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Wildlife Photographer of the Year awards – in pictures

The Wildlife Photographer of the Year is an annual competition hosted by the Natural History Museum in London, which awards top honours in various categories for outstanding photography

The winner of the Rising Star award
An inquisitive harbour seal enjoying the patter of the rain on the archipelago of Heligoland, Germany.

Photograph: Luca Lorenz/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#wildlife
#seals

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The winner of the Plants and Fungi category
The fluorescent world of an insect-attracting pitcher plant taken in Kuching, Sarawak, Borneo, #Malaysia. Some carnivorous pitcher plants reflect UV light on certain areas as part of their ‘display’. They use colour, scent and nectar to lure their prey into pools of digestive juices at the bottom of their leaves.

Photograph: Chien Lee/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#PitcherPlants

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The winner of the Behaviour: Invertebrates category

A gum-leaf skeletoniser caterpillar taken in Torndirrup national park, Western #Australia. This caterpillar’s unusual headgear is made up of old head capsules, each retained with every moult. The resulting tower is believed to help deflect attacks by predators.

Photograph: Georgina Steytler/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#macrophotography
#caterpillar

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The winner of the Wetlands: The Bigger Picture category

A springtail among a galaxy of neon green gas bubbles in moorlands in Platzertal, Tyrol. #Austria has lost 90% of its peat bogs, and only 10% of those that remain are in good condition. Platzertal is one of the last intact high moorlands in the Austrian Alps, and an area renowned for its carbon-storing peat bogs.

Photograph: Sebastian Frolich/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#PeatBogs
#methane

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The winner of the Portfolio award

Eye of the Tundra.

Kharitonov’s artistic exploration of remote regions in the Russian North, Siberia and Asia highlights taiga and Arctic tundra scenes as summer rapidly turns to winter. Using drones, he picks out details in these vast terrains, showcasing their wild beauty.

Photograph: Alexey Kharitonov/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#tundra

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Highly commended in the Photojournalism category, and the Impact award winner

An orphaned giant anteater pup follows its caregiver after an evening feed at a rehabilitation centre in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Faciole wanted to highlight the consequences of road collisions, a leading cause of the decline in giant anteater numbers in Brazil.

Photograph: Fernando Faciole/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#AnimalRescue
#anteaters

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The winner of the Underwater category

The egg case of a swell shark, tethered to the base of a giant kelp in Monterey Bay, #California. Researchers estimate that kelp forests in Monterey Bay have declined by more than 95% over the past 34 years. Swell sharks depend on kelp to lay their eggs, making them especially vulnerable to such losses.

Photograph: Ralph Pace/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#KelpForests
#sharks

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The winner of the Animals in their Environment category

A peppered moray eel hunting for carrion at low tide in D’Arros Island, Amirante, Seychelles. Peppered moray eels are well adapted to the intertidal zone. They can hunt both above and below the water’s surface using their keen senses of smell and sight, sometimes staying out of water for more than 30 seconds.

Photograph: Shane Gross/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#eels

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The winner of the Urban Wildlife category, and an overall winner, 2025

A brown hyena among the skeletal remains of a long-abandoned diamond mining town in Kolmanskop, near Luderitz, Namibia. The rarest #hyena species in the world, brown hyenas are nocturnal and mostly solitary. They are known to pass through Kolmanskop on their way to hunt Cape fur seal pups or scavenge for carrion washed ashore along the coast.

Photograph: Wim van den Heever/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography

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The winner of the Behaviour: Birds category

A ladyfish snatching its prey from right under an egret’s beak in Yundang Lake, Fujian province, China. Once a natural marine harbour, Yundang Lake was sealed off from the sea during development in the 1970s. Isolated from the tides and currents, it became polluted and stagnant. An engineering project later reconnected it to the sea via a system of gates that regulate water flow.

Photograph: Qingrong Yang

#photography
#birds
#fish
#lakes
#China

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The winner of the Photojournalist Story Award category

A black-tailed rattlesnake outside Fort Davis, Texas, US. For centuries, rattlesnakes have been viewed in vastly different ways across the American continent – from reverence and respect to fear and suspicion. Annual rattlesnake round-ups, where hunters compete to collect the most snakes, began in the 1930s.

Photograph: Javier Aznar Gonzalez de Rueda/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#snakes

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The winner of the 15-17 Years category

A longhorn beetle in the Lepini mountains, Lazio, Italy. The photograph tells a poignant story of habitat loss. As longhorn beetles tunnel into dead wood, fungi make their way inside, helping to break it down and recycle nutrients. If the beetles’ habitat is disturbed or destroyed, the effects ripple across the entire ecosystem.

Photograph: Andrea Dominizi/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#beetles

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The winner of the Behaviour: Amphibians and Reptiles category

A gathering of lesser tree frogs in a breeding event on Kaw Mountain, French Guiana. To attract mates, lesser tree frogs produce short, shrill calls. Huge numbers gather, and the spectacular breeding event – triggered by heavy rains – lasts for just a few hours.

Photograph: Quentin Martinez/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#frogs

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The winner of the Natural Artistry category

An orb weaver spider on its web on a pedestrian bridge, silhouetted by lights from the cars below, taken in Ibbenburen, Germany. In urban environments, orb weaver spiders often spin webs near artificial lights that attract insects at night.

Photograph: Simone Baumeister/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#spiders

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The winner of the 10 Years and Under category

An orb weaver spider inside its silken retreat on a cold September morning in Wales. The web is constructed from a scaffold of radial threads, overlaid with a spiral of sticky silk to hold ensnared insects. A strong signal thread transmits vibrations to the spider’s hiding place, triggering it to emerge and collect its prey.

Photograph: Jamie Smart/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#spiders

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The winner of the Animal Portraits category

The orange glint of an eagle owl’s eyes in Naturns, South Tyrol, Italy. About twice the weight of a buzzard and with a wingspan approaching 180cm (6ft), these formidable nocturnal predators are among the largest owls. They nest on sheltered cliff ledges or in crevices, often returning to the same site for years.

Photograph: Philipp Egger/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography
#owls

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The winner of the 11-14 Years category

Mist-shrouded mountains with a silhouetted Alpine #ibex, taken in Col de la Colombière, Haute-Savoie, #France. Native to Europe, the species was hunted close to extinction in the early 1800s. Thanks to protection and reintroduction efforts, ibex now roam large areas of the Alps. However, a rapidly changing climate causing shifts in food availability may hinder their survival.

Photograph: Lubin Godin/Wildlife Photographer of the Year/PA

#photography

This entry was edited (2 months ago)

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