Maddie MolloyClimate and Science Reporter

A brown hyena standing next to the ruins of an abandoned diamond mining settlement has earned wildlife photographer Wim van den Heever the title of Wildlife Photographer of the Year.
He set up his camera trap after spotting fresh hyena tracks in the ghost town of Kolmanskop, Namibia. According to him, it took him ten years to get vaccinated.
The rarest of all hyena species, the brown hyena is primarily nocturnal and tends to be solitary. For years, Mr van den Heever searched the deserted city, finding only traces of the elusive animal.
“I knew they were there, but it was just impossible to actually photograph them,” he says, after thinking about it.
He was awarded the London Natural History Museum Prize.
The annual exhibition dedicated to the competition will open at the Natural History Museum on October 17.
Keep scrolling to view the full collection of award-winning images.

Category: Junior Grand Prize and winner aged 15 to 17 years.
Heading: After destruction
Photographer: Andrea Dominici, Italy
Location: Mount Lepini, Lazio, Italy
While exploring the Lepini Mountains in central Italy, where old beeches once grew, Andrea noticed a beetle resting on a cut log next to abandoned machinery.
“This photograph shows the history and problem that many animal species face: habitat loss,” he says. “In this case, it’s a beetle that’s losing the tree and the wood it needs to lay eggs.”
Category winners

Category: Animals in the environment
Heading: Like an eel out of water
Photographer: Shane Gross, Canada
Location: D'Arros Island, Amirante, Seychelles
After several weeks of patience, last year's winnerShane Gross, caught peppered moray eels scavenging at low tide.
He endured the sun, heat and flies for hours, waiting for the place where the dead fish washed up. Eventually three eels appeared.

Category: Category “10 years and younger”
Heading: Weaver's Lair
Photographer: Jamie Smart, UK
Location: Mid Wales, UK
On a cold September morning, Jamie Smart discovered a weaving spider curled up in its silken shelter.
“It's also something special for me because I can show something that people are usually afraid of,” she says.

Category: Wetlands: the big picture
Heading: Disappearing Pond
Photographer: Sebastian Fröhlich, Germany
Location: Platzertal, Tyrol, Austria
Sebastian Fröhlich visited Austria's Platzertal bogs, fragile wetlands, to highlight their vital role as a carbon sink and habitat for a variety of wildlife at a time when Austria has lost 90% of its peatlands.

Category: 11–14 years old
Heading: Alpine dawn
Photographer: Lubin Gaudin, France
Location: Col de la Colombiere, Haute-Savoie, France
During an early climb, Lubin Godin discovered an Alpine ibex resting above a sea of clouds. He retraced his steps as the sun came out and captured the scene before the fog returned.

Category: Underwater
Heading: Survival Wallet
Photographer: Ralph Pace, USA
Location: Monterey Bay, California, USA
Braving a strong current, Ralph Pace took this photo of a shark's egg shell, revealing a glowing embryo with gill slits and a yolk sac.
Large sharks lay leathery kelp eggs, making them vulnerable to the loss of kelp forests. Researchers estimate that seagrass abundance in Monterey Bay has declined by more than 95 percent over the past 34 years.

Category: Animal portraits
Heading: Shadow Hunter
Photographer: Philipp Egger, Italy
Location: Naturns, South Tyrol, Italy
Philipp Egger watched this eagle owl's nest from afar for more than four years.
Among the world's largest owls, eagle owls are approximately twice as heavy as buzzards. These nocturnal hunters nest on rocks or in crevices and often return to the same place for many years.

Category: Behavior: Birds
Heading: Synchronized fishing
Photographer: Qingrong Yang, China
Location: Yundan Lake, Fujian Province, China.
Qingrong Yang caught the ladyfish snatching its prey right under the little heron's beak.
He visits the lake frequently to capture these frantic feeding moments.

Category: Behavior: Mammals
Heading: Cat among flamingos
Photographer: Dennis Stogsdill, USA
Location: Lake Ndutu, Serengeti National Park, Tanzania.
Caracals are known for their acrobatic leaps to catch birds, but they are rarely seen hunting flamingos.

Category: Photojournalism
Heading: How to save the view
Photographer: John A. Juarez, Spain
Location: Ol Pejeta, Nanyuki, Laikipia County, Kenya
In the years following the BioRescue Project, John A. Juarez witnessed a breakthrough in rhino conservation—the first successful transfer of a rhino embryo to a surrogate mother.
Although the southern white rhinoceros fetus pictured here did not survive the infection, the milestone proved that IVF can work for rhinos, bringing scientists closer to saving the endangered northern white rhinoceros.
The BBC reported on this incredible story and you can read about it here.

Category: Behavior: amphibians and reptiles
Heading: frolicking frogs
Photographer: Quentin Martinez, French Guiana
Location: Mount Kau, French Guiana
During heavy rain, Quentin Martinez followed a flooded path to a puddle in a forest clearing and captured the metallic glint of small tree frogs gathering to breed.

Category: The story of a photojournalist
Heading: End of review
Photographer: Javier Aznar Gonzalez de Rueda, Spain
Location: USA
In the United States, Javier Aznar Gonzalez de Rueda explored the conflicting public views of rattlesnakes, from deep respect to fear and persecution.

Category: Behavior: Invertebrates
Heading: Mad Hatter
Photographer: Georgina Steytler, Australia
Location: Thorndirup National Park, Western Australia
Georgina Steytler showed off a strange tower made from the discarded head capsules of a skeletonized caterpillar. Each moult leaves behind a capsule that forms a stack, which is thought to confuse predators.

Category: Oceans: the big picture
Heading: Holiday
Photographer: Audun Rikardsen, Norway
Location: Kvenangenfjord, Skjervoy, Norway
During the polar night in Norway, Audun Rikardsen photographed seagulls swarming around a fishing boat, trying to catch fish caught in the net.
He is keen to highlight the conflict between seabirds and the fishing industry. Many birds drown in purse seines every year.

Category: Plants and mushrooms
Heading: Deadly Charm
Photographer: Chien Lee, Malaysia
Location: Kuching, Sarawak, Borneo, Malaysia
Some carnivorous pitcher plants reflect ultraviolet light, using color, scent and nectar to lure prey. To illustrate this, Chien Lee used a long exposure and a UV lamp.

Category: Rising Star
Heading: Vigilant moments
Photographer: Luca Lorenz, Germany
Location: Germany
While Luca Lorenz was photographing mute swans on the city lake, a coypu blew up his frame.

Category: Natural artistry
Heading: Caught in the headlights
Photographer: Simone Baumeister, Germany
Location: Ibbenbüren, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
On the city bridge, Simone Baumeister photographed the silhouette of a weaver spider against the background of a traffic light. By flipping one of the six glass elements of her lens, she created a kaleidoscopic effect, framing the spider.

Category: Winner of the Impact Award 2025 and highly commended in the Photojournalism category
Heading: Orphan of the road
Photographer: Fernando Faciole, Brazil
Location: CETAS (Wild Animal Triage Centre), Belo Horizonte, Brazil
At a rehabilitation center in Brazil, Fernando Faciole photographed an orphaned giant anteater puppy chasing its guardian.
Its purpose is to show the consequences of road traffic accidents, which pose a serious threat to these animals.

Category: Portfolio Award
Heading: Visions of the North
Photographer: Alexey Kharitonov, Israel/Russia
Location: Russia
On the recently frozen lake in the Svetlyachkovsky swamp, dark circles covered with snow with crack-like veins are visible.
Using a drone, Alexey Kharitonov records the rapid transition from summer to winter in taiga forests and the Arctic tundra.