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All of you nature-loving Pandas are in for a treat. The Oceanographic Magazine has just announced the finalists of the Ocean Photography Awards and they look utterly magnificent. We can’t wait to show them to you, so scroll down to submerge yourself in the photographic glory of under- and above-water ecosystems. Remember to upvote your fave photos!

Now that we’ve seen the finalists, we can’t wait to hear who the winners of the competition are. Fortunately, we won’t have to wait long: the Ocean Photography Awards winners will be announced on November 19 during a virtual ceremony worthy of Poseidon himself. You can watch the award ceremony live on the Ocean Photography Awards YouTube channel starting at 7 p.m. GMT, Thursday. Which photos do you think are the best of the best, dear Readers? (We’ve got our favorites but they’re a secret!) Let us know in the comment section!

The Ocean Photography Awards team told Bored Panda that the competition is a celebration of the photographers "who capture our ocean spaces in earnest, sharing them with those who might otherwise never have an opportunity to see such places. By sharing their relationship with nature, ocean photographers provide space for their audiences to connect with the marine environment, which will hopefully mean more people will feel a drive to protect it." Read on for our full interview with the wonderful OPA team.

(h/t My Modern Met)

More info: OceanographicMagazine.com | Facebook | Instagram

#1

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Two sharks surf a wave at Red Bluff, Quobba Station, in remote Western Australia. “The huge bait ball the sharks were feeding on had moved very close to the shoreline,” says photographer Sean Scott, who was on an expedition spanning the full WA coast. “I got the long lens out and took a test shot of the waves, and the very next wave the sharks were in it. I didn’t see this happen again throughout the next two days that I was there.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Sean Scott Report

#2

Nominee: Community Choice Award

Nominee: Community Choice Award

One of the finalists vying for the Community Choice Award, Tobias Baumgaertner of Tobias Visuals, told Bored Panda more about the photo he took of the two widowed penguins gazing upon Melbourne's lights.
"The photo I took was one of those photos that you couldn't have planned if you tried. I went there to take images of the penguin colony and intended to capture a photograph which shows the pressures that human settlement/infrastructure can have on wild animal populations," he said.
"I spent 3 full nights with this particular penguin colony and was lucky enough to witness and capture this moment of love instead. With this moment unfolding in front of my eyes, I received more information about them from a Volunteer which I then disclosed in my first three Instagram posts about these two. It was a story of love and compassion and I am very happy that it has reached so many hearts around the world."
Tobias said that the biggest challenges he faced were the lighting conditions. "Strictly no lights are allowed in close proximity to this penguin colony. So all the light I had available to take this Image was residual light from the nearby city and harbor. Considering that these little Penguins move quite a lot did not make it easy to capture a sharp Image that gave this moment justice."
He continued: "Also, penguins are wildlife and they do not care about a photographer's wishes to position themselves in a particular way. Not only am I very much pro in situ photography and would never relocate my wildlife subjects to create an image, it is also strictly forbidden to touch or interfere with them and, therefore, I ask everyone who is going to visit them to show the utmost respect and keep their distance. Thus I waited for 3 full nights to capture the perfect moment between these two lovebirds."
Tobias said that he's very happy that his photo has touched so many hearts from all over the world. "This image has already reached millions of people with many different cultural backgrounds and beliefs, communicating a message in a language that everyone understands. Love and compassion for one another. What more could I really want?"

Ocean Photography Awards , Tobias Baumgaertner Report

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#3

Nominee: Community Choice Award

Nominee: Community Choice Award

A humpback whale calf ‘breakdances’ in the warm waters of Tonga. Photographer Jono Allen captured this moment on the final day of a three-week trip searching for an intimate calf encounter. “We hadn’t had any luck during the entire season, and then all of a sudden on the last day we came across this wonderful and joyful calf,” says Allen.

Ocean Photography Awards , Jono Allen Report

"The judging panel spent a lot of time carefully going through the submitted images and then discussing their thoughts together to choose this year’s winners. It was definitely a tricky process, as we received an astonishing array of beautiful imagery for consideration. Each of these judges works tirelessly to protect the ocean, using extraordinary storytelling and photography to catalyze real change. Their time, energy, and expertise are such an important and valuable part of these Awards," a representative of the Ocean Photography Awards team said.

