Tubular Silhouettes Tubular Silhouettes in Art of a Man Surfing on the Ocean

Dramatic Human being-of-State of war Takes Top Ocean Fine art Photography Prize

Matty Smith won Best of Show in an underwater photography contest for this shot of a Pacific Man-of-War (<i>Physalia utriciulus</i>) floating in the darkness in Bushrangers Bay, New South Wales, Australia.
Matty Smith won All-time of Show in an underwater photography contest for this shot of a Pacific Human-of-War (<i>Physalia utriciulus</i>) floating in the darkness in Bushrangers Bay, New South Wales, Australia. (Image credit: Matty Smith, Ocean Art Contest 2016)

A dramatic Pacific man-of-state of war framed against a deep black bounding main is the subject of one of the winning photos in this year'south Body of water Art Underwater Photo Competition.

Organized by the Underwater Photography Guide, the contest names 95 winners a yr in a variety of categories, from reefscapes to cold water to nudibranchs, the marine mollusks known for flashy colors and strange body structures.

This year is the contest's sixth, and the top "Best in Prove" prize went to a photo called "Bluish Lasso" past Matty Smith. The photo, which also won the meridian prize in the wide-angle category, was shot in Bushrangers Bay in New S Wales, Australia. Information technology shows a Pacific man-of-state of war (Physalia utriciulus) with its single deadly tentacle looped into a lasso-like "O" beneath the water. Man-of-wars are siphonophores, meaning that although they look like one animal, they're really several polyps working together as a unmarried organism. [Meet the Winning Underwater Photography Photos]

"It was ane of those rare moments when information technology all came together for me, the fortunate photographer, I knew I had just witnessed something very special," Smith wrote about the winning entry.

Dangerous subjects

Pacific man-of-wars are slightly smaller than their more famous Portuguese human-of-war cousins. Their stings are besides milder, according to the Western Australian Museum, and their venom less likely to be fatal to humans.

Other winners show humans and less-dangerous marine life interacting. In the Compact Beliefs category (using a compact camera to capture animal behavior), lensman Lawrence Alex Wu revealed a swarm of allurement fish swirling around his trunk in Hin Daeng, Thailand. The small fish were fleeing a school of larger fish, Wu wrote.

Offset prize in the Pool/Conceptual art category went to a stunning shot of a rescued turtle at a rehabilitation eye in Far North Queensland, Australia. The turtle, nicknamed Eva, snaps a tasty squid; the blurred background and color contrast were added in postal service-production, according to photographer Christian Miller.

Underwater worlds

The winning nudibranchs shot shows ii mating mollusks in a squishy encompass near Tulamben, Indonesia. Photographer Rafael Cosme had his married woman pose in the background, shining a diving light toward the biscuit-and-purple couple.

The Cold H2o winner seems to stare out of the photograph with defiance. The subject field is a throughway in Skällinge, a lake in southwestern Sweden. A earth away, the Reefscapes category winner features a sprawling blue sea star captured on film in Lembeh, Republic of indonesia.

Photographer Scipione Mannacio Soderini took home the Mirrorless Macro prize for a photo of a blue ring octopus (Hapalochlaena) — the first he'd e'er seen in the wild. These octopuses have a venom-filled seize with teeth capable of killing a human.

Thousands of photographs from more than lx countries were entered in the contest. Prizes included free sea cruises, dive packages at tropical resorts and gift certificates to the underwater camera shop Bluewater Photograph.

Original commodity on Alive Science.

Stephanie Pappas

Stephanie Pappas is a contributing writer for Live Scientific discipline, covering topics ranging from geoscience to archaeology to the human brain and behavior. She was previously a senior writer for Live Science simply is at present a freelancer based in Denver, Colorado, and regularly contributes to Scientific American and The Monitor, the monthly magazine of the American Psychological Association. Stephanie received a bachelor'south caste in psychology from the University of South Carolina and a graduate certificate in scientific discipline communication from the Academy of California, Santa Cruz.

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Source: https://www.livescience.com/57439-man-of-war-wins-ocean-art-photography-contest.html

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