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- The annual Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards highlight the funniest images in wildlife photography.
- Judges chose 16 highly commended and winning photos out of 10,000 entries.
- The overall winning photo features a gorilla showing off its acrobatic skills.
The Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards provide more than just laughs — they also raise money for wildlife conservation.
Each year, photographers submit their funniest wildlife photos showing animals striking amusing poses or making hilarious faces in their natural habitats.
In 2025, the contest received 10,000 entries from 109 countries, the most submissions in the history of the awards. A panel of judges selected 10 highly commended images and six winners in categories such as birds, fish, and reptiles, as well as an overall winner.
The Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards donate 10% of its revenue to Whitley Fund for Nature, a wildlife conservation organization.
Here are the funniest wildlife photos of the year.
Highly commended: “Smile, You’re Being Photographed” by Valtteri Mulkahainen
© Valtteri Mulkahainen /Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Mulkahainen took this photo of a brown bear in the Martinselkonen area of Finland.
“When I was photographing bears, this one-year-old bear cub saw it and started smiling at me,” Mulkahainen wrote.
Highly commended: “The Choir” by Meline Ellwanger
© Meline Ellwanger/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Ellwanger caught three lions yawning at the same time, calling it “a hilariously lucky moment.”
Highly commended: “Landing Gear Down” by Erkko Badermann
© Erkko Badermann/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
“The red-throated loon is quite a poor flyer, and its landing is usually very wobbly,” Badermann, who took the photo in Finland, wrote. “It seeks balance with its legs stretched backwards and then belly-lands to glide. I like to say they use the water as their runway. This time, the bird came straight towards me and was so steady you might imagine it had taken flying lessons.”
Highly commended: “Monkey Circus” by Kalin Botev
© Kalin Botev/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
While visiting Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, Botev came across a troop of baboons playing in a tree.
“Every time they passed by the sitting baboon, it was trying to catch them in a funny way,” Botev wrote.
Highly commended: “Bad Hair Day” by Christy Grinton
© Christy Grinton/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Grinton photographed a grey squirrel relocating her babies to a new nest in Victoria’s Beacon Hill Park in British Columbia. As the squirrel left the nest, her wet tail moved on top of her head, making it look like a spiky haircut.
“When I saw her it made me smile, thinking, ‘I know that moment where you have just washed your hair and the doorbell goes!” Grinton wrote. “I also loved the textures and colors of the bark of the arbutus tree surrounding her and her ‘bad hair.'”
Highly commended: “I Just Can’t Wait To Be King” by Bret Saalwaechter
© Bret Saalwaechter/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Saalwaechter photographed lion cubs pestering their mother in Tanzania’s Serengeti National Park.
“For over an hour, they followed their mother around a famous Serengeti kopje — those iconic rocky outcrops that dot the landscape— alternating between trying to suckle and play,” Saalwaechter wrote. “Each time the mother, already in a foul mood from the sweltering heat, would give a quick roar of disapproval and escape the circus. But the cubs, like any persistent little ones, would chase her down, nipping at her and yelping for more attention.”
Highly commended: “Fonzies Advertising” by Liliana Luca
© Liliana Luca/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Luca photographed a lemur in Madagascar licking its fingers “with the grace of a stage actor and the timing of a comedian,” as if it had just eaten a bag of Fonzies snacks.
“The photo immediately reminded me of that old snack commercial: ‘If you don’t lick your fingers, you’re only half enjoying it!'” Luca wrote.
Highly commended: “Now Which Direction Is My Nest?” by Alison Tuck
© Alison Tuck/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Tuck captured the moment when nesting grass blew into a gannet’s face on the Bempton Cliffs in Yorkshire, England.
Highly commended: “Go Away” by Annette Kirby
© Annette Kirby/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Kirby photographed a Steller’s sea eagle guarding a fish it had caught in Hokkaido, Japan.
“Other birds were flying above, and as they came closer, I captured the look it gave them,” Kirby wrote. “There was no way it was parting with its catch.”
Highly commended: “Aaaaawa Mum” by Mark Meth Cohn
© Mark Meth Cohn/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Cohn photographed a baby gorilla appearing embarrassed by its mother in the Virunga Mountains in Rwanda.
Bird category winner: “Headlock” by Warren Price
© Warren Price/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Price wrote that he photographed these “fiercely territorial” guillemots in the midst of a dispute “on a small rocky cliff ledge where space was at a premium.”
“I liked the way the guillemot was looking directly into my lens, its white eye-liner eyes highlighting its predicament!” Price wrote. “Sometimes you just want to bite your neighbor’s head off…literally!”
Fish and other aquatic animals category winner: “Smiley” by Jenny Stock
© Jenny Stock/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
“Whilst on a scuba dive in the Philippines, this little fish kept popping its head out of its home, a hole in the patterned coral,” Stock wrote of the bluestriped fangblenny featured in her winning image. “I took a few photos and I loved its cheeky face smiling back at me. What an expressive-looking face!”
Reptile, amphibian, and insect category winner and Nikon junior category winner: “Baptism of the Unwilling Convert” by Grayson Bell
© Grayson Bell/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Bell, a 13-year-old photographer, took this photo of male frogs establishing their territory in a pond in Maine.
“I took my camera and lay on my belly, watching them and taking shots,” Bell wrote. “It wasn’t until I got back to the house and looked at the pictures that I saw this one and realized how much I liked it. I showed it to my parents and they loved it too and it became one of my favorites. We all thought it looked like one frog was trying to baptize the other!”
Nikon young photographer category winner: “Hit the Dance Floor” by Paula Rustemeier
© Paula Rustemeier/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Rustemeier photographed playful foxes on a nature reserve in the Netherlands, documenting the same den over several months.
“The time with them taught me a lot about their social behavior,” Rustemeier wrote. “I saw them fight, hunt, sleep, groom, and of course play, which is always my favorite to watch! You really have to giggle a lot watching foxes play with their quirky personalities.”
Portfolio category winner: “Digging for Gold” by Maggie Hoffman
© Maggie Hoffman/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Hoffman caught a female chimpanzee picking her nose in a series of photographs taken in Gombe National Park in Tanzania.
Overall Winner: “High Five” by Mark Meth Cohn
© Mark Meth Cohn/Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards
Cohn snapped this winning photo of a gorilla from a family group known as the Amahoro family in Rwanda’s Virunga Mountains.
“One young male was especially keen to show off his acrobatic flair: pirouetting, tumbling, and high kicking,” Cohn wrote. “Watching his performance was pure joy, and I’m thrilled to have captured his playful spirit in this image.”
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