"We’ve got some really exciting speakers for the event on Thursday, and the Awards ceremony will be broadcast from a special extended reality stage in London. Beautiful imagery will be shared and showcased throughout, with nominees joining via video call to hear the judges' final decisions. The winners will also be invited to tell us a little more about their photographs and the important stories they convey."

#4

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

A freediver explores a cave in Tonga. Despite having visited this site more than 100 times, photographer Karim Iliya had never see the light quite like it was on this particular day: “It looked like he [the subject] was looking into another world. It made me think about exploration on this planet, and how you can even go somewhere you’ve already been and see it in a new way.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Karim Iliya Report

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#5

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nadia Aly is an award-winning wildlife photographer, with a focus on underwater marine life. Her primary goal is to educate people about the diverse populations of sea creatures that exist in the ocean. She hopes her photography can raise awareness and interest in supporting efforts to conserve the ocean and its inhabitants.

Ocean Photography Awards , Nadia Aly Report

#6

Nominee: Community Choice Award

Nominee: Community Choice Award

A Steller sea lion inquisitively peers into photographer Celia Kujala’s dome port off the coast of Hornby Island, British Columbia. “Steller sea lions are listed as near-threatened on the IUCN Red List,” says Kujala. “I hope this image makes people want to protect them and their ocean home.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Celia Kujala Report

“The Ocean Photography Awards are a celebration of our beautiful blue planet, as well as a platform to highlight the many plights it is facing,” the Oceanographic Magazine writes on its website.

The judging panel is made up of some of the world’s leading ocean photographers, so you can expect them to go all-in when it comes to picking out the best. Among them are expedition leaders and award-winners who have played an integral part in the conservation of species and raising public awareness about the issues that affect oceans and their denizens.

The judges’ work was far from easy. They had to choose the 100 finalists from more than 3k gorgeous entries. And their work’s only going to get harder as the ceremony ticks closer and closer.

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#7

Nominee: Young Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Young Photographer Of The Year

A common dolphin, between two realms. “As I hung over the bow of my family’s boat, camera in hand, I picked a young common dolphin to follow through my lens when suddenly it breaks the surface of the glassy water,” says 17-year-old photographer Kyla McLay. “The dolphin’s beak is barely piercing through the water’s surface, and a wave of froth sits on its back.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Kyla McLay Report

#8

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Paddle boarders float above a reef at sunset. “This image is one of a series of images aimed at demonstrating the innate bond humans have with the ocean, whether we are physically in it or just floating on the surface,” says photographer Grant Thomas. “In creating this picture, timing was everything; I had to shoot exactly at low tide to be close enough to the reef, while simultaneously capturing the sun as it hit the horizon.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Grant Thomas Report

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#9

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

A settling wunderpuss photographed at night during a blackwater dive in Anilao, Philippines. “Ninety percent of reef life starts out in this pelagic zone,” says photographer Henley Spiers. “During the day it stays relatively deep, and safe, only coming up to the surface at night to feed. I like to think the wunderpuss was chasing the shrimp that you also see in the bottom of the frame.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Henley Spiers Report

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There are 6 award categories plus the overall winner who will share the total prize pool of over a whopping half a million pounds. Some of the categories include the Ocean Adventure Photographer of the Year, the Community Choice Award, and the Ocean Conservation Photographer of the Year.

The competition aims to make the categories as broad and as inclusive as possible so that the “bravest and boldest photographers” don’t shy away from sharing their amazing photographs with the world. The photos also don’t necessarily have to be underwater. The shots can be from up topside. On the coast. Or from out into the sea. So there’s a lot of flexibility and the sky’s the limit (or in this case, the limit’s probably the Mariana Trench).

#10

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Grant Thomas is an award-winning underwater photographer, writer, and expedition guide with a fascination for the natural world. Originally from the United Kingdom, he moved to Asia to work as a scuba-diving instructor. His work has taken him around the world, from the warm tropical waters of Indonesia to the glacier-covered landscape of the Arctic.

