Check Out These Winning Pics of Plants, Fungi, Whales, and Dinosaurs

The winning image shows an invasive orange pore fungus (Favolaschia calocera).

The overall winning image shows an invasive orange pore fungus (Favolaschia calocera).
Image: Cornelia Sattler

The BMC Ecology and Evolution photo competition has come to an end, and the winners and runners-up cover a diverse sweep of the animal and fungal kingdoms.

From ongoing conservation efforts to investigations of life long extinct, these images show how humans interrogate and try to protect the world around them. Enjoy this short list of this year’s winning images.

Deploying an ROV at Coral Sea Marine Park.

Deploying an ROV at Coral Sea Marine Park.
Image: Victor Huertas

This shot was snapped by Victor Huertas, a postdoc at James Cook University’s Hoey Reef Ecology Lab. It won the ‘Research in Action’ category, and depicts a team dropping a remotely operated vehicle near the Diamond Reef. The image artfully splits the image into two sections: the surface, with the backdrop of blue sky, and the shallow sea below.

A beached whale getting a necropsy.

A beached whale in Scotland getting a necropsy.
Photo: Submitted by Professor Paul Thompson, photo captured by James Bunyan from Tracks Ecology.

The runner-up for the ‘Research in Action’ category also explores the line between sea and surface, albeit in a more macabre way. The shot (obviously) shows a stranded humpback whale, which has died and is receiving a necropsy from researchers. The team concluded that the whale was drowned following entanglement.

Bees and their keepers at the Chimpanzee Conservation Center in Guinea.

Bees and their keepers at the Chimpanzee Conservation Center in Guinea.
Photo: Robert García-Roa

The caption may have confused you, but indeed, these are bees that are part of a beekeeping project at the Chimpanzee Conservation Center in Guinea. Tradition honey harvesting in the region can cause deforestation, and a portion of the profits from the honey of these sustainably kept bees is dedicated to chimpanzee conservation.

A new-born blacktip reef shark being released in French Polynesia.

A new-born blacktip reef shark being released in French Polynesia.
Image: Victor Huertas

The runner-up in the ‘Protecting the Planet’ category is this shot of a researcher releasing a newborn shark. The shark has been tagged and its biometric data taken down. As seas warm, researchers are concerned about how the young sharks will be affected; tagging them allows ecologists to track the sharks as they grow throughout their lives.

The fruiting body of a zombie-ant fungus, seen in the New York Botanical Garden.

The fruiting body of a zombie-ant fungus, seen in the New York Botanical Garden.
Image: João Araújo

João Araújo is a mycologist at the New York Botanical Garden, where the macabre scene above unfolded. This image—the winner of the ‘Plants and Fungi’ category—shows an ant that has been harnessed by the zombie-ant fungus, which then is able to control the body of its host. Damn nature, you scary.

A spider covered in a parasitic fungus.

A spider covered in a parasitic fungus.
Image: Roberto García-Roa

The runner-up in the fungal category is this similarly gnarly shot of a spider that has been harnessed by a fungus. “While it is not uncommon to encounter insects parasitised by ‘zombie’ fungi in the wild, it is a rarity to witness large spiders succumbing to these fungal conquerors,” said photographer Roberto García-Roa. The fungi sprouts like coral from the spider’s back and legs, making it appear hairy—while the spider isn’t really, its situation clearly is.

An image depicting an embryonic hadrosauroid, about 70 million years ago.

An image depicting an embryonic hadrosauroid, about 70 million years ago.
Image: Submitted by Jordan Mallon. Restoration by Wenyu Ren.

The winner of the ‘Paleoecology’ category is a digital image reconstructing a hadrosaur developing within its egg. “The relatively small size of the eggs, and the unspecialized nature of the dinosaur embryos inside, suggest that the earliest hadrosaurs laid small eggs and hatched altricial young,” said Jordan Mallon, a paleontologist at the Canadian Museum of Nature, in a BMC release describing the winning images. “More derived hadrosaurs eventually laid eggs nearly four times larger by volume and hatched correspondingly larger young.”

A microscopic image of a dinosaur's blood vessel.

A microscopic image of a dinosaur’s blood vessel.
Image: Dr Jasmina Wiemann

The runner-up image in the ‘Paleoecology’ category is a microscopic shot of an extracted diplodocid dinosaur blood vessel. The remnants of these cells are about 150 million years old. “Once considered paradoxical, the preservation of fragile soft tissues is now known to be the result of the chemical transformation of original proteins, lipids, and sugars occurring during fossilization – allowing such fragile evidence of past life to survive over millions of years!,” said Jasmina Wiemann, a molecular paleobiologist at Chicago’s Field Museum, and who submitted the image.

