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BBC Climate & Science
At first glance, the pottery is, it seems, goes to the broom.
But this hard -working insect does not fly back to shake the witch’s boiler or play a quidic. It carries a caterpillar – prey to feed her young.
It was captured by the Bidyut Kalita macro photographer and was one of the records or “highly appreciated” this year in the wildlife.
Images —The distiller will be announced on October 14, Then the exhibition at the Natural Sciences Museumdemonstrating 100 great photos from all over the world.
Scroll down to explore other highly appreciated works from the competition.
Name: No place as home
Photographer: Emmanuel Tardi (France)
Location: El Tank, San Carlos, Alajuela, Costa Rica
Mr -n tardy captured a solid three -step, clutching to the barbed wire after crossing the road.
As their habitat becomes fragmented from the -loss of trees, the sloths are forced to make more ground transitions to get to the next tree, leaving them vulnerable.
Name: The travel of the ice edge
Photographer: Bertie Gregory (UK)
Location: Ekström Ice Sheelf, Atka Bay, Antarctica
Mr. Gregory seized a group of young chicks of the Emperor Penguins who made his way on the outskirts of the ice shelf.
After two months, watching the colony, he saw most chicks using natural ice ramps to safely go down to the sea – but this group missed a simpler route down.
The emperor of the penguins who remained on himself should eventually make a jump into the icy ocean for the first feeding attempt.
Scientists believe that a decrease in marine ice can force penguins to multiply on ice shelves, making jumping as it is more common.
Name: A family portrait
Photographer: Uddin Pole (Bangladesh/UK)
Location: Slindon Wood, Western Sussex, England, UK
Mr. Uddin discovered a group of mucus -forms located on the dead log in the forest. He described the stage as “a bizarre family portrait”, complete with a tiny yellow insect egg.
Slip-tiller consists of mobile, one-class, amoeba-like organizations that live independently but can combine to function as the only formation to find food and reproduction.
Name: The Call of the Call
Photographer: Jamie Smart (UK)
Location: Park Bradheyt, Letershire, UK
Red deer with deer during the autumn track in Bradheyt Park, which captured Miss Smart from a safe distance.
She avoided the long grass, stretched up to look clear.
Organists, which are now fully hardened and velvet, grow growing every spring, becoming more impressive every year when new points called Tines develop.
Name: Inside the pack
Photographer: AMIT Eshel (Israel)
Location: Island Elesemer, Nunavut, Canada
At the eye level with the inquisitive Arctic wolf package at −35 C, Mr. Eshel fulfilled his dream to photograph these elusive creatures.
The wolves came so close that it smells breath.
Arctic wolves found only in the northern and northern Greenland of Canada, interesting people from the minimum impact.
Name: The essence of Kamchatka
Photographer: Kesha vicram (India)
Location: Kurile -Leik, Kamchatka edge, Russia
After the days of patience, Mr. Vikram captured the brown bear, walking along the shores of Kurile -Leik, with Volcano Ilinsky passed through the cloud.
While the bears are usually alone, this one headed to enjoy others on salmon overwhelming, which crossed the Pacific Ocean to its origin to spawning.
Name: A fairy tale about two coyotes
Photographer: Purham Purahmad (USA)
Location: Park Bernal Heights, San Francisco, California, USA
Catching the morning light, Mr. Purahmad designed the amber eye of the male coyot in the curve of the woman.
He followed this pair through the rocky slope for hours and made a shot when the male stopped to throw the female.
The coyotes are very custom and begin to restore themselves in San Francisco, where they once disappeared.
Name: Pink
Photographer: Lean Kuster (Switzerland)
Location: Pont de gow, mosquito, france
Lean Kuster shows a larger flamingo in the act of scratching one of his unmistakable long legs.
During the vacation, it was fascinated by their workpiece behavior when they moved exquisite on shallow, salty wetlands, feeding filters for molluscs and crustaceans.
Flamingo use their languages to pump water through their unequivocally adapted accounts, which are laid out by the rows of thin, plates.
The pink color of the larger flamingo comes from a diet high in carotenoids – pigments that are in algae and invertebrates such as shrimp.
Name: Deadly lessons
Photographer: Marina Cano (Spain)
Location: Samburo National Park, Samburu, Kenya
In Kenya Kenya, Samburo National Park, Marina Canno witnessed young cheetahs who practice the hunting hunting and the mother watched nearby.
Cubs cheetahs remain hidden for two months and only join hunting about a year to learn how to pursue and kill skills.
Name: Toxic advice
Photographer: Lakshita Karunarna (Sri -Lanka)
Location: Ampra, Eastern Province, Sri -Lanka
In Sri -Lanka, Lakshita Karunarno recorded a lonely Asian elephant, which is drove at the waste disposal.
Over the past three years, it has recorded the impact of elephants in the region.
At the landfill in Ampar, it was created more than a decade ago near the safety zone of wildlife, where about 300 elephants live. Along with the trimming of food, they consume the plastic that kills them slowly, officials say.
Name: Call for waking up
Photographer: Gabriella Comi (Italy)
Location: SERENGETI National Park, Tanzania
Gabriela Komi and her guide David noticed a cobra moving up to two lions drove in the Serengeti National Park in the scorching midday sun.
The senior lion lifted his head to face the threat of slipping.
Name: Jelly taste summer
Photographer: Ralph Pace (USA)
Location: Monterey -Bey, Montere, California, USA
In the midst of the mass – either “taste” – from the Pacific Marine Nettle, Mr. Pace covered any skin, not covered with his hydroelectric jelly to protect himself from bites.
Stop tentacles can provide a painful jal, who, according to Mr. Pace, feels more like a bees than a nettle.
Name: Nature returns its space
Photographer: Sitamra Raul (India)
Location: Gang, Maharashtra, India
In complete darkness, Mr. Raul stood against the background of fruit bats that came out of historical destruction, using focus and outburst to fix the moment. Batting mice made their way over their heads, and “cocktach” on him and his cameras.
In South Asia, the fruits of the Old World often sort out abandoned buildings.
Name: A fragile river of life
Photographer: Isaac Sabo (USA)
Location: Colombia, Florida, USA
Having joined Crystalov a clean Florida River, Mr. Sabo photographed the female bitter together with several males during the mating period. According to Mr. Sabo, the turtle that flows on the stage was “glazing on the cake”.
This river is one of the more than 1000 waterways that feed on freshwater sources known for its exceptional clarity. The protection of aquifers that support these springs is important not only for iconic wild animals, such as the monate, but also for the delivery of drinking water to almost half the Florida population.
Name: Clouds of gold
Photographer: Yassen Todorov (USA)
Location: Bay San Francisco, California, USA
Mr. Todorov captured the clouds that were displayed in huge salted water bodies during a flight to San Francisco.
The ponds covering almost 5,000 hectares reflect the constantly changing colors -the look that he says never tires.
The process of collecting salt in the San -Francisco Gulf was industrialized in the 1800s, but now the salted water reservoirs are part of the main restoration project, which returns tidal swamps and wildlife.