Incredible images from the Wildlife Photographer of the Year awards
John E Marriott/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
2024's finest photos
Wildlife Photographer of the Year, developed and produced by the Natural History Museum, London, awards the best visual storytelling inspired by the natural world and issues around its conservation. In 2024 the esteemed competition celebrates 60 years of documenting Earth’s exquisite beauty, wonder and vulnerability through captivating images. Take a look at this year’s stunning category winners, selected from a record-breaking 59,228 entries received from 117 countries and territories.
Click through this gallery to admire the incredible winning images from 2024’s Wildlife Photographer of the Year awards…
Matthew Smith/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Under the Waterline
Using a specially-made extension he designed for the front of his camera, photographer Matthew Smith carefully captured this curious leopard seal beneath Antarctic ice. The encounter with the playful youngster was Smith's first with a leopard seal. Though leopard seals are widespread and abundant, overfishing, retreating sea ice and warming waters mean that krill and penguins – their main food sources – are both in decline, spelling potential trouble for the species. This image won in the Underwater category this year.
Parham Pourahmad/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
An Evening Meal
Winner of the 11-14 category, Parham Pourahmad caught the last rays of the setting sun illuminating this young (and hungry) Cooper’s hawk. Over a single summer, Pourahmad spent several weekends at the Ed R Levin County Park in Milpitas, California, taking photos that showcase the variety of wildlife living within a busy metropolitan city. The Cooper’s hawk, widespread across southern Canada, the USA and central Mexico, typically inhabits mature and open woodlands. But these adaptable birds also live in urban spaces, where there are tall trees to nest in, and bird feeders that attract smaller birds and squirrels to prey on.
Robin Darius Conz/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Tiger in Town
German drone photographer Robin Darius Conz was following this tiger as part of a documentary team filming the wildlife of the Western Ghats. Some of the most biodiverse landscapes in India, the protected parts of the Western Ghats have a stable population of tigers that is closely monitored. Sadly, outside these areas – where development has brought conflict between humans and animals – tiger occupancy has declined. The image of this lone tiger, lounging on a hillside where forests once grew, won Conz the Urban Wildlife category.
Sage Ono/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
The Serengeti of the Sea
Recipient of the Rising Star Portfolio Award, Sage Ono was inspired to take up underwater photography by his grandfather, a retired marine biologist. Upon relocating to the Californian coast near the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary after university, Ono became fascinated by the submerged world of the bay’s giant kelp forests. The biggest of all seaweeds, giant kelp supports a huge diversity of life, including the gemstone-like tube-snout fish eggs captured in this winning image. They fade in colour as the embryos develop, but this photo preserves them in all their ruby glory.
Igor Metelskiy/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Frontier of the Lynx
Here, photographer Igor Metelskiy shows a lynx stretching in the early evening sun, its body mirroring the undulating wilderness of Primorsky Krai in Russia. The remote location and changing weather conditions made access to this spot – and transporting equipment there – a challenge. But, after waiting more than six months, and positioning his camera trap near the footprints of potential prey, Metelskiy finally achieved this relaxed image of the elusive lynx. A survey carried out in 2013 estimated the entire Russian lynx population to be around 22,500 individuals. This image beat out the competition in the Animals in their Environment category.
Thomas Peschak/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Dolphins of the Forest
Also known as the boto or pink river dolphin, the Amazon river dolphin’s relationship with humans is complex. Both revered and feared in traditional Amazonian cultures, some people also see them as thieves who steal fish from nets and should be killed. Winner of the Photojournalist Story Award Thomas Peschak took this picture in an area where local communities are creating opportunities for tourists to encounter the dolphins. This brings another set of problems, as it encourages the creatures to rely on being fed by humans.
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Britta Jaschinski/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Dusting for New Evidence
Taken at London's Heathrow Airport, this powerful image by Britta Jaschinski won the Photojournalism category in this year's competition. Jaschinski spent time at the CITES Border Force department where confiscated animal products are tested, and here she observes a police investigator dusting for fingerprints on a seized elephant tusk using newly developed magnetic powder. The substance allows experts to obtain prints from ivory up to 28 days after it was touched, increasing the chances of identifying those involved in its illegal trade.
Fortunato Gatto/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Old Man of the Glen
Home to one of the UK's highest concentrations of native trees, Glen Affric in the Scottish Highlands is a vital ecosystem. Analysis of pollen preserved in the layered sediments here dates the ancient forest back at least 8,300 years. Italian photographer – and Plants and Fungi category winner – Fortunato Gatto came across this gnarled old birch tree, adorned with pale 'old man’s beard' lichens, on a solo walk through the glen. The presence of this particular lichen indicates an area of minimal air pollution.
Hikkaduwa Liyanage Prasantha Vinod/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
A Tranquil Moment
This serene scene of a young toque macaque dozing between feeds was captured by Hikkaduwa Liyanage Prasantha Vinod in Sri Lanka's Wilpattu National Park. The Behaviour: Mammals category winner was resting in a quiet place after a morning of photographing birds and leopards before realising he wasn’t alone – a troop of toque macaques was moving through the trees above. Toque macaques easily adapt to human foods, and the encroachment of plantations into their habitat has seen a tragic increase in incidents of shooting, snaring and poisoning by farmers trying to preserve their crops.
Ingo Arndt/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
The Demolition Squad
Winner of the Behaviour: Invertebrates category, German photographer Ingo Arndt documents the efficient dismemberment of a blue ground beetle by red wood ants. Mercifully, the beetle was already dead when the ant army began carving its body into pieces small enough to fit through the entrance to their nest. While red wood ants get much of their nourishment from honeydew secreted by aphids, they also need protein to thrive. Through sheer strength of numbers, they can easily dispatch insects and other invertebrates several times their size.
