The winners of the latest Close Up Photographer of the Year competition have been announced. This year's winner was an amazingly-timed image of a Eurasian nuthatch flying overhead through a forest – an image taken by Hungarian photographer Csaba Daróczi while hidden inside a hollowed-out tree stump.
"The photographer clearly had an image in his mind's eye and went that extra mile to make sure anyone looking at the picture would share the wonder he felt when he encountered the scene" Tracy Calder, co-founder of of the competition, told BBC Science Focus. "Placing the camera inside the tree trunk really makes us feel as though we are immersed in nature".
This is the fifth year of the competition, and it attracted 12,000 entries from all around the world. Categories include Fungi & Slime Moulds, Micro (for images created using a microscope) and Young Close-up Photographer of the Year (for entrants aged 17 or under).
Here are all of the winners and some of our other favourites from this year's competition.
Winner – Underwater category – Dreamtime
Winner – Fungi category – The ice crown
Winner – Butterfly category – The wedding guest
Micro category finalist – Butterfly Eggs
Winner – Young photographer category – Small Wanders
Animals category finalist – Kiss of death
Winner – Intimate landscape category – Undertow
Winner – Insects category – Wood Ants Firing Acid Secretion
James Cutmore is the picture editor of BBC Science Focus Magazine. He has worked on the magazine and website for over a decade, telling compelling science stories through the use of striking imagery. He holds a degree in Fine Art, and has been nominated for the British Society of Magazine Editors Talent Awards, being highly commended in 2020. His main areas of interest include photography that highlights positive technology and the natural world. For many years he was a judge for the Wellcome Trust's image competition, as well as judging for the Royal Photographic Society.
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