Marine Conservation Photographer of the Year competition opens 1 November

2022 Marine Conservation Photographer of the Year winner ‘Big Appetite’ by Thein Nguyen Ngoc (Photo: Thein Nguyen Ngoc /UPY)

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The Marine Conservation Photographer of the Year competition, organised by the Underwater Photographer of the Year and sponsored by The Save Our Seas Foundation (SOSF), has announced that it will be accepting entries from 1 November 2022 to 7 January 2023.

The ‘Save our Seas Foundation’ Marine Conservation competition is free to enter and is open to both underwater and above-the-surface photographs. Photographs must highlight a marine conservation story or theme, with both positive and negative stories encouraged. Freshwater themed conservation images are also accepted. Cash prizes are available for the top three photographs.

Chair of the judges, underwater photographer and marine ecologist, Dr Alex Mustard MBE, said, ‘Powerful photographs are able to change hearts, minds and attitudes. Conservation imagery is especially important from the oceans, which faces many threats from our activities. However, these issues mostly happen unwitnessed, out of sight of land or beneath the surface. This contest gives these valuable images a huge public platform.’

UPY 2022 Marine Conservation Photographer runner Up: ‘Fishermen camp’, by Fabrice Dudenhofer (Photo: UPY)
UPY 2022 Marine Conservation Photographer, third place: ‘In the net’ by Pasquale Vassallo (Italy)

Dr James Lea, CEO of the Save Our Seas Foundation, said: ‘Images have a profound capacity to affect how people view the world, and at SOSF we are all about encouraging positive change in how people view and interact with the marine environment. As such we are delighted to partner with the Marine Conservation Photographer of the Year award, which is uniquely placed to highlight issues our oceans are facing and inspire change.’

Previous editions of the contest have attracted entries from photographers around the world, keen to draw attention to conservation issues, campaigns and success stories important to them. The award was most recently won by Thein Nguyen Ngoc from Vietnam, with his aerial photograph ‘Big Appetite’, whose photo shows boats straining the waters for anchovies in the Phu Yen province of his country. 

‘Salted anchovy is the most important raw material in traditional Vietnamese fish sauce. But these little fish are also a keystone of a natural ecosystem,’ said Nguyen. ‘Despite increased fishing, the catches of anchovies have decreased by 20-30% in the past 10 years. When they are overfished, the whales, tunas, sea birds and other marine predators face starvation and critical population declines.’

The Marine Conservation Photographer of the Year, part of UPY is an annual competition, that traces its roots back to 1965. Enter on the UPY 2023 website.


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