2022 Wildlife Photography Contest Winners
The Winners Of The Natural History Museum Wildlife Photographer Of The Year Contest Were Announced. Karin Eigner Won The Grand Title For Her Photograph Of A Ball Of Cactus Bees.
Wildlife Photographer of the Year was developed by London’s Natural History Museum and was established in 1965 by the BBC’s wildlife magazine, then called Animals.
The Natural History Museum joined forces in 1984 to create the current competition, which is now managed and owned by the Natural History Museum, London.
This competition includes two big prizes “Wildlife Photographer of the Year” and “Young Wildlife Photographer of the Year.” The two winning images were selected from among 19 category winners, which included 38,575 entries from 93 countries this year.
These photographs were judged anonymously by a panel of Natural History Museum experts based on the image’s originality, narrative, technical excellence, and ethical performance.
Wildlife Photographer of the Year (Winner, Behavior: Invertebrates)
- Karin Agner
Wildlife photographer of the year Winner, 15-17 years
- Cattaneo Vothikastanakorn
under ten years
- Ekaterina B
11 to 14 years
- Ismail Dominguez Gutierrez
Animals in their habitat
- Daniel Medros
Animal portraits
- Jose Juan Hernandez Martinez
Behavior: Birds
- Nick Kanakis
Behavior: Mammals
- Anand Nambiar
Behavior: amphibians and reptiles
- Fernando Constantino Martinez Belmar
Natural art
- Janji Texaco
the oceans
- Richard Robinson
Plants and fungi
- Agorastos Papatsanis
Underwater
- Tony was
Urban wildlife
- Dimitri Koch
ponds
- Daniel Nunez
Photojournalism
- Brent Stirton
The season finale photographer shares the story of a lovable mountain gorilla as the gorilla lays in the arms of his 13-year-old savior and caretaker.
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