Justin Gilligan/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
A Diet of Deadly Plastic
Here, Australian photographer Justin Gilligan creates a sobering mosaic from the 403 pieces of plastic found inside the belly of a deceased flesh-footed shearwater on Lord Howe Island. The seabird was discovered by scientists at the Adrift Lab, which studies the impact of plastic pollution on marine ecosystems. Gilligan, the winner of the Oceans: The Bigger Picture category, has documented the team's work for several years. In 2023, they classified a new disease caused by plastic ingestion in birds. Named plasticosis, it involves the creation of excessive scar tissue in the digestive tract.
Jack Zhi/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Practice Makes Perfect
American photographer Jack Zhi has been visiting the same strip of Los Angeles coastline for the past eight years, observing the presence of peregrine falcons and their growing chicks. On the day this photo was taken, the young birds were flying so fast that it was a challenge to track the action. Should this majestic infant – seen here practising its hunting skills on a butterfly – make it to adulthood, tests have shown that it will be capable of swooping at speeds of more than 200 miles per hour (320km/h). Zhi won the Behaviour: Birds category with this shot.
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Jiří Hřebíček/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
The Artful Crow
This impressionistic vision of a sitting carrion crow is the work of Czech photographer Jiří Hřebíček, who came out on top in the Natural Artistry category this year. Now living in Basel, Hřebíček often visits his local park as it’s an ideal place to experiment with camera techniques. To create this painting-esque effect, he deliberately moved his camera in different directions while using a long shutter speed. Carrion crows are intelligent birds that have successfully adapted to living alongside humans, with gardens and parks providing a regular food supply. In Switzerland, some of the highest concentrations are found around Basel.
Karine Aigner/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Wetland Wrestle
The tour group Karine Aigner was leading in the Pantanal had stopped to photograph some marsh deer when she noticed an odd shape in the water. Through binoculars, Aigner quickly recognised the sinuous form of a yellow anaconda as it coiled itself around the snout of a yacaré caiman. Watching as the reptiles struggled with each other, Aigner took this photograph, which won the Behaviour: Amphibians and Reptiles category. Caimans will eat snakes but, as anacondas get larger, they will include reptiles in their diet too, so it’s hard to determine who is the aggressor here.
Alberto Román Gómez/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Free as a Bird
Here, Spanish junior shutterbug Alberto Román Gómez contrasts a delicate stonechat bird with a hefty chain. Winner of the 10 Years and Under category, he watched from the window of his father’s car at the edge of the Sierra de Grazalema Natural Park to get the shot, while the young bird flitted back and forth. Though this juvenile stonechat would not yet have developed its adult call (which sounds like two stones tapping together), Gómez felt it displayed a sense of ownership and guardianship beyond its years. Stonechats tend to prefer open habitats and typically perch on fences.
John E Marriott/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
On Watch
Winner of the Animal Portraits category John E Marriott had been tracking this lynx's family for almost a week, wearing snowshoes and carrying light camera gear to make his way through the freezing forests of Canada's Yukon. When fresh tracks led him to the group, he kept his distance to make sure he didn’t disturb them, silently capturing this beautiful image. Lynx numbers usually reflect the natural population fluctuations of their main prey species, the snowshoe hare. With climate change reducing snow coverage, giving other predators more opportunities to hunt the hares, both hare and lynx populations may decline.
Liwia Pawłowska/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Recording by Hand
To celebrate the 60th anniversary of Wildlife Photographer of the Year, and in line with the Natural History Museum’s vision of a future where both people and planet thrive, the competition introduced the Impact Award for both the Adult and Young Photographer categories in 2024. The Young Impact Award was given to Liwia Pawłowska of Poland for this photograph, spotlighting a process known as bird ringing. Here, a common whitethroat has its length, sex, condition and age recorded to help scientists monitor the species' population and track migratory patterns. Pawłowska has been photographing bird ringing sessions since she was just nine years old.
Jannico Kelk/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Hope for the Ninu
The Adult Impact Award, which recognises a conservation success, a story of hope and/or positive change, went to Jannico Kelk of Australia. He photographed the greater bilby, a small marsupial also referred to as the ninu by Aboriginal Australians, which was brought to near-extinction through predation by introduced foxes and cats. Kelk’s image shows a ninu among red sand dunes in a fenced reserve, which has protected the species from predators and helped it thrive.
Alexis Tinker-Tsavalas/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Life Under Dead Wood
The award for Young Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2024 went to German photographer Alexis Tinker-Tsavalas, who also won the 15-17 category. Tinker-Tsavalas quickly rolled over a log to take this intriguing image of a raspberry-coloured springtail next to a ballooning slime mould, moving fast as tiny springtails can jump many times their body length in a split second. He used a technique called focus stacking, where 36 images – each with a different area in focus – were combined. Macroscopic springtails are found in almost every corner of the globe and are vital for improving soil health, munching on microorganisms such as bacteria and fungi.
Shane Gross/Wildlife Photographer of the Year
The Swarm of Life
Taking home the grand prize of Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2024, Canadian marine conservation photojournalist Shane Gross also topped the Wetlands: The Bigger Picture category. Gross snorkelled Cedar Lake in British Columbia for several hours to make this photo, gliding through fields of lily pads. Taking care not to disturb the silt and algae on the lake floor (thus maintaining visibility), he finally caught this glittering school of inky-black and gold western toad tadpoles on camera. Western toads are native to western North America, and their tadpoles have to swim up to the shallows from the safer depths of the lake to feed. An estimated 99% do not survive to adulthood.
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