The Anole Annals Photo Contest: 2020 Edition

Aryeh Miller and Ansley Petherick

Which anole species will grace the pages of this year’s calendar? Pictured here is Anolis capito. Photograph by Aryeh Miller.

The Anole Annals Photo Contest: 2020 Edition.

While some of us were able to complete field work earlier this year, many of us were not. Being largely away from Anolis this field season has made us relish their spectacular diversity even more, and we want to celebrate such diversity once again by sharing our favorite photos. That’s pretty much like field work, right? Like the previous years, we at Anole Annals want your best anole photographs for our 2021 calendar. 

Here’s how it works: anyone who wants to participate will submit their favorite photos. The editors of Anole Annals will choose a set of 30-40 finalists from that initial pool. We’ll then put those photos up for a vote on this blog, and the 12 winning photos will be chosen by readers of Anole Annals, as well as a panel of anole photography experts. The grand prize winning photo will be featured on the front cover of the 2021 Anole Annals calendar, and the second place winner will be featured on the back cover; both photographers will win a free calendar!

The Rules

Submit your photos (as many as you’d like) as email attachments to anoleannalsphotos@gmail.com. To make sure that your submissions arrive, please send an accompanying email without any attachments to confirm that we’ve received them. Photos must be at least 150 dpi and print to a size of 11 x 17 inches. If you are unsure how to resize your images, the simplest thing to do is to submit the raw image files produced by your digital camera (or if you must, a high quality scan of a printed image).  If you elect to alter your own images, don’t forget that it’s always better to resize than to resample. Images with watermarks or other digital alterations that extend beyond color correction, sharpening and other basic editing will not be accepted. We are not going to deal with formal copyright law and ask only your permission to use your image for the calendar and related content on Anole Annals (more specifically, by submitting your photos, you are agreeing to allow us to use them in the calendar). We, in turn, agree that your images will never be used without attribution and that we will not profit financially from their use (the small amount of royalties we receive are used to purchase calendars for the winners). Please only submit photos you’ve taken yourself, not from other photographers–by submitting photos, you are declaring that you are the photographer and have the authority to allow the photograph to be used in the calendar if it is chosen.

Please provide a short description of the photo that includes: (1) the species name, (2) the location where the photo was taken, and (3) any other relevant information. Be sure to include your full name in your email as well. Deadline for submission is November 13, 2020.

Good luck, and we look forward to seeing your photos!

Aryeh Miller

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1 Comment

  1. Rick+Wallach

    Hi Aryeh – I’d make a better tightrope walker than photographer (we honeymooned in the Galapagos Islands 40 years ago, and I didn’t start enjoying myself until I broke my camera). However, I’d like to suggest, perhaps, a special spread dedicated to those amazingly cool so-called “false chameleons” or “bearded anoles” of Cuba.

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