Science

Stunning polar bear, bird portraits earn Canadians Wildlife Photographer of the Year awards

Intimate photos that provide a rare window into the lives of polar bears, birds and insects have earned several Canadians recognition in this year’s Wildlife Photographer of the Year Awards.

Several winning photos were taken by Canadian photographers in B.C., Manitoba, Ontario

A polar bear swims away from the last of the sea ice in spring on Hudson Bay in a photograph by Martin Gregus. (Martin Gregus/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

Intimate photos that provide a rare window into the lives of polar bears, birds and insects have earned several Canadians recognition in this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year Awards.

The winners of the 2021 edition of the annual competition, developed by the Natural History Museum in London were announced Tuesday evening. This year's competition drew 50,000 entries from 95 countries.

The grand prize winner was "Creation" by French underwater photographer and biologist Laurent Ballesta. It features camouflage groupers leaving their annual mating frenzy under a full moon in a lagoon in Fakarava, French Polynesia.

French underwater photographer Laurent Ballesta won the grand prize in this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition for his photo of camouflage groupers leaving their annual mating frenzy under a full moon in a lagoon in Fakarava, French Polynesia. (Laurent Ballesta/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

Intimate moments with animals

Several Canadians won awards in different categories.

Martin Gregus of Vancouver won the Rising Star Portfolio Award, for photos of polar bears enjoying the summer in Hudson Bay, including a mother napping with a cub who is missing a leg and two adult females playing together in the shallow water.

"These bears really did share with us many intimate moments and they shared their story with us," he said. "In doing so, they allowed us to sort of share it with the world. 

Gregus and his team of two others were invited by a tourism company to scout out a new area near Churchill, Man., during the tourism lull caused by the pandemic in 2020. "It was an amazing opportunity," he recalled.

He said that while people are used to seeing polar bears in the snow or starving bears in the summer, he wanted to show how the population has adapted to this region and climate by hunting prey such as terns and marmots and eating flowers instead of just hunting seals.

"I want them to see the resilience of the polar bear … given the opportunity and given our protection of their landscape."

Two female polar bears play in shallow water, forming a heart shape. Martin Gregus won the Rising Star Portfolio award in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Awards for his series of photos of polar bears in Churchill, Man. (Martin Gregus/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

'Step outside and look'

Gil Wizen of Mississauga, Ont., received recognition for four photos.

"Spinning the cradle," captured along the Credit River near his home, won the Behaviour: Invertebrates category. It features a mother fishing spider weaving its egg sac.

Photographer Gil Wizen captured this fishing spider (Dolomedes scriptus) spinning an egg sac in Mississauga, Ont. (Gil Wizen/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

"The spider room" won the Urban Wildlife category. It features a larger-than-life portrait of a female Brazilian wandering spider, one of the world's most venomous, that he found under his bed while working as an entomologist in Ecuador.

A venomous Brazilian wandering spider guards her young under a bed in Ecuador in this photo by Gil Wizen. (Gil Wizen 2014/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

Two more of his photos were highly commended in the Behaviour: Invertebrates category.

"Beautiful bloodsucker" featured an ornamented mosquito as it fed on his knuckle.

An ornamented mosquito sucks blood from photographer Gil Wizen's knuckle. (Gil Wizen/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

"Big filling station" captured a stink bug nymph sucking the blood out of a caterpillar.

A nymph of the predatory stink bug (Euthyrhynchus floridanus) sucks a caterpillar’s hemolymph (insect blood) using its piercing mouthparts in this photo by Gil Wizen. (Gil Wizen/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

Wizen said all the photos represented several hours of work, and some of them a certain amount of hazard. He found the mother Brazilian wandering spider on a trip in 2014 after he noticed baby spiders all over the room and searched for their nest. He decided to use a wide-angle lens to capture a corner under the bed to make it feel human-sized. The resulting photo went viral online.

He said his goal is to make people stop and think and to recognize the diversity of life around them, including small and overlooked animals in places like the Toronto area where he photographed the fishing spider.

"You don't have to travel far," he said. "You just have to step outside and look."

Giving a voice to nature

Shane Kalyn of Vancouver won the Behaviour: Birds category with an intimate portrait of two courting ravens.

He took the photo in early February in 2019 at Mount Seymour, a local ski resort he visits every year at that time to watch the ravens' unique courtship behaviours. He said humans can get quite close to the birds because they're so focused on each other.

In this photo, the amorous couple was taking turns inspecting around and inside each others' beaks, something Kalyn had never seen before. He acknowledged the photo doesn't capture the full experience.

Shane Kalyn of Vancouver, B.C., won the Behaviour: Birds category with an intimate portrait of two courting ravens. (Shane Kalyn/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

"The best part … is the whole time they were clearly talking to each other in that raven language," he said. "It was really cool to see."

He said his goal with photography is to show the beauty of nature. "It's at a time where we need to start giving a voice."

Celina Chien's photo "Imprisoned" was highly commended in the Photojournalism category. It features an orangutan gripping the bars of its cage while standing upright with its head bowed at a zoo in Yunnan, China.

Chien, who was visiting the zoo on her day off while working on a conservation photography project in the region, saw the animal, a tree-dweller that almost never stands on the ground, as begging for freedom.

Celina Chien photographed an orangutan gripping the bars of its cage in a zoo in Yunnan Province, China. (Celina Chien/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

"I took the photo basically, because what else could I possibly do? It's the only thing I could think of doing where I knew that I could do something to help — not only him, but also all non-human animals in captivity," said Chien, who currently lives in the U.K. She has Canadian citizenship from her Chinese-Canadian father, but has never lived in Canada.

Nichole Vijayan of Oakville, Ont., captured a highly commended photo in the 11-14 years youth category. "Bluebird morning" shows an eastern bluebird feeding its chick at sunrise near her home. Vijayan is the sister of one of last year's winners, Hannah Vijayan, and daughter of wildlife photographer Thomas Vijayan

'Bluebird morning' by Nichole Vijayan of Oakville, Ont., was named a highly commended photo in the 11-14 years youth category. (Nichole Vijayan/Wildlife Photographer of the Year)

The entire exhibition can be viewed at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto from Nov. 13, 2021 to April 18, 2022.

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