Flowering Plant Anther Captures Top Honors in 2009 Nikon Small World Competition

Annual Competition Honors Top Photomicrographs From Around the World


MELVILLE, N.Y., Oct. 8, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A magnificent depiction of the essence of floral life, a gorgeous photograph of a thale cress anther (the male sex organ of a small flowering plant) is the winning image in the 2009 Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition. Heiti Paves of Tallinn, Estonia took the top honor with this image, which was magnified 20 times and taken using a confocal microscope.

Nikon Small World recognizes Dr. Paves' image, along with the other winners from this year, for showing both scientific and artistic qualities. More than 2,000 entries were received this year, the most ever for the competition, from scientists and artists across the world. The winning images were selected by a distinguished panel of judges.

"As part of my work as a research scientist, I have been taking photographs through the microscope for almost 30 years to observe the processes in living cells. I have spent a lot of time to capture nice pictures worthy of submission to the Nikon Small World Competition," said Heiti Paves, a scientist of Tallinn University of Technology. "I am honored to receive this recognition and am excited for the opportunity to share my work broadly."

Now in its 35th year, Nikon Small World is the oldest and most respected competition of its kind. The competition, which has become the preeminent forum for showcasing the beauty and complexity of life as seen through the light microscope, celebrates the world's best photomicrographers who create beautiful imagery while showcasing a wide variety of advanced scientific disciplines. Nikon Small World recognizes photomicrographers for their achievements in capturing dynamic images at the intersection of science and art.

"We are lucky to see some of the most unbelievable things under the microscope. This competition is truly the world's gallery, giving researchers and photographers globally the opportunity to share their amazing work," said Lee Shuett, executive vice president, Nikon Instruments. "Every year the competition gets better and better. It is clearly reflecting the discovery process -- not in just life science but in industry as well."

The top five images this year include Dr. Paves' thale cress anther, Gerd Guenther's picture of a spiny sowthistle's stem, Dr. Pedro Barrios-Perez's image of a wrinkled photoresist, James Hayden's colorful, spiraling image of an anglerfish ovary and Bruno Vellutini's photomicrograph of the oral surface of a young seastar. Nikon has also awarded several "Honorable Mentions" and "Images of Distinction" this year to outstanding photomicrographs that demonstrate superior technical competency and artistic skill.

"The Nikon Small World competition provides a premier opportunity to have your work seen by an enormous amount of international venues," said Mr. James Hayden, director of the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia and 2009 Small World 4th Place winner with a colorful, spiraling image of an anglerfish ovary. "As the competition has grown through film and digital techniques, it has showcased amazing new technologies like confocal and 2-photon imaging, and it has helped create that spark of interest in a new generation. These images are ambassadors -- introducing the scientific accomplishments of the research world to the general public."

This year's judges again represented top industry experts and included Gary Borisy, Ph.D., Director and Chief Executive Officer, Marine Biological Laboratory; Charles Krebs, Photographer, Charles Krebs Photography; James Shreeve, Science Editor, National Geographic; and Clive Thompson, Journalist.

Top images from the 2009 Nikon Small World Competition will be exhibited in a full-color 2010 calendar and through a national museum tour. For additional information, including tour cities and dates, please visit www.nikonsmallworld.com.

THE OFFICIAL 2009 NIKON SMALL WORLD WINNERS

The 2009 gallery of winning images can be viewed at www.nikonsmallworld.com.


 1st Place
 Dr. Heiti Paves
 Tallinn University of Technology
 Tallinn, Estonia
 Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress) anther (20x)
 Confocal


 2nd Place
 Gerd A. Guenther
 Dusseldorf, Germany
 Sonchus asper (spiny sowthistle) flower stem section (150x)
 Darkfield


 3rd Place
 Dr. Pedro Barrios-Perez
 Institute for Microstructural Sciences
 National Research Council of Canada
 Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
 Wrinkled photoresist (200x)
 Brightfield


 4th Place
 James Hayden
 The Wistar Institute
 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
 Anglerfish ovary (4x)
 Two-channel Autofluorescence


 5th Place
 Bruno Vellutini
 Centro de Biologia Marinha
 Universidade de Sao Paulo
 Sao Paulo, Brazil
 Oral surface of a young seastar (40x)
 Darkfield


 6th Place
 Dr. Havi Sarfaty
 Israel Veterinary Association
 Ramat-Gan, Israel
 Discus fish scales (20x)
 Transmitted Light


 7th Place
 Dr. Shirley Owens
 Michigan State University (retired)
 East Lansing, Michigan, USA
 Hair-like trichomes on Thunbergia alata (Black-eyed Susan vine) (450x)
 Confocal Fluorescence and Reflection


 8th Place
 Dr. Lloyd Donaldson
 Scion, Next Generation Biomaterials
 Rotorua, New Zealand
 Cotton fibers stained with berberine sulphate and color depth shaded
 (200x)
 Confocal Fluorescence


 9th Place
 Dr. Bernardo Cesare
 Dipartimento di Geoscienze
 Universita degli Studi di Padova
 Padova, Italy
 Olivine inclusions in gabbro (magmatic rock) (5x)
 Polarized Transmitted Light


 10th Place
 Dr. Arlene Wechezak
 Anacortes, Washington, USA
 Algae and diatoms (10x)
 Darkfield


 11th Place
 Dominik Paquet
 Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen
 Adolf Butenandt Institute
 Munich, Germany
 "Alzheimer" Zebrafish, stained for Tau (red), neurons (green), and
 pathologic Tau (blue) (10x)
 Confocal


