A spectacular picture of a football covered in barnacles has been unveiled as the winner of this year’s British Wildlife Photography Awards.
The image was chosen from more than 14,000 submissions from amateur and professional photographers.
The winning image was taken by Ryan Stalker and also won in the Coast and Marine category.
“Above the water is just a football. But below the waterline is a colony of creatures,” Mr Stalker said.
“The football was washed up in Dorset after making a huge ocean journey across the Atlantic. More rubbish in the sea could increase the risk of more creatures making it to our shores and becoming invasive species.”
The RSPB Young British Wildlife Photographer of the Year Award went to Max Wood for his picture of a coot running across a misty lake at sunrise.
Here are the other winners:
Animal Behavior winner
Three Frogs in Amplexus by Ian Mason, taken in Perthshire.
Animal Portraits winner
Mark Williams’ Starling at Night, showing a common starling in Solihull.
Botanical Britain winner
Jason McCombe won with his picture of slime mold in Essex.
Black and White winners
Raven Above Arran by Robin Dodd won in the black and white category.
Winner’s habitat
Daniel Valverde Fernandez captured a red fox in Sherwood Pines Forest Park in Nottinghamshire and titled it The Tightrope Walker.
Hidden Britain winner
Three’s a Crowd, by Ross Hoddinott, showing a group of common blue butterflies in Devon.
Urban Wildlife winners
Simon Withyman’s Day Walker, showing a red fox in Bristol.
Wild Woods winners
A picture of a beech tree by Graham Niven, taken in East Lothian.
British Seasons winner
Warren Price’s The King’s Quarters, showing a common kingfisher in Bedfordshire.
RSPB 12 – 14 Years winners
Mother and Fawn by Felix Walker-Nix, showing roe deer in Sherfield on Loddon.
RSPB 11 and under winners
Spring’s Treasures, showing a pheasant in Mid Wales, by Jamie Smart.
“The British Wildlife Photography Awards [BWPA] brings to light the spectacular tapestry of Britain’s natural heritage,” said Will Nicholls, director of BWPA.
“This collection is more than just a gallery of images; it is a celebration, a reminder of the enduring beauty of British wildlife and a call to preserve the natural spaces that we are so fortunate to have in Britain.”