A photograph of a white stoat with a black tipped fluffy tail jumping into the air above a snow-covered ground. It has twisted its body and has its mouth wide open in what looks like an expression of joy.

When Jose spotted this stoat jumping mid-air on the last day of his trip, he saw this performance as an “expression of exuberance”, although an alternative explanation may be a parasitic infection. 

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First Look at Wildlife Photographer of the Year 60

Wildlife Photographer of the Year is back for its sixtieth anniversary, celebrating the wonder of the natural world with some of the most extraordinary images of our planet.

From high-jumping stoats and mating bees to melting ice caps and bycatch sharks, this sneak peek at 2024’s entries perfectly captures the planet’s beauty, awe and fragility. 

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In the Spotlight by Shreyovi Mehta

On the horizon the silhouettes of two peacocks is framed by a tunnel of vegetation, bathed in an ethereal peachy light.

Surrounded by a tunnel of vegetation, two peahens are silhouetted against a peachy dawn sky in Keoladeo National Park, India.

It was this perfect moment that inspired Shreyovi to crouch down low on the ground to snap this dream-like image of these iconic Indian birds.

 

Strength in Numbers by Theo Bosboom

A photograph of a rocky shoreline. In the foreground a bed of blue-grey mussels fills the lower half of the picture, in the background waves are crashing against rocks.

Reminded of a marching army carrying shields, Theo took this image with a wide-angle lens to highlight the huge ecological role that mussels play in their marine environment.

On the Atlantic coast of Portugal, these mussels form massive beds held together by byssal threads. Not merely a static mass, mats of mussels are considered ecosystem engineers as they filter the seawater and provide homes for countless other marine species. 

 

Hooked by Tommy Trenchard

A photograph of a shark as it is being pulled out of the water by a fishing line. It is writhing as it exits the water, the waves of which are splashing against the side of the boat.

While onboard the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise, Tommy captured the final thrashes of a requiem shark as it was pulled out of the ocean.

The picture is part of a project to document the bycatch by fishing boats that are targeting tuna and swordfish for human consumption. The goal is to highlight the lack of effective regulation of industrial-scale fishing in international waters.

 

Stormy Scene by William Fortescue

A sepia photograph in which a male lion is jumping back from a female lion in an aggressive way. Both lions are roaring at each other, as flecks of saliva can be seen between the two. The sky behind the lions is filled with dark, swirling clouds, reflecting the mood between the big cats.

With a backdrop of swirling storm clouds, William caught a fraught moment between two lions as they were mating.

Sex between lions can be something of a frenetic affair, typically taking place multiple times over several days. In this case, the female had had enough and broke things off with an overeager male. 

 

The Disappearing Ice Cap by Thomas Vijayan

A wide-angle photograph of a huge sheet of ice. Across the surface of the white ice are several bright blue melt water rivers which plunge off its edge and into the contrasting deep blue water that surrounds the ice.

Capturing the epic scale of the Austfonna ice cap in Norway was a challenge for Thomas. He managed this by stitching together 26 frames taken from a drone to create this incredible panorama of the summer meltwater plunging over the edge of the Bråsvellbreen glacier.

This is the third largest ice cap in the world, but as Thomas found out on this visit, the onset of its annual melting occurred much earlier than usual because of the unfolding climate crisis. 

 

Leaving the Nest by Sasha Jumanca

A photograph showing a pair of young, fluffy owls sitting on a branch in a tree. One of the young owls has its eyes closed, while the other looks down on the viewer as it leans in to the first.

Two fuzzy tawny owls nuzzle each other on a branch in Munich. The couple were photographed by Sasha in the Maximiliansanlagen Park in the centre of the city. He had seen owls in the neighbourhood before but was surprised to find them in such an urban setting.

Sasha watched the owls for a few days, capturing one last cuddle before the fledglings went their own ways. 

 

Ziggy Spider by Lam Soon Tak

A photograph of a dusky orange spider, with its legs stretched between two moss covered branches. The photo is back lit, showing the spiders exceedingly fuzzy legs and the white egg sac it is carrying under its body in a beautiful detail.