Ocean Photography Awards , Grant Thomas Report

#11

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Grant Thomas is an award-winning underwater photographer, writer, and expedition guide with a fascination for the natural world. Originally from the United Kingdom, he moved to Asia to work as a scuba-diving instructor. His work has taken him around the world, from the warm tropical waters of Indonesia to the glacier-covered landscape of the Arctic.

Ocean Photography Awards , Grant Thomas Report

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#12

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Orcas surf rough water in Norway. “This moment took place above the Arctic Circle,” says photographer Todd Thimios, “A combination of impossible circumstances and years in the Arctic allowed for this very brief moment to come together – in borderline dangerous weather and fading light.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Todd Thimios Report

#13

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A starving polar bear looks out to sea, waiting for the ice to return. “I was scouting the shoreline when I saw the polar bear on a distant cliff,” says photographer Martin Berg. “The summer had been unusually warm, and the pack ice was further north. Many polar bears, including this one, were stranded ashore.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Martin Berg Report

#14

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

A freediving instructor waits for their student to return from a dive below Cenote Angelita’s microbial cloud – a cloud that separates the light-filled freshwater above and the dark saline water below. “The microbial cloud is so thick that it appears to be a floor,” says photographer Jason Gulley, “and visibility inside it is almost zero. Visibility improves a little as you re-emerge into the pitch black saline water below.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Jason Gulley Report

#15

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Marlin and sea lions work a bait ball. “Each year in autumn, mackerel and sardines migrate south along the coast of the Californian Peninsula in Mexico,” says photographer Hannes Klostermann. “They are followed by an armada of predators, the most magnificent of which is the striped marlin. California sea lions, however, often compete with them for feeding opportunities.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Hannes Klostermann Report

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#16

Nominee: Community Choice Award

Nominee: Community Choice Award

Predator and prey, photographed off the coast of Jupiter, Florida. “The sun was going down and the lighting was epic,” says photographer Tanner Mansell. “Evening thunderclouds were building, but light rays were still poking through here and there. Everything came together. When bull sharks attack, they extend their jaws. It was exciting to try to get that moment on camera. This is one of my all-time favourite moments, and all-time favourite shots.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Tanner Mansell Report

#17

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Penguins march through heavy snowfall and strong winds in St Andrew’s Bay, South Georgia, Antarctica. Photographer Ben Cranke spent a total of 50 hours across five days at this location, accessed via a zodiac from a small yacht. He captured this image on the final day of his expedition.

Ocean Photography Awards , Ben Cranke Report

#18

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Grant Thomas is an award-winning underwater photographer, writer, and expedition guide with a fascination for the natural world. Originally from the United Kingdom, he moved to Asia to work as a scuba-diving instructor. His work has taken him around the world, from the warm tropical waters of Indonesia to the glacier-covered landscape of the Arctic.

Ocean Photography Awards , Grant Thomas Report

#19

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A hermit crab crawls atop a pile of plastic in a shell made from manmade waste. Photographed on the small island of Thanburudhoo in the Maldives, photographer Matt Sharp hopes his image communicates the direct impact plastic pollution is having on the natural world: “We were so shocked at the plastic waste littering the island. And then I saw this hermit crab crawling through the knee-deep plastic. It demonstrates the scale of the problem.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Matt Sharp Report

#20

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nadia Aly is an award-winning wildlife photographer, with a focus on underwater marine life. Her primary goal is to educate people about the diverse populations of sea creatures that exist in the ocean. She hopes her photography can raise awareness and interest in supporting efforts to conserve the ocean and its inhabitants.

Ocean Photography Awards , Nadia Aly Report

#21

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Henley Spiers is an award-winning photographer who has featured regularly in the international press, including The Sunday Times and Der Spiegel, as well as multiple magazine covers. In 2019, he co-authored Black is the New Blue Vol. II, showcasing blackwater diving. His latest book, the Guide to Cebu, was co-written with his wife and frequent collaborator, Jade. Sought after as a teacher and guide, Henley also leads photographic trips to see incredible underwater wildlife encounters around the globe.

