With a record 76,000 votes, these are the winner and highly commanded images chosen by wildlife photography and nature fans ...
This year's winner shows a badger looking at a graffiti version of itself. It was praised as "flawlessly timed" and will be ...
‘No Access’, British photographer Ian Wood’s perfectly timed capture of an ambling Eurasian badger glancing up at some rather familiar graffiti in St Leonards-on-Sea, England, has won the tenth ...
Dorset photographer, Ian Wood, came first for his humorous image of a Eurasian badger looking up at graffiti depicting a ...
An "ambling Eurasian badger," lava coming from a Chilean volcano, an owl flying out of a barn, a stoat blending into the snow ...
A record 76,000 votes were cast to decide this year’s People’s Choice Award winner. Wildlife Photographer of the Year is ...
The camera in an Anchorage police cruiser captured a "pint-sized" ermine—also called a stoat—climbing around the headrests ...
Homer Drawdown first began in 2019 as a collaborative shepherded by Cook Inletkeeper and Alaskans Know Climate Change.
In New Zealand, Shaka is about to make history as Northland Regional Council's first Certified Possum Detection Dog.
In the last couple of weeks Italy brought in a new law making surrogacy a “universal crime”. This has been seen as part of a larger international reaction against the practice of surrogacy.