Named as an homage to Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, Bowie’s 70s alter ego and band, the David Bowie spider is found in the tropical rainforests of Malaysia.

Spotting this individual guarding a white disc of eggs, Lam managed to snap this beautiful picture of the spider as it clung to a branch on the side of a river.

 

The Last Resting Place by Randy Robbins

A close-up photograph showing the head of a dead deer. It is covered in a brilliant white frost, which coats its fur and the leaves on which is it lying giving it an otherworldly appearance.

Over the past few years, Randy had been watching and photographing this mule deer doe as it raised fawns on his property in California.

Then, while hiking one day in December, he came across its body in the frost and snow. With nothing more than the camera on his phone, Randy snapped this photo as a reminder of the fragility of life and the “grand design of it all”. 

 

Precious Rocks by Samual Stone

A side on photograph of a jackdaw, which has four pieces of rock arranged in size order in its beak. The background is a soft focus of yellows, oranges and greens.

After noticing a pair of jackdaws nesting in a hole in the trunk of a willow tree in London’s Bushy Park, Samual started to watch what they were bringing back to the nest.

At first this was beaks full of hair taken from the park’s resident deer, but as highly adaptable and intelligent birds, jackdaws will use a whole range of building materials. Samual noticed that this included something rather unusual: clumps of dirt and rocks, which they carried in their beaks in size order.

 

Moonlight Hunter by Xingchao Zhu

A photograph of a Pallas’s cat staring directly at the camera. It is bathed in a beautiful deep blue light as the yellowy moon rises behind it. At the cat’s feet the feathered body of a bird can just be made out in the light.

High up on the Mongolian Plateau, in the light of the moon a Pallas’s cat had just caught its prey.

Xingchao had tracked a group of the cats to this spot, and braved the freezing nighttime conditions to be there just as this one had caught an unfortunate Mongolian lark shortly before dawn.

 

Centre of Attention by Georgina Steytler

An action shot of five red and yellow bees all scrambling to grapple a larger silverly bee that is just visible among the legs and bodies. In the ensuing action, the orange sand and gravel of the floor is kicked up into the air.

These bees are battling it out for a mate.

Every year, solitary female Dawon’s burrowing bees emerge from nests in the hot, rocky ground. Already waiting are patrolling males that swarm the female in a bid to mate with it. Georgina has been studying these bees for a few years, and by using a long lens she managed to capture this extraordinary moment in exquisite detail. 

 

Going with the Floe by Tamara Stubbs

A top-down photograph of broken up ice floes in water. In among the shards of ice, the heads of two seals with their eyes closed bob in the water.

Crabeater seals are the most numerous marine mammals in the world, with around seven million of them thought to live in the chilly waters that surround Antarctica.

While on a nine-month expedition to the southern continent, Tamara noticed hundreds of the seals following the boat and eventually falling asleep among the ice floes, allowing her to snap this extraordinary picture. 

 

Deadly Bite by Ian Ford

A photograph of a jaguar killing a caiman. The jaguar is staring directly at the viewer with its piercing orange eyes as it delivers a fatal bite to the back of the reptile’s head. The caiman is pinned down by one of the cat’s claws and is opening its mouth in apparent pain.

The Pantanal in Brazil supports the highest density of jaguars anywhere in the world. So there was no better place for Ian to be when a call over the radio alerted him to one prowling the banks of a river.

Crouching down in the boat, he got in the perfect position to capture the moment a jaguar delivered a skull-crushing bite to a yacare caiman.

 

As Clear as Crystal by Jason Gulley

An underwater photograph of an adult and juvenile manatee swimming over a serene seagrass meadow. The water is crystal clear with a beautiful blue tinge.

Decades of pollution put the future of the Florida manatee at risk. But after community organisations and biologists came together to clean up the Crystal River and restore its eelgrass meadows, the marine mammals have rebounded.

This playful moment between a mother and its calf, with the amusing expression and trail of bubbles, made it one of Jason’s favourites.