Olympus BioScapes competition

The open 'mouth' of a floating humped bladderwort plant (Utricularia gibba) took first prize in Olympus' microscope image competition. Igor Siwanowicz, a researcher from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Janelia Farm Research Campus in Ashburn, Virginia, took the winning image of the carnivorous plant, beating more than 2,000 entries from 71 countries.
In its 10th year, the Olympus BioScapes Competition celebrates images and movies of human, plant, and animal subjects as captured through light microscopes. See the top 10 in our gallery. Also, check out the honorable mentions on the BioScapes winners gallery.
(above) Photographer: Igor Siwanowicz
Location: Ashburn, Virginia, United States
Specimen: Open trap of aquatic carnivorous plant, humped bladderwort Utricularia gibba, with single-cell organisms inside.
Technique: Confocal imaging, 100x
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Dorit Hockman
Location: Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
Specimen: Embryo of black mastiff bat Molossus rufus.
Technique: Stereo microscopy
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Igor Siwanowicz
Location: Ashburn, Virginia, United States
Specimen: Single-cell fresh water algae (desmids). Composite image including, concentric from the outside: Micrasterias rotata, Micrasterias sp., M. furcata, M. americana, 2x M. truncata, Euastrum sp. and Cosmarium sp.
Technique: Confocal imaging, 400x
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Spike Walker
Location: Staffordshire, United Kingdom
Specimen: Lily flower bud, transverse section.
Technique: Darkfield illumination, stitched images
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Dylan Burnette
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Specimen: Mouse embryonic fibroblasts showing actin filaments (red), mitochondria (green) and DNA (blue).
Technique: Structured illumination microscopy (SIM) fluorescence, acquired with a 60x objective
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Kurt Wirz
Location: Basel, Switzerland
Specimen: 'Brother bugs.' Gonocerus acuteangulatus, two hours old. Size 3mm.
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Charles Krebs
Location: Issaquah, Washington, United States
Specimen: Phantom midge larva (Chaoborus) 'Glassworm.' Birefringent musculature that is usually clear and colorless is made visible here by specialized illumination.
Technique: Polarized light, 100X
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Yaron Fuchs
Location: New York, New York United States
Specimen: Mouse tail whole mounts showing hair follicle stem cells and proliferating cells.
Technique: Confocal imaging
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Fabrice Parais
Location: Caen, France
Specimen: Head and legs of a caddisfly larva: Sericostoma sp., a benthic macroinvertebrate that can be used for freshwater biomonitoring; because it is relatively sensitive to organic pollution and dies if water is dirty, it is a good indicator of water quality.
Technique: Stereo microscopy, 15x
Olympus BioScapes competition

Photographer: Ralph Grimm
Location: Jimboomba Queensland, Australia
Specimen: Paramecium, showing contractile vacuole and ciliary motion.
Technique: Differential interference contrast, 350x-1000x


Więcej...