Collar cams offer a bear's eye view into the lives of grizzlies on Alaska's desolate North Slope
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This undated image provided by Washington State University in January 2026, made from a video taken from a grizzly bear's collar camera, shows two grizzly bears playing on the tundra in Alaska's North Slope. (Washington State University via AP)This Aug. 5, 2025, photo provided by Rob Kozakiewicz shows Washington State University doctoral student Ellery Vincent, left, and Alaska Department of Fish and Game Wildlife Biologist Jordan Pruszenski taking measurements and samples of an anesthetized grizzly bear prior to affixing a video collar on it in the North Slope of Alaska. (Rob Kozakiewicz via AP)This undated image provided by Washington State University in January 2026, made from a video taken from a grizzly bear's collar camera, shows the bear approaching a caribou carcass on the snow-covered tundra of Alaska's North Slope. (Washington State University via AP)This undated image provided by Washington State University in January 2026, made from a video taken from a grizzly bear's collar camera, shows another grizzly bear on the tundra of Alaska's North Slope. (Washington State University via AP)This undated image provided by Washington State University in January 2026, made from a video taken from a grizzly bear's collar camera, shows the bear encountering a wolf pack on the snow-covered tundra of Alaska's North Slope. (Washington State University via AP)
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This undated image provided by Washington State University in January 2026, made from a video taken from a grizzly bear's collar camera, shows two grizzly bears playing on the tundra in Alaska's North Slope. (Washington State University via AP)