Ocean Photography Awards , Henley Spiers Report

#22

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Two technical divers descend into the Blue Abyss, Mexico. This site is accessed by an hour-long underwater scooter ride and a 20-minute swim through a shallow cave system. “You pop through a hole and suddenly the floor drops out to around 70m,” says photographer SJ Bennett. The two divers pictured are at depths of approximately 15m and 30m deep.

Ocean Photography Awards Report

#23

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Henley Spiers is an award-winning photographer who has featured regularly in the international press, including The Sunday Times and Der Spiegel, as well as multiple magazine covers. In 2019, he co-authored Black is the New Blue Vol. II, showcasing blackwater diving. His latest book, the Guide to Cebu, was co-written with his wife and frequent collaborator, Jade. Sought after as a teacher and guide, Henley also leads photographic trips to see incredible underwater wildlife encounters around the globe.


Ocean Photography Awards , Henley Spiers Report

#24

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

A remora shifts position on a humpback whale. Photographer Craig Parry was hoping to capture a close-up portrait of the whale’s eye when a suckerfish decided to move, providing him with a rare opportunity for a dynamic little-and-large behavioural shot. He has been visiting Vava’u, Tonga, for six years, spending more than 400 hours in the water in search of the perfect eye contact shot.

Ocean Photography Awards , Craig Parry Report

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SocksNeverMatch
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This is an incredible personal moment Craig was able to share with the whale and suckerfish.

#25

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

A surfer at the remote Shipstern Bluff in Tasmania. “Gigantic swells have battered the towering cliffs at Shipstern for millennia,” says photographer Lance Morgan. “The fractured rock walls have slowly succumbed to the wind and waves, and piece by piece, created one of the most dangerous waves in the world. This part of the world is raw, rugged and cold, and help is a long way away.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Lance Morgan Report

#26

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Shane Gross is a Canadian marine conservation photojournalist and Emerging League member of the International League of Conservation Photographers. He is currently based in The Bahamas working to conserve queen conch, Nassau grouper, seagrass and mangrove habitats, among others. Shane’s work has been recognised by the Wildlife Photographer of the Year, Underwater Photographer of the Year, Nature Photographer of the Year and many others. He is widely published around the world and his first book, Bahamas Underwater, is out soon.

Ocean Photography Awards , Shane Gross Report

#27

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Florian is an award-winning wildlife photographer who works in the polar regions. He started his photographic career in the French Navy as a photo reporter. His passion for nature and later the High Arctic led him to pursue personal projects and his dreams of using his love for nature to document the polar regions. By using drones, Florian aspires to bring a new perspective to life in these remote places. 

Ocean Photography Awards , Florian Ledoux Report

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mrkette avatar
Mary Rose Kent
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

At first I thought it was leaves blown onto the snow, and then as I began to look for the source of said leaves, I realized what I was seeing.

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#28

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Survivor. A blue shark clearly displays two hooks protruding from its mouth, two lucky escapes. Photographed off the coast of Rhode Island, photographer Ron Watkins says, “I’d dived with blue sharks off the coast of Southern California in similar conditions, but none ever had hooks like this shark”.

Ocean Photography Awards , Ron Watkins Report

#29

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Swimmer and environmental activist Lewis Pugh swimming off Antarctica. “We were deep into the Antarctic Peninsula for Lewis’s long distance swim,” says Olle Nordell, expedition photographer for the Lewis Pugh Foundation. “After scouting the bay for a good spot, I positioned myself in a zodiac. My window was small. As Lewis passed me, I framed him with the blue fringe of the glacier.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Olle Nordell Report

#30

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

A silky shark in Cuba’s Gardens of the Queen marine reserve. “I was trying to capture the crazy action of diving with silky sharks in this area,” says photographer Ron Watkins. “I set my shutter speed to 1/10th of a second and aperture to F/16 and spun the camera as the shark quickly approached to imply motion in the photograph.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Ron Watkins Report

#31

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Western toad tadpoles photographed off Vancouver Island, British Columbia. ”I had this particular image, with the back ambient lighting, in mind for several years,” says photographer Maxwell Hohn, who captured the image while on expedition as part of a four year project on the species. “This particular mid-morning proved to be perfect.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Maxwell Hohn Report

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#32

Nominee: Community Choice Award

Nominee: Community Choice Award

A grey whale mother and calf are photographed in shallow waters on the Pacific coastline of Baja California Sur. “I didn’t want to bother the whales,” says photographer Jacopo Brunetti, who captured this image while out freediving, “so I just did one pass and took a single picture.” A number of other whale species, including humpbacks, migrate through Baja’s waters, often staying close to the shoreline.

