The winners of the 2025 Nikon Small World competition capture the world beyond the human eye

The winners of the 2025 Nikon Small World competition capture the world beyond the human eye
ФОТО: dpreview.com

Nikon Small World 2025 Photomicrography Winners Nikon has announced the winners of its 2025 Small World photomicrography competition, gathering images from all around the world that show off the microscopic universe around us in shocking detail.

The winning images depict a wide range of subjects, including cells from a variety of organs (and even species), insects, fungi and minerals, just to name a few.

There's also a Small World videography competition, for which Nikon announced the winners last month.

There are twenty winners, which you'll see in this slideshow, but there are several other honorable mentions and images of distinction, which Nikon has hosted on its site. The company says it received "thousands of entries from scientists and artists across the globe. "

1st place: Zhang You

Subject: Rice weevil (Sitophilus oryzae) on a grain of rice

Technique: Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 5X

Location: Kunming, Yunnan, China

About the image: You is a member of the Entomological Society of China and the Entomological Society of Yunnan Province. He told Nikon: “It pays to dive deep into entomology: understanding insects’ behaviors and mastering lighting. ” “A standout work blends artistry with scientific rigor, capturing the very essence, energy, and spirit of these creatures. ”

The image was created over the course of two weeks out of 100 exposures taken with a medium format camera.

You told Nikon: “I had observed rice weevils in grains before, but never one with its wings spread. ” “This one was naturally preserved on a windowsill, perhaps in a final attempt to escape. Its tiny size makes manually preparing spread-wing specimens extremely difficult, so encountering it was both serendipitous and inspiring. ”

2nd place: Dr. Jan Rosenboom

Subject: Colonial algae (Volvox) spheres in a drop of water

Technique: Reflected Light

Objective Lens Magnification: 5X

Location: Rostock, Mecklenburg Vorpommern, Germany

3rd place: John-Oliver Dum

Subject: Pollen in a garden spider web

Technique: Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 20X

Location: Medienbunker Produktion, Bendorf, Rheinland Pfalz, Germany

4th place: Dr. James Hayes

Subject: Heart muscle cells with chromosomes condensed following cell division

Technique: Confocal

Objective Lens Magnification: 100x

Location: Vanderbilt University, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Nashville, Tennessee, USA

5th place: Dr. Igor Siwanowicz

Subject: Spores (blue/purple structures) of a small tropical fern (Ceratopteris richardii)

Technique: Confocal

Objective Lens Magnification: 25X

Location: Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), Janelia Research Campus, Ashburn, Virginia, USA

6th place: Dr. Francisco L

Subject: Rat liver cells

Technique: Confocal

Objective Lens Magnification: 63X

Location: Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, USA

7th place: Stella Whittaker

Subject: iPSC-derived sensory neurons labelled to show tubulin and actin

Technique: Confocal, Fluorescence, Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 10X

Location: National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, Maryland, USA

8th place: Dr. Igor Siwanowicz

Subject: Mallow pollen germinating on stigma while being parasitized by a filamentous fungus

Technique: Confocal

Objective Lens Magnification: 40X

Location: Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), Janelia Research Campus, Ashburn, Virginia, USA

9th place: Wim van Egmond

Subject: A fungus (Talaromyces purpureogenus) known for its red, diffused pigment

Technique: Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 10X

Location: Micropolitan Museum, Berkel en Rodenrijs, Zuid Holland, Netherlands

10th place: Dr. Dylan Burnette & Dr. James Hayes

Subject: Heart muscle cells (iPSC-derived) showing condensed chromosomes in metaphase

Technique: Structured Illumination Microscopy (SIM)

Objective Lens Magnification: 60X

Location: Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Nashville, Tennessee, USA

11th place: Marek Mi

Subject: Sunflower trichomes (hair-like plant outgrowths)

Technique: Polarized Light

Objective Lens Magnification: 10X

Location: Marek Mi

12th place: Halli Lindamood & Eric Vitriol

Subject: The actin cytoskeleton (cyan) and endoplasmic reticulum (red) of a mouse brain cancer cell

Technique: Confocal, Deconvolution

Objective Lens Magnification: 100X

Location: Augusta University, Department of Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, Augusta, Georgia, USA

13th place: Henri Koskinen

Subject: Slime mold (Arcyria major) releasing spores

Technique: Image Stacking, Reflected Light

Objective Lens Magnification: 10X

Location: Helsinki University, Helsinki, Uudenmaan l

14th place: Manfred Heising

Subject: Quartz with biotic goethite filaments

Technique: Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 5X

Location: LWL Museum of Natural History M

15th place: Zhang You

Subject: Geometer moth (Geometridae) laying eggs

Technique: Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 5X

Location: Kunming, Yunnan, China

16th place: Rogelio Moreno

Subject: Spore sacs (sporangia) of a fern

Technique: Fluorescence, Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 40X

Location: Panama, Panama

17th place: Hong Guo

Subject: Water fleas (Daphnia) and algae

Technique: Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 5X

Location: Chengdu, Si Chuan, China

18th place: Marius M& Laurent Gelman

Subject: Fluorescently marked mouse colon

Technique: Confocal

Objective Lens Magnification: 20X

Location: Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Basel, Basel Stadt, Switzerland

19th place: Eduardo Agustin Carrasco

Subject: Parasitic fungus (Cordycipitaceae) on a fly (Calliphoridae)

Technique: Image Stacking

Objective Lens Magnification: 2X

Location: Cuenca, Azuay, Ecuador

20th place: Zachary Sanchez

Subject: Marine copepod

Technique: Confocal

Objective Lens Magnification: 60X

Location: Vanderbilt University, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Nashville, Tennessee, USA

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