Visit the exhibition
Pause, reflect and reconnect with the natural world through images that celebrate nature’s awe-inspiring beauty and urge us to protect it.
Tickets on sale now.
Shane woke at dawn to the sound of splashing. Scrambling out of his tent, he spotted ‘a pile of 14 nurse sharks thrashing around in knee-deep water’. He had seen them heading for the shallows the evening before, and so had camped out on the beach. He managed to capture the gaze from the tiny eyes of the mating pair amid the chaos.
Nurse shark mating is not a gentle affair. The male bites the female’s pectoral fin, rolling her over and pinning her to the seabed. Many males often attempt to mate with a single female, who in turn tries to avoid them by swimming into very shallow water, where she can bury her pectoral fins safely in the sand.
Canada
Shane is a professional marine conservation photojournalist. He’s photographed everything from sharks, whales and crocodiles to seahorses, nudibranchs and tadpoles. Through his work, Shane wants to shine a light on the impact, both positive and negative, people are having on the oceans and on freshwater ecosystems. He’s an Associate Fellow with the International League of Conservation Photographers and a founding member of the Canadian Conservation Photographers Collective.
Help us harness the power of photography to advance scientific knowledge, spread awareness of important issues and nurture a global love for nature.