Birds soar and tussle in the sky. One seems to ponder, as it stares off across a sweeping vista. Chicks ride on their mother’s back, clutching the spoils of a fishing trip.
These are some of the winning images in the 2022 Audubon Photography Awards from the National Audubon Society. Now in its 13th year, the contest had 2,416 entrants from all 50 states, Washington, D.C., and seven Canadian provinces and territories this year.
The grand-prize winner was the white-tailed kite, above, photographed by Jack Zhi in Costa Mesa, California. Zhi, of Irvine, California, captured the kites mid-air as one clutched a vole in its talons.
Contest winners and honorable mentions will be featured in the summer issue of Audubon magazine and will travel the country as part of a photo exhibit.
Here’s a look at the rest of the winners, as well as some notable honorable mentions.
Amateur Winner
A Western grebe stares right at photographer Peter Shen in the Calero Reservoir in San Jose, California. Two chicks ride on the grebe’s back, each holding part of a fish in its beak. Shen, of Castro Valley, California, won in the amateur category for his shot.
Amateur Honorable Mention
Two black common ravens stand in the snow, with one bird appearing to groom the other. Ankur Khurana of Toronto photographed the birds in Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario.
Professional Winner
Liron Gertsman spotted this white-tailed ptarmigan, a grouse-like gamebird, in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada. Gertsman of Vancouver, British Columbia, won in the professional category for the contemplative image.
Professional Honorable Mention
Two male sharp-tailed grouse clash in mid-air in front of a sea of grass in Thompson-Nicola, British Columbia, Canada. This image was also captured by Gertsman.
Youth Winner
Jayden Preussner won in the youth category for his photo of a black-bellied whistling duck perched in a hole on a palm tree trunk. From Miami Beach, Florida, Preussner spotted the duck at St. Johns Water Management Area, known as the Farm 13/Stick Marsh, in Indian River County, Florida.
Youth Honorable Mention
Amiel Hopkins of Fairfax County, Virginia, photographed this brightly colored greater prairie-chicken in Fort Pierre National Grassland in Fort Pierre, South Dakota. The bird has distinctive orange sacs on its neck and fluffy golden eyebrows.
Plants For Birds Winner
A Nashville warbler holds a tiny snail while perching on the stalk of a scarlet bee balm plant in this winning image. Shirley Donald of Oro-Medonte, Ontario, Canada, took the photo in Blue Sea, Quebec.
Plants For Birds Honorable Mention
A Hawaii ‘amakihi bird—a species of honeycreeper—drinks nectar upside-down from an ‘iliahi, a native sandalwood tree. Warren Johnson of Paia, Hawaii, saw the bird at Haleakalā National Park on Maui.
Fisher Prize Winner
The Fisher Prize was named after Audubon’s longtime creative director Kevin Fisher. It spotlights the most creative approach to photographing birds.
This flock of Northern shovelers was photographed at the Muskegon County Wastewater Management System in Muskegon County, Michigan. Steve Jessmore of Alto, Michigan, took the image as one male rose above the rest, revealing the blue on the upper part of his wing.
Female Bird Prize Winner
This relatively new category spotlights often-overlooked female birds who aren’t always as flashy as their male counterparts. Alan Krakauer of Richmond, California, shot this winning image of a greater sage-grouse in Fremont County, Wyoming. The female bird was standing in sagebrush in the snow.