Roberto Garcia Roa/British Ecological Society
Roberto Garcia Roa was the winner in the "Individuals and Populations" category, thanks to this photo of a flock of gulls over a rice field in Valencia, Spain.
Raul Costa-Pereira/British Ecological Society
Raul Costa-Pereira won "The Art of Ecology" category with this photo showing a mosaic of mosses, lichens and fungi on an Amazonian palm tree in Brazil.
Pete Hudson/British Ecological Society
Pete Hudson won the "Ecology in Action" category with this image of a fruit bat being sampled in Bangladesh.
Alicia Hayden/British Ecological Society
Alicia Hayden's image of moss growing on a wall in Cornwall, England, led to her being crowned winner of the "Up Close and Personal" category.
Jack Marcus Smith/British Ecological Society
Jack Marcus Smith won the student prize in the "Up Close and Personal" category with this image of a blowfly.
Dani Davis/British Ecological Society
Dani Davis was the overall student winner with this image of a green lynx spider and the bumblebee it had just caught.
Vijay Karthick/British Ecological Society
Vijay Karthick won the "Dynamic Ecosystems" category with this image of a snail eating a kind of fungi known as dead man's fingers in India.
Rebecca Nason/British Ecological Society
The overall winner of the competition was Rebecca Nason's image of a Kumlien's gull, which she took in Lerwick, Shetland.
John Benjamin Owens/British Ecological Society
The student prize in the "People and Nature" category was won by John Benjamin Owens with this image of the Russell's viper, which often lives in rice paddies in India.
Jack Marcus Smith/British Ecological Society
Jack Marcus Smith won the student prize in the "Individuals and Populations" section with this photo of a granular poison dart frog standing guard over his territory.
Dani Davis/British Ecological Society
The student prize in the "Dynamic Ecosystems" category went to Dani Davis for this photo of a jumping spider with a butterfly it just caught.
Joshua Powell/British Ecological Society
Joshua Powell won the student prize in "Ecology in Action" with this image of a female Asiatic black bear being prepared for transport in South Korea.
Alicia Hayden/British Ecological Society
Alicia Hayden took home the student prize in "The Art of Ecology" category with this photo of a spider repairing its web in the light of a streetlight in Exeter, England.
Roberto Garcia Roa/British Ecological Society
Roberto Garcia Roa was runner-up in the overall competition with this image of a recently discovered cave-dwelling bug known as the "fairy of the Valencian forests" that lives in a few caves in Spain.
Molly Dunn/British Ecological Society
Molly Dunn won the "People and Nature" category with this photo of ivy vines stretching across a wall in Florence, Italy.
CNN  — 

A close-up of a gull’s eye is the overall winner of this year’s British Ecological Society photography competition, the organizers have announced.

Category winners include an image of moss set against the sunset, a close-up of a blowfly and a jumping spider with a freshly caught butterfly, according to a news release from the British Ecological Society.

The overall winning image of a Kumlien’s gull’s eye was taken by Rebecca Nason, who is based in Lerwick, on the island of Shetland, off the coast of Scotland.

Nason described how she saw the rare Kumlien’s gull as she was feeding herring gulls some bread.

Rebecca Nason/British Ecological Society
Rebecca Nason won the overall competition with this photo of a Kumlien's gull.

“I started photographing the eye detail, noting a gorgeous granite coloured iris with dark speckled plumage detail around the eye,” said Nason in a news release. “It was only when I got home I realised that the speckled patterns were in fact lice clustered around the eye, the Kumlien’s gull hadn’t travelled alone.”

Jane Memmott, president of the British Ecological Society, praised the standard of entries in the competition.

“The winner is a beautifully composed photograph of a gull’s eye – it’s visually arresting, pin sharp and very beautiful, hitchhiking lice included,” said Memmott in the release.

A judging panel, which included six photographers, selected winning images from six categories, as well as another eight highly commended images.

The photos include images of a red snail feeding on a fungus in India, a recently discovered bug that lives in caves in Spain, and a green lynx spider with a bumblebee it has just caught.

“Green lynx spiders are majestic yet voracious predators,” said photographer Dani Davis, who won the overall student prize for the image. “With a quick bite, the lynx can subdue their cumbersome prey and feast in peace.”

Dani Davis/British Ecological Society
Dani Davis captured the moment a green lynx spider caught a bumblebee.

Laura Dyer, a South African wildlife photographer who was part of the judging panel, said the winning photos showcase completely different styles of photography, and hailed the impact of the competition on conservation efforts.

“Wildlife and nature photography is so vital today, as it helps to showcase parts of the natural world which would otherwise remain hidden from the view of most of us,” Dyer said.

“And it is only by seeing the beauty of nature that we will be inspired to protect and conserve it.”

A virtual collection showcasing the images is available at the British Ecological Society website.