What the Router states the device is, and what the device actually is can be two totally different things. On my Network, I have a Govee TV Backlight, but it shows up in my router as a water leak sensor. My litter robot shows up as a Vacuum. The Hardware ID of the device is usually assigned to the manufacturer, not necessarily the device type, this causes consumer routers to make assumptions when they try to guess what type of device is connected.
I would block the suspected camera on your router, and then thoroughly check all of the devices in the home to see if any of them lose connection. I would be willing to bet something does.
What the Router states the device is, and what the device actually is can be two totally different things. On my Network, I have a Govee TV Backlight, but it shows up in my router as a water leak sensor. My litter robot shows up as a Vacuum. The Hardware ID of the device is usually assigned to the manufacturer, not necessarily the device type, this causes consumer routers to make assumptions when they try to guess what type of device is connected.
I would block the suspected camera on your router, and then thoroughly check all of the devices in the home to see if any of them lose connection. I would be willing to bet something does.