“…Camera traps provide a non‐invasive approach for detecting and monitoring wildlife that has been made more accessible through continued improvements in camera quality and cost‐efficiency, and their use in addressing fundamental ecological questions is on the rise (Burton et al., 2015; Caravaggi et al., 2017; Frey, Fisher, Burton, & Volpe, 2017). Beyond monitoring, utilization of camera traps for observational research in predator–prey ecology has exploded in recent years (Figure 1), largely due to advances in statistical techniques, such as occupancy modelling and spatial capture–recapture analysis (Augustine et al., 2018; Chandler & Royle, 2013; MacKenzie et al., 2017; Royle, Chandler, Sun, & Fuller, 2013; Sollmann et al., 2013).…”