The winners for this year's BMC Ecology and Evolution image competition have just been announced, highlighting the incredible interactions between people and wildlife across the planet.
The competition was created to give ecologists and evolutionary biologists the opportunity to celebrate their research and is now in its third year.
The overall winner of this year's competition is an image of an orange pore fungus, an invasive species that has displaced other fungi throughout the Australian rainforest. The bright orange fruiting bodies typically grow on dead wood and can spread through spores.
The impact of this spread is yet to become clear, but scientists are concerned about the possible dangers to the ecology of Australia.
Other winners include reef sharks, ants paralysed by fungus, and embryonic dinosaurs.
Plants and fungi category runner-up – Defeated by a parasitic fungus
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.