2008 Gerald Durrell Award for Endangered Wildlife - Winner
Steve Winter (United States of America)
Snowstorm leopard
'After 10 months and a winter with little snow in Ladakh's Hemis High Altitude National Park, India, I was running out of hope of getting the picture I wanted. But one freezing morning I checked my remote-controlled camera and found a snow leopard had triggered it the night before, in the frame I'd dreamed of - in its true element.' Snow leopards are adapted to life in the mountains of central Asia. They have long, waterproof outer fur, dense woolly under-fur and large nasal cavities that warm the air as they breathe it in. This allows them to survive temperatures as low as -40°C. But the leopards can also tolerate the heat of the Gobi Desert, where temperatures can reach 40°C.
Canon EOS Rebel XT + 10-22mm lens at 16mm; 1/200 sec at f16; ISO 100; waterproof camera box + Plexiglass tubes for flashes; Trailmaster 1550-PS remote trigger.
View other winners in this category
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Special awards Bleak outlook Stefano Unterthiner
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Special awards Mountain prowl Steve Winter
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Special awards On the big-cat trail Steve Winter
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The Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition is owned by the Natural History Museum and BBC Wildlife Magazine.