With a record 76,000 votes, these are the winner and highly commanded images chosen by wildlife photography and nature fans ...
The Natural History Museum in London revealed that the winning photograph of this year's wildlife contest depicted an ...
‘No Access’, British photographer Ian Wood’s perfectly timed capture of an ambling Eurasian badger glancing up at some rather ...
A record 76,000 votes were cast to decide this year’s People’s Choice Award winner. Wildlife Photographer of the Year is ...
It struck a chord with the public, who crowned the image of this black-and-white art connoisseur as the People’s Choice winner for Wildlife Photographer of the Year 60.
The Natural History Museum in London announced the winner and four 'Highly Commended' photos for the 2024 Wildlife ...
Now, after a few months of voting, the winner of the People's Choice Award has been announced along with four "Highly ...
An "ambling Eurasian badger," lava coming from a Chilean volcano, an owl flying out of a barn, a stoat blending into the snow ...
The shot - taken by British photographer Ian Wood - came in first for the people's choice award this year, beating 25 ...
Wildlife Photographer of the Year was founded by BBC Wildlife Magazine in 1965, then called Animals. The Natural History Museum came on board in 1984 to create the competition as it is known today ...
That's the badger: this tongue-in-cheek juxtaposition of a real badger facing off against a gun-toting adversary polled the ...
From ambling badgers to stoats in snow, discover the winner and runners-up of this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year ...