“…Camera trapping has become a common noninvasive survey technique (Burton et al, ; O'Connell, Nichols, & Karanth, ; Rowcliffe & Carbone, ), especially for rare and elusive forest‐dwelling species (Furnas, Landers, Callas, & Matthews, ; Stewart et al, ), and has been used to obtain crucial ecological information (Caravaggi et al, ). Landscape‐scale camera grids or transects are increasing across the globe (McShea, Forrester, Costello, He, & Kays, ), and such sampling may be used to monitor global biodiversity in the future (Rich et al, ; Steenweg et al, ). For example, the project Snapshot Wisconsin currently has over 1,000 registered volunteers maintaining over 1,200 remote cameras and has collected over 22 million images since it was established in 2016 (Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, ).…”