2017 Get Into Your Sanctuary Photo Contest Results
Thank you to all the photographers who shared their view of national marine sanctuaries with us! Click each photograph to see the full version.
Please note that we may use any of the photos we received for this contest on our website, on social media, and in other NOAA and National Marine Sanctuary Foundation publications. We will provide credit to photographers whenever we use any of the photos. Organizations other than NOAA and the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation may use photographs submitted in this contest to promote sustainable and responsible activities in the National Marine Sanctuary System, as long as the photographer is credited. These photos are not for sale and are not for commercial use unless prior permission is arranged.
Sanctuary Life
From tiny krill to enormous gray whales, thousands of species call the National Marine Sanctuary System home! This category depicts the amazing marine life that you can find in your national marine sanctuaries.
1st Place : A bloom of sea nettles drifts through Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Curtis Wee
2nd Place : A sea otter grooms her pup in the Great Tidepool of the aquarium at Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Eric Palmer
3rd Place : A green sea turtle, or honu in Hawaiian, hangs out at Maluaka Beach in the Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Mike Rineer
All Submitted Photos
Bright and beautiful, anemones form a clustered garden at Santa Cruz Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Michelle Manson
An orange bat star (Asternia miniata ) clings to a rock near Anacapa Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Tony Knight
A blue whale is spotted east of Santa Cruz Island during a marine mammal survey in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: John Burke
A playful sea lion approaches a group of divers in the kelp forests of Channel Island National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Curtis Wee
A common dolphin breaks the surface near Anacapa Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: John Burke
Two common dolphins race to ride the bow wake of a boat near Anacapa Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: John Burke
A common dolphin pops to the surface while riding the wake of a boat in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: John Burke
A golden gorgonian grows from the rocks near Anacapa Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Tony Knight
A gray whale peers above the waves in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: John Burke
A curious harbor seal studies a diver near Santa Cruz Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Michelle Manson
An island fox on Santa Cruz Island is part of a rebounding population in Channel Islands National Park. Photo: Aura Leaf Kaila Edmondson
A kelp bass swims through golden strands of kelp growing near Anacapa Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Tony Knight
A pink and blue male sheephead swims through dark rocks and golden kelp in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Tony Knight
A salp strand, which is a chain of tiny gelatinous tunicates, floats near San Miguel Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Michelle Manson
Two female sheephead touch faces in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Tony Knight
A tube anemone sprouts from the rocks around Anacapa Island in Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Tony Knight
A brightly-colored Christmas tree worm sits on star coral in Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Steve Miller
A cocoa damselfish is striking against its colorful surroundings in Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Steve Miller
A lavender-hued frogfish sits on colorful sponges in Stetson Bank at Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Steve Miller
A graysby (Cephalopholis cruentatus ) shows off its speckled pattern at Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Steve Miller
A graysby (Cephalopholis cruentatus ) shows off its speckled pattern at Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Steve Miller
A manta ray creates a smooth, dark sillhouette as it passes through sunny waters. Photo: Steve Miller
A seaweed blenny pokes its purple head out in Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Steve Miller
A spotted moray eel gives its best smile in Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Steve Miller
A squirrelfish swims in Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Steve Miller
An American alligator rests in the morning sun in the Everglades, near Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Lindsey Washiashi
A pair of Atlantic spadefish gently make their way through the water around Molasses Reef in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Daryl Duda
A diver from Keys Marine Laboratory photographs a pillar coral during a warm-water bleaching event in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Karen Neely
A school of blue-striped grunts are found at Snapper Ledge in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Romain Chaput
A diver examines endangered elkhorn and pillar corals at Sombrero Key, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Karen Neely
Female pillar corals spawn during their once-a-year mating event in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Karen Neely
A French angelfish investigates a diver within Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Karen Neely
This elegant gray angelfish was admired at French Reef in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Daryl Duda
A grouper lurks within a school of baitfish on Sombrero Reef, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Karen Neely
A Portugese man-o-war floats in Biscayne Bay, near Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Gary Herlth
A Portugese man-o-war floats in Biscayne Bay, near Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Gary Herlth
A vivid queen angelfish brightens Molasses Reef in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Rick Hein
Four beautiful scrawled filefish perform what looks like a ballet at Molasses Reef off Key Largo in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Daryl Duda
Snapper and grunts guard the passageway to the Benwood wreck off Key Largo in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Credt: Daryl Duda
A southern stingray soars by a diver from the Florida Aquarium during a research dive in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Dr. Karen Neely
A trunkfish swims around a moat wall surrounding Fort Jefferson on Garden Key, near Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Laurie Lee
White grunts assemble around staghorn coral at the Coral Restoration Foundation's nursery in Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Daryl Duda
Off of Key Largo in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, two whitespotted filefish meet. They are the same species but in different color phases. Photo: Daryl Duda
A common murre searches for food to feed its chick in Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Patrick Sysiong
Common murre adults bring fish back for their chicks on Farallon Island in Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Patrick Sysiong
Flocks of common murres fly back and forth from the Farallon Islands to take care of their hungry chicks in Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Patrick Sysiong
A gray whale breaks the surface for a quick breath near Farallon Island in Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Patrick Sysiong
An opalescent nudibranch crawls across Duxbury Reef in Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Geoff Ehlers