F. calocera in the Australian rainforest.

F. calocera in the Australian rainforest.
Image: Cornelia Sattler

The overall winning image in the competition was this shot of an invasive orange pore fungus in the Australian rainforest. The fruiting bodies of the fungus are springing from deadwood. Their impacts on the Australian ecosystems they spread to is not yet entirely clear.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
This Private Moon Lander Is Kicking Off a Commercial Lunar Race thumbnail

This Private Moon Lander Is Kicking Off a Commercial Lunar Race

A boxy, 7.5-foot-tall spacecraft is making its final approach to the moon, where it will make history—if it touches down safely. It’s poised to be the first commercial lander to set its robotic feet there, with competitors sure to follow.The Tokyo-based company Ispace lofted its M1 lander on December 11, 2022. After tracing a roundabout, energy-efficient
Read More

Facebook is coming back online after hours-long outage

Facebook services are slowly coming back online after one of the biggest outages in recent memory. Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger’s apps appear to be working again, though some of the websites are loading more slowly than usual.  As of 6:05pm ET Monday, the "Facebook for Business Status" page was still showing "major disruptions," to…
Read More
Three ways to upgrade Windows 11 for free, with link to upgrade immediately!!! thumbnail

Three ways to upgrade Windows 11 for free, with link to upgrade immediately!!!

目前微軟的 Windows 10 已經開始免費提供升級到 Windows 11 的服務,只不過該服務當下主要面向於搭載 Windows 10 的新裝置,其餘符合條件的裝置會在後續陸續提供升級資源。Windows 11 系統對於硬件的要求頗高,所以導致了運行 Windows 10 系統的裝置不一定可以升級為 Windows 11。官方給出的升級條件是裝置需要搭載 Intel 第八代 Coffee Lake 或 AMD Zen 2 處理器及以上,支援 TPM 2.0,至少配備 4GB RAM+64GB ROM。官方給出的條件較為苛刻,導致數百萬台電腦無法正式升級到 Windows 11。有困難就有方法去克服,網上肯定會有第三方的其他升級方式。微軟的 Windows 11 系統採用逐步推出的形式來讓裝置進行升級,這意味著免費升級服務不會提供給所有現有符合條件的電腦。微軟的說法為,現有符合審升級條件的裝置應該會在 2022年中期前獲得 Windows 11 的升級。目前升級Windows 11系統主要有三種方式。第一種方法為 Windows 11 安裝助手,該方式是最佳最方便的升級方式,只需下載安裝助手,軟件會進行硬件檢測,當裝置符合要求便會選擇合適的升級的版本和語種開始下載和進入安裝程式。下載網址:https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=2171764第二種方法為創建 Windows 11 安裝媒體。先下載媒體創建工具,然後通過工具來製作可引導的 USB 或 DVD,最後創建本地安裝媒介便可多次使用進行升級無需再次進行下載過程。下載網址:https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=2156295第三種方法為下載 Windows 11 映像(ISO)檔。該方式較為複雜,需要創建可引導安裝媒體(USB、DVD)或創建虛擬機(.ISO 文件),用來安裝 Windows…
Read More
The Samsung Galaxy A52s 5G presents a rounded A story thumbnail

The Samsung Galaxy A52s 5G presents a rounded A story

08.10.2021 17:02 | Mobile Saopštenje za javnostKompanija Samsung Electronics je nedavno predstavila najnoviji Samsung Galaxy A52s 5G telefon. Reč je o modelu koji zapravo predstavlja nadogradnju Galaxy A52 telefona, poznatom po rekordnoj prodaji i brojnim pozitivnim reakcijama. Sa novom verzijom ovog modela dolaze i značajna unapređenja ključnih karakteristika – podrška za 5G mrežu, veća memorija,…
Read More
Samsung Galaxy S22 thumbnail

Samsung Galaxy S22

Ostatnie smartfony Samsunga z linii Galaxy S okazały się być rozczarowujące pod względem sprzedaży. Choć obiektywnie to jedne z najlepszych urządzeń z Androidem, to jednak nie można oprzeć się wrażeniu, że postęp względem poprzedników jest raczej znikomy. Nic więc dziwnego, że właściciele poprzednich "Galaktyk" kręcą nosem, a fani innych modeli pozostają przy swoich wyborach. Szkoda…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share