杏吧原创

Otherworldly beauty of fungi on show in photo competition

These stunning images are finalists in the World of Fungi category in the International Garden Photographer of the Year contest
Barry Webb (#445691)
A trio of Cribraria slime moulds
Barry Webb/IGPOTY

PROVING that stunning, otherworldly nature is never too far away, these images are finalists in this year鈥檚 International Garden Photographer of the Year (IGPOTY) competition.

Pictured above is Barry Webb鈥檚 composite shot of a trio of Cribraria slime moulds, found next to a decaying pine log in the forests of Buckinghamshire, UK, after weeks of searching. Webb鈥檚 initial motivation to simply take pictures of slime moulds has developed into an 鈥渙bsessive quest鈥 to document as many as possible, he says, 鈥渁lways striving to produce images that capture their otherworldly beauty鈥.

Standing at mere millimetres, these organisms were once classed as multicellular fungi, but are now considered a unique type of single-celled protozoa in their own right. It is when they merge together in the joint hunt for food 鈥 sometimes in slimy masses, other times in pinhead-like clusters, as seen here 鈥 that they become known as slime moulds.

The 鈥渉eads鈥 of these Cribraria, akin to tiny watermelons, are the slime mould鈥檚 fruiting bodies that form when food is scarce, and from which spores are released to kick-start the life cycle once more.

Jay Birmingham (#443465).
Mycena mushroom
Jay Birmingham/IGPOTY

A Mycena mushroom sprouting from a pinecone, photographed by Jay Birmingham in Dorset, UK, is shown above. This type of fungi can be found throughout the UK and is characterised by a bell-like cap. Both images were shortlisted in the competition鈥檚 The World of Fungi category. The will be showing at Kew Gardens, London, until 10 March.

Topics: fungi / photography