By Loz Blain
The winners have been announced in the third annual World Nature Photography Awards. A haunting glance from a mud-crusted crocodile lying in wait takes the top honors, but there's a visual feast to enjoy from the other winners and runners-up.
Based in London, this completely independent contest aims to encourage people all over the world to take in different perspectives, and change their own behavior and decisions for the good of the planet and its other inhabitants. To put its money where its mouth is, the World Nature Photography Awards team plants a tree for every one of the thousands of entries it receives.
The overall World Nature Photographer of the Year for 2023 is Germany's Jens Cullman, who shot the winning image Danger in the Mud. Crocodiles are well known for their fast strike and savage power, but Danger in the Mud highlights their other key weapon: patience. This yellow-eyed fella has lain in wait long enough for the mud on his snout to bake into a cracked crust.
The Ghost of the Rocks, which took out the Gold prize in the Behavior-Invertebrates category is by Spainiard Javier Herrantz who uses a long exposure to turn a wave washing over a stationary red crab into a misty and atmospheric veil.
Then there's the extraordinary work of Japan's Norihiro Ikuma, whose shot Ride on You, takes us to an underwater landscape that may as well be an alien planet. A stacked pair of Japanese stream toads strike an imperious pose as they watch over an impossibly huge mass of loosely tangled egg strings stretching off into the distance.
And it's not all about the category winners. Portugal's Antonio Coelho may only have taken out Bronze in the Plants and Fungi category, but his image Foggy Morning, is another example of how sometimes a different perspective on planet Earth can place the familiar in a spectacularly different light.
Reprinted with permission from www.newatlas.com
Photos can be found here: https://newatlas.com/photography/2023-world-nature-photography-awards-winners/