Imaging Competitions : Photo of “Mouse-Like” Water Creature Wins Olympus BioScapes Contest
November 14, 2011Charles Krebs of Issaquah, Washington, captured the image, which showcases the amazing movements of a rotifer, a tiny underwater creature with cilia (hairlike projections) that sweep at lightning speed to move food into its mouth. Krebs used a special flash to freeze the cilia’s rapid motion.
Now in its eighth year, the Olympus BioScapes competition is a platform for honoring images and movies of human, plant and animal subjects as captured through light microscopes. Any life science subject is eligible, and entries are judged based on the science they depict, their aesthetics and their technical expertise. Photographers can use any brand of equipment. This year, in addition to prizes 1-10, honorable mentions went to 64 images and movies, and one movie earned an award for technical merit.
Second prize went to a time-lapse movie of a cress plant developing new roots over a 75-hour period. Daniel von Wangenheim of Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany, captured the movie. Third prize went to a four-channel video of COS-7 cells, which are derived from African green monkey kidney cells and used in biological research. The movie was captured by Liang Gao, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Janelia Farm Research Campus, Ashburn, Virginia.
“BioScapes images and movies remind us that our world is endlessly beautiful and fascinating,” said Hidenao Tsuchiya, group vice president and general manager, Scientific Equipment Group, Olympus America. “They also open a window to some of the most important and compelling research going on in laboratories around the world. The BioScapes competition, with entries representing dozens of countries and every field of life science, allows Olympus to bring scientists’ amazing images and stories to the world.”
The other Top 10 winners include: 4th, Edwin Lee of Carrollton, Texas, for his movie of Paramecia; 5th, James Nicholson of NOAA/NOS/NCCOS, Charleston, South Carolina, for his image of live green brain coral; 6th, Haris Antonopoulos, Athens, Greece, for a photo of stink bug eggs; 7th, Gunnar Newquist, University of Nevada, Reno, USA, for a photo of fruitfly ovaries and uterus; 8th, James LaFountain of the State University of New York, Buffalo and Rudolf Oldenbourg of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, for their movie showing a crane fly sperm cell dividing; 9th, Wolfgang Bettighofer of Kiel, Germany, for his depiction of a living diatom; and 10th, Gerd Güenther of Dusseldorf, Germany, for his image of bluegreen algae colonies.


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