Taylor Roades
Earth Photo is an annual competition awarding photographers and filmmakers for work that showcases the issues affecting the climate and life on our planet. Taylor Roades’ photo of Tukpahlearick Creek in Alaska flowing rust-red was among 2024's winning images. 2023 was the hottest year on global record and permafrost is thawing at an unprecedented rate, releasing toxic metals that are changing waterways. Scroll through the gallery to see more. 
Jean-Marc Caimi and Valentina Piccinni
Photographers Jean-Marc Caimi and Valentina Piccinni won the main prize for their series “Tropicalia” which documents the methods employed by Sicilian farmers as a response to climate change. Some are giving up their land for solar energy systems, whereas others, such as Elena Giorgianni (right) are starting to grow exotic fruits that suit the new climate.
Jennifer Adler
Jennifer Adler was recognized for her “Corals of the Future” series, which aims to make ocean science more accessible. Here, scientist Roxane Boonstra examines a “tree” of healthy elkhorn coral at the Coral Restoration Foundation’s Tavernier nursery, Florida, the world’s largest underwater coral nursery.
Raymond Zhang
Fourteen-year-old Raymond Zhang, a student from Shanghai, China, was awarded the future potential award for his photograph of a farmer walking along terraces in southern China.
Marilene Ribeiro
Marilene Ribeiro’s photographs of forests in her home country of Brazil also received an award. After developing the film, she burned it, representing the process that is also being endured by the landscape.
TJ Watt
A gargantuan western cedar in British Columbia, Canada, measuring over 17 feet wide and 151 feet tall. The winning photograph was taken by TJ Watt, co-founder of The Ancient Forest Alliance which protects ancient trees in the region.
Zula Rabikowska
The competition also gives awards to films, such as “The Border” by Zula Rabikowska, which explores how nature and landscapes can bear the brunt of human conflict and war.
Alex Cao
The winning images alongside shortlisted works will be available to view in the Earth Photo 2024 exhibition that is running at the Royal Geographical Society in London from June 18 to August 21. Shortlisted images include Alex Cao’s photo of mangrove forests in Quang Ngai province of Vietnam, which provide an important shield against typhoons.
Anna Korbut
Anna Korbut’s image shows how glaciers in Switzerland are covered by sheets to stop them from melting.
Damith Osuranga Danthanarayana
Damith Osuranga Danthanarayana’s photograph of elephants eating garbage in Ampara, Sri Lanka, shows the threat of plastic waste.
Mark Adams
An image of an English oak tree in the Forest of Dean, UK, was also shortlisted. It was part of a series of photographs by Mark Adams that showed the diverse woodland landscape through the different seasons.
Sandipani Chattopadhyay
A Hindu man makes the Chhath Puja pilgrimage along Delhi’s Yamuna River. The sacred water is polluted, jeopardizing both human and aquatic health.

Editor’s Note: Call to Earth is a CNN editorial series committed to reporting on the environmental challenges facing our planet, together with the solutions. Rolex’s Perpetual Planet Initiative has partnered with CNN to drive awareness and education around key sustainability issues and to inspire positive action.

CNN  — 

A photograph of a solitary man walking along terraces in China, rust-red rivers in Alaska and a gargantuan western red cedar are among the winning images of the Earth Photo 2024 competition.

The award – created in 2018 by Forestry England, the UK’s Royal Geographic Society and visual arts consultancy Parker Harris – aims to showcase the beauty of our planet, as well as the threats it is facing, from climate change to toxic pollution.

More than 1,900 images and videos were submitted to this year’s competition by photographers and filmmakers from all over the world. The winners were announced last night at a ceremony at London’s Royal Geographical Society, ahead of an exhibition at the same location showcasing the evocative imagery.

Photographers Jean-Marc Caimi and Valentina Piccinni took the top prize with their “Tropicalia” series, which documents how Sicilian farmers are adapting in response to climate change. “Rising temperatures, shifting rainfall patterns, and an increased risk of extreme events have transformed what was once Europe’s breadbasket into a testing ground for adaptation and survival,” they said in a press release.

Their images show how farmers are having to diversify: some are giving up their fields to solar energy systems, while others are pivoting to grow exotic fruits such as avocadoes and mangoes that thrive in the now tropical environment.

Jean-Marc Caimi and Valentina Piccinni
The "Tropicalia" series documents how Sicilian farmers are adapting to climate change. Francesco Verri (right) has started cultivating tropical fruits such as mangoes in response to rising temperatures on the island.

“Each inspiring image highlights the important stories of resistance, innovation and resilience at the frontline of climate change,” Louise Fedotov-Clements, head of Earth Photo’s jury and director of Photoworks UK, told CNN. “The series as a whole serves as an example of the future that awaits the whole continent.”

Other winning imagery depicts possible climate solutions, including Jennifer Adler’s “Corals of the Future” series that focuses on ocean science and the efforts to restore marine ecosystems in the world’s largest underwater coral nursery. A short film, “Ser Guardianes Madre Arbol” (“Becoming Guardians of Mother Tree”), by Marc Lathuillière, celebrates an indigenous community in northern Colombia that is fighting for the protection of rainforest and their ancestral lands.

The works highlight “the beauty, fragility, crisis and change happening in our natural environment,” said Mike Seddon, chief executive of Forestry England, in a press release. “Bringing us closer to landscapes, wildlife and communities from across the planet in this way sparks new conversations and reflections. And it prompts us to focus on the creative solutions needed for these environments to flourish beyond our lifetimes.”

Fedotov-Clements added that photography and film “represent a formidable means for raising awareness that can encourage us to adapt, innovate and invent sustainable solutions.”

“From the impact of climate change to the inspiring stories of resilience, this year’s powerful edition is sure to inspire stimulating dialogues about our environment,” she said.