and slow motion. Let’s start with this 80% of commercial wildlife video are done with RED cameras. I have both the R5 and R5c and heading out to Africa in a week. I just created and account to answer you as you seemed soo convinced that you did wrong, and I feel sorry about it as it is not true at all. ![]()
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