" The Nikon Small World In Motion Competition " provides an sexual perceptivity   into our unobserved microscopical creation . While all the entries lend   a refreshed hold of a world beyond our usual senses , the contest ’s judges late harbinger the winner of this year ’s   5th annual challenger .

A mates of month ago , Nikon announced thewinners of their micro - photography competition , which   take some of the best images catch via microscopes .   This competition is very similar   except all the entries   are videos , add a whole raw proportion to this rarely see to it world .

The winning video comes from Wim van Egmond of the Micropolitan Museum in The Netherlands . The short video show a   ciliate Trachelius hunt aanimalcule Campanella , both single - celled protozoas ,   magnify 250 time . The video shows the predatory behaviour between   these organisms   in tangible - time .

This vulture versus prey scenario ,   found in a backyard pond of van Egmond ’s supporter , neatly displays the   competition ’s ethos that anybody can pick up a microscope and capture some incredible sights .

“ Wildlife is so close to us , yet most of us never search closelipped enough to see it , ” van Egmond said in a printing press release . “ A pocket billiards in your garden is really a miniature underwater hobo camp teeming with aliveness . If you need to see the world , your backyard is a groovy place to start . ”

Second seat was awarded to science communicator Danielle Parsons fromWonder Science TV , who film   the inside of a white ant ’s gut . imposingly , you could see the   micro-organism within the gut   that help kick downstairs down the wood , which the termites feed on .

Gonzalo Avila , a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Auckland , won third booty for a video that shows nature is every bit as terrify on a microscopic grade . His cartridge holder shows a parasitoid white Anglo-Saxon Protestant larva bursting out of aGum - Leaf Skeletoniser moth , like a minuscular interpretation of the " Alien " films . This physical process can take several hours , so the   TV was speed up 64 clock time .

Interestingly , this macabre display is vital in check the population of the moths , which do immense amounts of damage to eucalyptus Tree in Australia and New Zealand .

Another especially cool video recording was capture by Dr. Luigia Santella and a team of scientists from the Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn institute in Naples , Italy .   This time shows the process of a sea star ’s testicle being fertilized by a sperm cell cell .

you’re able to check out all the entries on theNikonMicroscope   YouTube line .