Ocean Photography Awards , Jacopo Brunetti Report

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#33

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A diver’s regulator holder cuts into the flesh of an oceanic whitetip, damaging its gills. Photographed in the Red Sea, Egypt, the image is a “visual representation of what we are doing to the ocean”, says photographer Joe Daniels. This shark was caught several weeks after this image was taken and the plastic was removed.

Ocean Photography Awards , Joe Daniels Report

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#34

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A mangrove sapling stands tall as its ecosystem is pulled down around it. It was buried the next day. “The irony of this shot,” says photographer Matt Potenski, “is that I was taking a journalist to this area to see some pristine mangroves and how juvenile lemon sharks use the area as a refuge.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Matt Potenski Report

#35

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

A cave diver enters Little River Spring in Mexico during a flood. “During most floods there is a brief period, typically a few days, when the water level in the river and aquifer are nearly equal and the normally roaring flow of water in the cave slows to a trickle,” says photographer Jason Gulley. “As spring flow diminishes, rolling clouds of orange river water begin creeping slowly into the cave before the spring completely reverses flow and floodwaters pour into the aquifer.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Jason Gulley Report

#36

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Staghorn corals exposed at low tide, the Milky Way visible in the distance. It took photographer Sirachai Arunrugstichai a year to capture the image from the time he first visualised it: “I stumbled upon this pristine intertidal reef while working on a story. I wanted to capture the exposed corals during spring tide with the Milky Way in the same frame. I waited for 10 months for the Milky Way and the corals to fit in the same frame.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Sirachai Arunrugstichai Report

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iajdini avatar
Bardhi's Dad
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It was worth spending 10 months to catch this beautiful view, I guess. It's magnificent!

#37

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

A polar bear scans the ocean for prey from the vantage point of an iceberg. “This polar bear was walking along the top of a large iceberg in front of the Austfonna ice cap, Svalbard,” says photographer Florian Ledoux. “It was hunting – looking for seals in the water.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Florian Ledoux Report

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#38

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nadia Aly is an award-winning wildlife photographer, with a focus on underwater marine life. Her primary goal is to educate people about the diverse populations of sea creatures that exist in the ocean. She hopes her photography can raise awareness and interest in supporting efforts to conserve the ocean and its inhabitants.

Ocean Photography Awards , Nadia Aly Report

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#39

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

An aggregation of mobula rays in clear waters off Baja California Sur, Mexico. “Mobula rays are incredibly sensitive to movement and sound,” says photographer Nadia Aly, “so I took this photo while freediving. We found this aggregation at a discreet location in mid-morning and stayed with it for four hours. The sun was shining and the ocean was gifting!”

Ocean Photography Awards , Nadia Aly Report

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#40

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A ghost net completely covers Kimud Shoal, Cebu, Philippines. “We visited this area in the hope of seeing hammerhead sharks,” says photographer Henley Spiers. “That hope was quickly dashed as we came across a scene that was simply horrific. We swam for 60 minutes without coming to the end of the ghost net.” Dive operators from Malapascua removed the net shortly after this photograph was taken.

Ocean Photography Awards , Henley Spiers Report

#41

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A polar bear surveys the icy waters north of Svalbard. “In previous work I have shown, from above, how a polar bear can use sea ice to live,” says photographer Florian Ledoux. “This image shows how a polar bear can use an iceberg to hunt. There were several seals in the area, and the bear was actively looking at the water, waiting to make its move.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Florian Ledoux Report

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#42

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Anemone fish seemingly gaze up at the horrors of a ghost fishing net that has covered their entire reef. “In this image, you see the inhabitants of the reef looking at this human destruction which would quite quickly stifle and destroy their entre existence,” says photographer Henley Spiers. A fleet of dive operators removed the net shortly after this image was taken.

