By David Beard, Executive Editor, Newsletters
It’s one of our most popular stories each time: National Geographic’s best animal photos of the year. This time, with a beluga calf at the top, it’s curated by Kathy Moran, our deputy director of photography and soon-to-retire 40-year Nat Geo veteran. Over the years, she says she’s seen an important change in how we cover animals.
“When I first started, what you’d see were the animal stories, and it was pure wildlife—pure natural history,” she told Natasha Daly. But now? Context. “I really felt that the most amazing natural history image was meaningless if that animal was under threat from X, Y, and Z, and we didn’t show it.”
That, for example, includes a delightful family of meerkats standing on guard in the Kalahari Desert, where a warming climate is increasingly putting a carefully calibrated ecosystem at risk. Or an extreme close-up of an orchid bee, which gave me new appreciation for the beauty of bugs—and what devastation may come if we lose them. And there’s what I consider the biggest emotional punch of the year: The orphaned mountain gorilla Ndakasi taking her final breaths in her caregiver’s arms. If that doesn’t move you to care about animals, I don’t know what will.
See a few examples below—and the full selection here. What’s your favorite?
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