First images for Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition revealed
More than a dozen highly commended images have been unveiled by the Natural History Museum for the 60th annual competition.
A stoat “dancing” over the snow, a David Bowie spider and a jaguar going for the kill are among the first images released from this year’s Wildlife Photographer of the Year.
More than a dozen highly commended images have been unveiled on Thursday by the Natural History Museum for this year’s competition.
It comes ahead of the winners being announced at a ceremony hosted by TV presenters and conservationists Chris Packham and Megan McCubbin on October 8.
Among the newly released images, which received highly commended awards in their categories, are Jose Manuel Grandio’s joyous image of a stoat jumping high into the air over fresh snow and young photographer Sasha Jumanca’s shot of two curious tawny owlets.
A jaguar delivering a fatal bite to a caiman in the Pantanal in Brazil was captured by British photographer Ian Ford.
Meanwhile, Theo Bosboom’s image showed how mussels bind together to avoid being washed away from the shoreline in Sintra, Portugal.
Also among the 14 images that have been released are shots of lions mating with a backdrop of storm clouds in Tanzania, a Pallas’s cat staring down the lens as the moon sets in China, a jackdaw bringing stones to its nest in London, and a requiem shark in a final act of resistance in the bycatch of a ship in the South Atlantic.
Kathy Moran, chair of the judging panel, said: “In this selection, you see species diversity, a range of behaviour and conservation issues.
“These images represent the evolution of the competition through the years, from pure natural history to photography that fully embraces representation of the natural world – the beauty and the challenges.”
To mark the 60th anniversary of the competition in 2024, the museum’s flagship exhibition will feature a timeline of key moments in its history.
Entries were judged anonymously by an international panel of industry experts on their creativity, originality and technical excellence.
A new award in both the young and adult competitions, called the Impact Award, has also been introduced this year to recognise a conservation success, a story of hope or positive change.
Dr Doug Gurr, director of the museum, said: “As we celebrate sixty years of Wildlife Photographer of the Year, we also celebrate the generations of visitors who have been inspired by the beauty and majesty of its images, and the millions of connections made with nature.”
“But still today, the competition remains true to one of its founding objectives: ‘to enhance the prestige of wildlife photography in the hope that ultimately the awards would benefit animals ‘by creating greater public interest in them and in that all-important topic – conservation.'”
Wildlife Photographer of the Year is developed and produced by the Natural History Museum, London, supported by Associate Donor The William Brake Foundation.