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    Home»Top News»Hug photo between biologist and photo on Amazon River competing for the prize in the UK
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    Hug photo between biologist and photo on Amazon River competing for the prize in the UK

    Morton ObrienBy Morton ObrienDecember 2, 2021No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Hug photo between biologist and photo on Amazon River competing for the prize in the UK
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    Marco Guyoti / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    Each year, the Natural History Museum in London receives more than 50,000 images for the UK’s Best Wildlife Photographer’s Competition. The company selects only 100 finalists and holds an additional 25 photos, which will go to the polls to compete in a separate contest.

    We have brought in this text some of the remaining images. You can choose your favorite until February 2, 2022 by voting for it Link here. Winners will be announced on the 9th of the same month. It does not want to divert your votes or anything like that. But the first place on our list was made in Brazil. See below.

    “Aproso de Golfinho”, Jaime Rojo, Spain

    Picture: Jaime Rojo / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    Photographer Jaime Rojo took this photo while looking at biologist Federico Mosquera, who was posing for a pink dolphin in the Amazon River. The animal was transferred to a makeshift animal shelter in Puerto Narino, Colombia, where it will receive a tracker on its paddle.

    Direct contact calms the dolphins, so in this case the hug was well received. Marking is part of a research project to map the health of these animals and understand their migration patterns.

    Thomas Pesach, “Meerkats Bose” from Germany / South Africa

    Image: Thomas Pesach / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    Meerkats are quiet animals associated with human existence, which allowed Thomas Peshak to approach the group in South Africa. Mountains in the region.

    Zhang Jiang, China’s “monkey care”

    Image: Zhang Jiang / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    The monkeys in the picture belong to the genus Rhinoceros And are in danger of extinction. They live in temperate mountain forests, and when it comes time to rest, women and their offspring flock together for warmth and protection. This loving gesture led to a photo taken by Zhang Qiang.

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    “Paragudas”, Jung Chen Woo, Taiwan

    Image: Yung Chen Wu / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    To get this click, the photographer must swim for five days with animals in the western Pacific. In the beginning, the fish were constantly changing shape, and Sen Wu was unable to get the right angle. After a while, it looks like Barracudas accepted the photographer on board, who thought of sending a fish look into the school.

    Marco Guyotti, Italy’s “Breath of the Arctic Fox”

    Image: Marco Guyoti / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    When Marco clicked the hand, the wind was at -35 C over Spitzberg in the Svalbard Arctic archipelago. The fox was calling out to someone of the genus, and every time it howled, its wet breath froze in the room.

    Jo-Ann McArthur, Canada’s “Hope in the Burnt Garden”

    Image: Jo-Anne McArthur / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    Photographer Joe-Annie McArthur traveled to Australia in early 2020 to capture animals affected by fires in New South Wales and Victoria. In the middle of a journey, she saw this eastern gray kangaroo and its cub. Before the animal jumped, MacArthur only had time to press the camera button.

    Ashley McCartney’s “Shelter from the Rain”, USA

    Image: Ashleigh McCord / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    Initially, Ashley McCart was photographing only one of the cats in the picture. The other quickly greeted his partner at one point and left. However, as the rain thickened, the second lion came back and ambushed the first lion, protecting it from falling water.

    “Making the Egg Box” by Javier Aznar Gonzalez de Ruda of Spain

    Image: Javier Aznar González de Rueda / 2021 Best Wildlife Photographer of the Year

    This photo was also taken in the South American Amazon, but in the Dena area of ​​Ecuador. The photographer captured the moment when a spider creates a cocoon for its eggs. The beauty of the figure in the circle that looks like a full moon.

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    Morton Obrien

    "Reader. Infuriatingly humble travel enthusiast. Extreme food scholar. Writer. Communicator."

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