Ocean Photography Awards , Henley Spiers Report

#43

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

A pair of small pantropical spotted dolphins ride the pressure wave created by a pygmy blue whale, a subspecies of the largest animal to have ever lived on our planet. “This image gives a powerful perspective of all creatures great and small,” says photographer Scott Wilson, “and illustrates the shared experience and social bonds between them.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Scott Wilson Report

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#44

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Striped marlins gather in large numbers to feed. “In autumn, striped marlins can often be seen in large numbers in the area around Magdalena Bay, Mexico, where they feed on sardine and mackerel,” says photographer Hannes Klostermann. “I swam with this particular bait ball for more than two hours, with marlins and sea lions hunting right in front of me.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Hannes Klostermann Report

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#45

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

A settling wunderpuss photographed at night during a blackwater dive in Anilao, Philippines. “Ninety percent of reef life starts out in this pelagic zone,” says photographer Henley Spiers. “During the day it stays relatively deep, and safe, only coming up to the surface at night to feed. I like to think the wunderpuss was chasing the shrimp that you also see in the bottom of the frame.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Henley Spiers Report

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Becca Gizmo the Squirrel
Community Member
3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Is this the same pic as before, just not as close? I can see the shrimp now, couldn't in other pic.

#46

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

A freediver swims below a breaking wave off Rurutu Island, Autrales, French Polynesia. “We had actually spent nine hours looking for humpback whales and decided to have a quick look at the breaking waves,” says photographer Fred Buyle. “I try to be instinctive in the way I shoot, taking 90% of my images without planning them.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Fred Buyle Report

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#47

Nominee: Young Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Young Photographer Of The Year

The silky tentacles of a brightly coloured Magnificent Anemone sway in surging water, exposing a Maldivian anemone fish, an endemic species only found in the atolls of the Maldives. “This photo was taken in time with the surge of waves breaking overhead,” says photographer Cruz Erdmann, “just as the tentacles of the anemone revealed the full body of the anemone fish.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Cruz Erdmann Report

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#48

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Henley Spiers is an award-winning photographer who has featured regularly in the international press, including The Sunday Times and Der Spiegel, as well as multiple magazine covers. In 2019, he co-authored Black is the New Blue Vol. II, showcasing blackwater diving. His latest book, the Guide to Cebu, was co-written with his wife and frequent collaborator, Jade. Sought after as a teacher and guide, Henley also leads photographic trips to see incredible underwater wildlife encounters around the globe.

Ocean Photography Awards , Henley Spiers Report

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#49

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A shark is tangled in the reeled gillnet of an illegal fishing boat caught operating within Liberia’s Exclusive Economic Zone. Photographer Melissa Romao boarded the boat as part of a Sea Shepherd team working with the Liberian government and coastguard. She was tasked with capturing photographic evidence of the ship’s illegal activity.

Ocean Photography Awards , Melissa Romao Report

#50

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A beached sperm whale on the ‘Razende Bol’ sandbank, southwest of Texel Island, Netherlands, a common beaching spot for numerous whale species in the area. “I try to visit and photograph every stranded whale in the Netherlands,” says photographer Jeroen Hoekendijk. “This location is very inaccessible. I had only visited it once before, when a humpback whale got stranded on the same sandbank only six days before.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Jeroen Hoekendijk Report

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#51

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Three spinetail devil rays engage in sexual courtship in Honda Bay. The species is typically shy and elusive, making this capture particularly special. “It is an image I could never have dreamed of capturing at such close quarters, because this behaviour has been so rarely observed or photographed,” says photographer Duncan Murrell.

Ocean Photography Awards , DuncanMurrell Report

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#52

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Adventure Photographer Of The Year

Waves crash on the shore at the aptly named Diamond Beach, Iceland, creating an image full of texture and vibrant hues. “The challenge,” says photographer Eric Wittkopf, “was running towards the shore break, using a long exposure of one-second, and then getting back to safety before the swell hit me.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Eric Wittkopf Report

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#53

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nadia Aly is an award-winning wildlife photographer, with a focus on underwater marine life. Her primary goal is to educate people about the diverse populations of sea creatures that exist in the ocean. She hopes her photography can raise awareness and interest in supporting efforts to conserve the ocean and its inhabitants.