 12th Place
 Dr. Tsutomu Seimiya
 Tokyo Metropolitan University
 Tokyo, Japan
 Flow pattern in draining soap film (10x)
 Simple Microscope


 13th Place
 Dr. John Hart
 Hart3D Films
 Boulder, Colorado, USA
 Recrystallized melted mixture of acetanalide, resorcinal and
 carbon tetrabromide (33x)
 Transmitted Polarized Light


 14th Place
 Tora Bardal
 Department of Biology
 NTNU Center of Fisheries and Aquaculture
 Trondheim, Norway
 Lobster egg (3.2x)
 Darkfield


 15th Place
 Fabrice Parais
 DIREN Basse-Normandie
 Herouville-Saint-Clair, France
 Atherix ibis (fly) aquatic larva (25x)
 Stereomicroscopy


 16th Place
 Massimo Brizzi
 Microcosmo Italia
 Empoli, Firenze, Italy
 Snail eggs (200x)
 Differential Interference Contrast


 17th Place
 Dr. Rebekah R. Helton
 Department of Biological Sciences
 University of Delaware
 Newark, Delaware, USA
 Stopwatch (2.5x)
 Confocal (with Depth Coding)


 18th Place
 Dr. Julia Sero
 Children's Hospital Boston
 Harvard Medical School
 Boston, Massachusetts, USA
 Human skin on fibronectin with growth factor (60x)
 Confocal


 19th Place
 Yanping Wang
 Beijing Planetarium
 Beijing, China
 Snowflake (40x)
 Reflected and Transmitted Light


 20th Place
 Dr. Havi Sarfaty
 Israel Veterinary Association
 Ramat-Gan, Israel
 Rusted old coin (40x)
 Reflected Light


 Honorable Mentions

 Dr. Dylan Burnette
 National Institute of Child Health and Human Disease
 National Institutes of Health
 Bethesda, Maryland, USA
 Ciliated protozoa (1700x)
 Confocal


 Dr. Kirk Czymmek
 Department of Biological Sciences
 University of Delaware
 Newark, Delaware, USA
 Fungal infection of Arabidopsis (flowering plant) root (25x)
 Confocal 3D Maximum Intensity Projection


 Thomas Deerinck
 National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research
 University of California, San Diego
 La Jolla, California, USA
 Rat cerebellum (200x)
 2-photon Excitation Fluorescence Microscopy


 Dr. Nils O. E. Krutzfeldt
 School of Medical Sciences
 University of Auckland
 Auckland, New Zealand
 Whole finch testicle (4x)
 Brightfield


 David Millard
 Austin, Texas, USA
 Fire agate (10x)
 Diffused Incident Illumination


 Larry Millet
 Dept. of Cell and Developmental Biology, and Micro & Nanotechnology
 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
 Urbana, Illinois, USA
 Aspergillus mold in a microfluidic device (20x)
 Differential Interference Contrast


 Dr. Juan Alberto Morales
 Departamento de Patologia, Escuela Medicina Veterinaria
 Universidad Nacional Autonoma
 Heredia, Costa Rica
 Aspergillus sp. (250x)
 Nomarski Differential Interference Contrast


 Dr. Heiti Paves
 Tallinn University of Technology
 Tallinn, Estonia
 Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress) anther (20x)
 Confocal
 (Different version than the winning image)


 Juergen Pfleiderer
 Heilbronn, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
 Radula of Buccinum undatum (sea snail) (100x)


 Dr. Jugal Gupta
 University of Wisconsin - Madison
 Madison, Wisconsin, USA
 Biosensing liquid crystals (20x)
 Polarized Light


 Viktor Sykora
 Institute of Pathophysiology, First Medical Faculty
 Charles University
 Prague, Czech Republic
 Hoya carnosa (wax plant) flower (10x)
 Darkfield


 Bruno Vellutini
 Centro de Biologia Marinha
 Universidade de Sao Paulo
 Sao Paulo, Brazil
 Pluteus larva of a sea biscuit (echinoderm) (200x)
 Differential Interference Contrast


 Dr. Uwe Weierstall
 Department of Physics and Astronomy
 Arizona State University
 Tempe, Arizona, USA
 Water droplets ejected from a vibrating glass nozzle (200x)
 Stroboscopic LED Illumination


 Dr. Ting Xie
 Stowers Institute
 Kansas City, Missouri, USA
 A fruit fly ovariole containing different stages of developing
 egg chambers
 (400x)
 Confocal


 Dr. Robert Zucker
 USEPA
 Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA
 Mosquito larvae (100x)
 Confocal

ABOUT THE NIKON SMALL WORLD PHOTOMICROGRAPHY COMPETITION

The Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition is open to anyone with an interest in photography. Participants may submit their images in traditional 35mm format, or upload digital images directly at www.nikonsmallworld.com. The first, second and third prize winners will receive a selection of Nikon products and equipment worth $3,000, $2,000 and $1,000, respectively. For additional information, contact Nikon Small World, Nikon Instruments Inc., 1300 Walt Whitman Road, Melville, NY 11747, USA or phone (631) 547-8569.

ABOUT NIKON INSTRUMENTS INC.

Nikon Instruments Inc is a world leader in the development and manufacture of optical and digital imaging technology for biomedical and industrial applications. Now in its 91st year, Nikon provides complete optical systems that offer optimal versatility, performance and productivity. Cutting-edge instruments include microscopes, precision measuring equipment, digital imaging products and software. Nikon Instruments is the microscopy and digital imaging arm of Nikon Inc., the world leader in digital imaging, precision optics and photo imaging technology. For more information, visit www.nikoninstruments.com. Product-related inquiries may be directed to Nikon Instruments at 800-52-NIKON.



            

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