Photographer disqualified from wildlife photo contest for submitting an image of stuffed anteater
Apr 27, 2018
Share:

National History Museum has announced that it’s disqualifying Marcio Cabral’s winning photo from the 2017 Wildlife Photographer of the Year Competition. Cabral’s image titled The Night Raider won the 2017 Animals in their Environment category.
According to NHM, anonymous sources sent photos showing the animal in Cabral’s picture is highly likely to be a taxidermy anteater. The high-resolution images were of a stuffed anteater on display at the Emas National Park, and its posture is strikingly similar to the one photographed by Cabral. What raises more suspicions is the fact that the image was taken at the same park.

After the tip, NHM subsequently launched an investigation that included two in-house mammal experts and a taxidermy specialist. They also asked the help of a South American mammals expert and an expert anteater researcher. All the five researchers who worked independently concluded that the taxidermy anteater displayed at the park and the one in Cabral’s image are “too similar.”
According to the museum, Cabral cooperated fully in the investigation and even submitted the raw images he had taken that night. Unfortunately, none of them included the anteater. The photographer said that he didn’t have another picture of the animal because he used a 30-second exposure at ISO5000, adding that the animal ran away when the flashes fired.
In my opinion, the taxidermy specimen from the park and the animal in Cabral’s photo not only look similar in posture, but they also share similar physical characteristics. The details around the spots alone convince me that Cabral’s anteater is exactly the same as the one displayed at the park.
If this latest photo contest controversy intrigues you, feel free to visit the National History Museum’s website and compare the stuffed animal photo and the anteater in The Night Raider yourself. Tell me what you think!
More from Wildlife Photographer of the Year
- Meet Carlos Naval: the 9-year-old prodigy recently crowned Wildlife Photographer of the Year
- Canadian physician wins Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2015
- A photo of butchered rhino wins 2017 Wildlife Photographer of the Year award
- These are the breathtaking winning photos of 2018 Wildlife Photographer of the Year contest
- Winners of 2019 Wildlife Photographer of the Year remind us why we need to protect the natural world
- A tree-hugging tiger is the wildlife photo of the year 2020
- Extraordinary underwater scene wins Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2021
- Magical frozen landscape is the people’s choice for 2021 Wildlife Photographer of the Year
- A buzzing ball of bees wins 2022 Wildlife Photographer of the Year
- Gorgeous image of snow leopard at sunset is people’s choice for Wildlife Photographer of the Year
- Breathtaking photo of ancient crab wins the Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2023
- Wildlife Photographer of the Year wants your vote; these are the people’s choice finalists
- Incredible “tadpole party” wins 2024 Wildlife Photographer of the Year
- Haunting Image of Rare Hyena in Ghost Town Wins Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2025
[via Telegraph]
Chad Verzosa
Chad Verzosa is a freelance writer and photographer currently based in Florida. When not traveling, he likes to spend his time printing pictures in the darkroom.




































Join the Discussion
DIYP Comment Policy
Be nice, be on-topic, no personal information or flames.
One response to “Photographer disqualified from wildlife photo contest for submitting an image of stuffed anteater”
Man, this is the most creative cheating ever! We’ve seen all sorts of manipulated images, or submitting other people’s work… But this, this is a whole new level. :D