Ocean Photography Awards , Nadia Aly Report

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#54

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Florian is an award-winning wildlife photographer who works in the polar regions. He started his photographic career in the French Navy as a photo reporter. His passion for nature and later the High Arctic led him to pursue personal projects and his dreams of using his love for nature to document the polar regions. By using drones, Florian aspires to bring a new perspective to life in these remote places. 

Ocean Photography Awards , Florian Ledoux Report

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#55

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Florian is an award-winning wildlife photographer who works in the polar regions. He started his photographic career in the French Navy as a photo reporter. His passion for nature and later the High Arctic led him to pursue personal projects and his dreams of using his love for nature to document the polar regions. By using drones, Florian aspires to bring a new perspective to life in these remote places. 

Ocean Photography Awards , Florian Ledoux Report

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#56

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

A plastic bottle lies amongst the nests of the world’s largest colony of imperial cormorants, 100km south of Puerto Madryn, Argentina. “I was in this part of the world for research reasons,” says photographer Andrea Benvenuti. “I dreamt about this shot for days, but only had a few minutes to take it. The image was taken during a drone flight to create 3D models of the colony, to study its morphology.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Andrea Benvenuti Report

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#57

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Walruses huddle on a small patch of land, northeast of Svalbard. With the continued loss of stable sea ice due to climate change, walrus populations are at risk. The species feeds in shallow water, where sea ice plays a critical role in sustaining a healthy food web. The species is listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List.

Ocean Photography Awards , Florian Ledoux Report

#58

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Crabeater seals rest on slabs of sea ice in Antarctic waters at dawn. “The night before this image was taken we were making slow progress through the sea ice and decided to stop,” says photographer Florian Ledoux. “We saw the seals feeding in an open area at the edge of the broken ice. I knew I would have the opportunity to get an image of the seals resting after they had eaten.”

Ocean Photography Awards , Florian Ledoux Report

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#59

Nominee: Young Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Young Photographer Of The Year

A juvenile black skimmer hunts for prey at the water’s surface. “I had waited many hours on a dock for a black skimmer to get close enough for a decent photo,” says photographer Ben Cammarata. “When this bird came into view, I snapped a few photos at a slow shutter speed in order to show their speed and elegance while hunting.”

Ocean Photography Awards Report

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#60

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Nominee: Collective Portfolio Award

Shane Gross is a Canadian marine conservation photojournalist and Emerging League member of the International League of Conservation Photographers. He is currently based in The Bahamas working to conserve queen conch, Nassau grouper, seagrass and mangrove habitats, among others. Shane’s work has been recognised by the Wildlife Photographer of the Year, Underwater Photographer of the Year, Nature Photographer of the Year and many others. He is widely published around the world and his first book, Bahamas Underwater, is out soon.

Ocean Photography Awards , Shane Gross Report

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#61

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Conservation Photographer Of The Year

Fisherman haul in a purse seine net full of tuna in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. “We were between recreational dives and saw the fisherman hauling in the day’s catch,” says photographer Shane Gross. “I asked permission from our boat captain to get in the water. He asked the fisherman and we got the ok.” Gross eventually had to exit the water as the visibility disappeared due to the volume of blood and fish oil in the water.

Ocean Photography Awards , Shane Gross Report

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#62

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

A researcher operates a 360-degree camera and sound recording system as waves and fish move around him, photographed off Réunion Island in the Indian Ocean. The equipment was being tested for a cetacean communications research programme that hopes to decode the language of sonar and clicks.

Ocean Photography Awards , Fred Buyle Report

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#63

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

Nominee: Exploration Photographer Of The Year

A diver poses beneath the ice of Lake Baikal, the coldest lake in the world. Photographer Alfred Minnaar was in Siberia, Russia to photograph members of a recreational dive club who hadn’t missed a Saturday dive for 20 years. The average temperature of the lake was 1 degrees Celsius, with topside temperatures ranging from -5 degrees Celsius to -20 degrees Celsius.

Ocean Photography Awards , Alfred Minnaar Report

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