Photo Competition Shines a Light on the Secret World of Insects

This is a highly detailed stacked image of a living gnat ogre photographed in the field. A green background card was placed behind the subject to help with exposure to the tiny subject. Overall winner of The Royal Entomological Society 2024 Photography Competition. | Benjamin Salb

The Royal Entomological Society (RES) has announced the winners of its 2024 Photography Competition, unveiling an amazing selection of up-close images of fascinating insects.

The annual competition, organized by the UK’s leading insect science charity, celebrates the skill and creativity of amateur photographers, showcasing the diversity of insect life across the world. The competition received almost a thousand entries from keen photographers from 44 countries.

The overall winner in the 18 and over category is Benjamin Salb for his macro image of a gnat ogre, a species of robber fly. This tiny robber fly in the genus Holcocephala is found throughout the eastern United States. They have characteristic wide-set eyes and get their name because their diet consists almost entirely of gnats. Salb, from the United States, became interested in macro photography at the start of the pandemic.

“I love photographing gnat ogres because they’re such a challenge. They’re ridiculously small and very flighty. This is my most successful attempt so far, and I am very pleased with how the detailed eyes came out,” he says.

This sycamore aphid has been attacked by a parasitoid braconid wasp. Having emerged from the aphid, the wasp larva has constructed a disc-like cocoon beneath the ‘mummified’ body of the aphid. Second place in The Royal Entomological Society 2024 Photography Competition. | Rupert Lees

The Under 18 category overall winner is 17-year-old German photographer Alexis Tinker-Tsavalas for his image of a large female jagged ambush bug (Phymata americana) waiting for prey on a flower head.

“While visiting family in Canada, one of my main target species was the jagged ambush bug. I found this one in an urban park in Montreal and was able to get a focus stack of it isolated against a black background,” says Tinker-Tasvalas.

Specially Commended

Antlion larva | Gustav Parenmark
Violet leaf bettle | Tyler Redford
Water strider with its prey | Thomas Barbin
Western Tiger Bettle Larva | Thomas Barbin

Insect Behavior

Ants defend the aphids from their predators and, in turn, the aphids excrete honeydew that serves as food for them | Pepe Badia Marrero
The common red soldier beetle is unfolding its wings and taking off | Marc Brouwer
A spiny ant clamps tightly onto a leaf while a
deadly Orphiocor dy ceps fungi sprouts from its
thorax | Marco Chan
A darter dragonfly, resting after emerging
from its old skin | Luke Chambers
A robber fly is eating a termite on a wooden fence | Jamie Spensley
Cuckoo spit clings to the stems, secreted by the nymphs of a froghopper commonly known as a spittlebug | Raghuram Annadana
A robber fly is being predated on by a group of
American furrowed ants | Benny Gauthier
A female tiger moth laying eggs on a stick | Julian Lobo-Guerrero

Insect Portraits

A spittlebug, shedding its skin. Its unfolded
wings look like ears | Luke Chambers
Botyodes Moth | Rahuram Annadana
Electric blue longhorn | Douglas Barber
Ji Yuan
Hornet | Raghuram Annadana
Pentatomidae | Julian Lobo-Guerrero
A male wasp emerges | Matthew Thomas
Sandy beetle | Ben James
A stacked image of a living damselfly taken in
the early morning. | Benjamin Salb

Smartphone

A tiny fly on flowers | Marga Estrany
A shore fly landing on algae | Gioi Ha Van
Blue Pierrots butterfly | Sritam Kumar Sethy
A green metallic sweat bee collecting pollen on a flower | Antaryami Das

Matt Doogue, one of the competition judges and professional macro photographer comments: “We had the privilege of reviewing nearly a thousand submissions from photographers around the world, so deciding on the winning entries was never going to be an easy task. It’s inspiring to see so many people capturing these extraordinary and intricate glimpses of insects and celebrating their beauty and diversity. While technology can often distance us from nature, these photographs highlight how it can also bring us closer. With affordable and accessible equipment, and even smartphones now capable of impressive macro photography, it’s easier than ever to explore and marvel at the insect world.”

Insects in Their Environment

An acorn weevil on an oak leaf. | Matthew Thomas
A backlit shot of an Iris oratoria during sunrise. | Panagiotis Dalagiorgos
A banded alder borer (Rosalia funebris) as the sun sets in the background. | Thomas Barbin
A damselfly settling down amongst the daisies. | Lee Frost
A tiny flower bee sits on a yellow corn marigold flower. | Ryan Dale

A close-up photo of a nymph. | Panagiotis Dalagiorgos

Under 18s

A backlit shot of an Iris oratoria during sunrise. Winner of the Under 18s category. | Alexis Tinker-Tsavalas
A ladybird larva feeding on a colony of aphids. Second place in the Under 18s category. | Alexis Tinker-Tsavalas

The entries to the Over-18s competition were submitted under the categories: insect behaviour, insect portraits, insects in their environment, and images taken on smartphones. The winner and runner-up in both the over-18 and under-18 categories received an OM System camera and a cash prize, sponsored to encourage talent in insect photography.

The 2025 RES Photography Competition is now open for entries, inviting all amateur photographers to submit their favorite images of insects To find out more and view the full gallery of winning images, visit the website.




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