A tiny white sea star was found on the beaches of Point Reyes in Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Jessica Bender
A black sea urchin and a pencil-slate sea urchin sit side by side in the Molokini Shoal Marine Life Conservation District of Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Julia Andrews White
A Potter's angelfish (Centropyge potteri ) is bright in the night waters of Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Christopher D'Arminio
A bright pink frogfish enjoys the warm, shallow waters of Keawakapu Beach in the Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Mike Rineer
A group of spinner dolphins emerges from the deep in Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Alexandra Avila
A longjaw squirrelfish swims above pale green corals in the Makena Beach area of Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Mike Rineer
A longspine porcupinefish swims calmly above a reef at Ulua Beach in Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Mike Rineer
A dwarf moray eel slips through the thick radiols of a red pencil urchin at Ulua Beach in the Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Mike Rineer
A spicebush swallowtail butterfly sips from a plant at the proposed Mallows Bay national marine sanctuary. Photo: Angela Bunker
A spicebush swallowtail butterfly sips from a plant at the proposed Mallows Bay national marine sanctuary. Photo: Angela Bunker
A dragonfly alights on a reed at the proposed Mallows Bay national marine sanctuary. Photo: Angela Bunker
Amid a large clone of aggregating anemones, one remains open while the tide falls in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Stephanie Stock
A close-up of an anemone in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Jody Parker
Wingtips just inches above the surface, a black-footed albatross glides effortlessly over the glassy waters of Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Douglas Croft
A blue whale surfaces for a breath in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A blue whale surface-feeding on krill in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A Brandt's cormorant dives beneath the waves in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Curtis Wee
A Brandt's cormorant plunges beneath the waves in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Curtis Wee
A humpback whale breaches at Moss Landing in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A humpback whale breaches gracefully in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A humpback whale calf playfully breaches near its mother in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A harbor seal and her little pup lie on the beach in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Fernando Ibanez
Through the thick strands of a Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary kelp forest, a sea lion appears in front of divers. Photo: Curtis Wee
An agile sea lion rockets from the water in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Douglas Croft
A sea lion rests at Fisherman's Wharf in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Wendi Amber Zuccaro
A California sea lion launches from the water near Bird Rock Vista Point in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Peter Richardson
A trio of California sea lions cuddle on a boat dock in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Jessica Bender
A dock shrimp gazes into the camera with its bright blue eyes in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Curtis Wee
An elegant tern emerges from a dive in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Douglas Croft
A fin whale surface-feeding on krill in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A flock of willets suddenly takes flight as the waves rush in at Sunset State Beach in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Stephanie Stock
A cluster of giant green anemone (Anthropleura xanthogrammica ) glow in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Fernando Ibanez
A seal rests on a rock at Pebble Beach in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Jody Parker
A great blue heron is reflected in a pond near Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Fernando Ibanez
A green sea anemone shows off its bright coloration in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Melissa Anne Thomas
A harbor seal with curly whiskers rests at Point Lobos State Reserve in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Peter Richardson
A harbor seal balances on its side in the Monterey Harbor of Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Will Fitzgerald
A harbor seal, wrapped in a blanket of kelp, floats and naps on the surface of Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Eric Palmer
The shocking blue eyes of a hermit crab contrast against its algae-covered shell in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Curtis Wee
A herring gull eats a pelagic red crab at Lovers Point Park at sunset in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Amy Sibiga
A Hopkins' rose nudibranch glides over rocks covered in coralline algae in a tide pool in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Stephanie Stock
Tails up with this humpback whale near Moss Landing in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary! Photo: Fernando Ibanez
A humpback whale spout breaks the early morning ocean surface in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Douglas Croft
Two humpback whales surface close together in the fog at Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Tera Killip
Six humpback whales dive in front of Moss Landing in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A humpback whale tail slaps the water in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Will Fitzgerald
Juvenile male northern elephant seals wrestle in the surf in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Will Fitzgerald
A major bloom of brown sea nettles drifts through Monterey Harbor in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary.
A young elephant seal rests at Piedras Blancas in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Melinda Mohamed
A giant Pacific octopus hides in a rocky reef of Breakwater Cove at Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Taylor Eddy
A wolf eel sticks out from the rocks at Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Michelle Manson
A group of long-beaked common dolphins porpoise in a boat's wake in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A group of humpback whales lunge feed on a school of anchovies in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Douglas Croft
A pair of humpback whales lunge feed in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
An opalescent nudibranch crawls at Breakwater in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Melissa Anne Thomas
An opalescent nudibranch crawls across the seafloor at Breakwater in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Melissa Anne Thomas
A pair of orca whales make a surprise appearance near Cannery Row in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Peter Richardson
Pacific sea nettles drift in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Michelle Manson
A Pacific white-sided dolphin porpoises in a boat's wake in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nicole Moreland
A female Pacific white-sided dolphin does a series of back-flips in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Douglas Croft
Pelagic red crabs, usually found in Baja California, were brought to Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary in warm currents driven by El Niño events. Photo: Eric Palmer
A newborn Risso's dolphin calf gets playful as it swims next to its mother in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Douglas Croft
A green sea anemone is attached to a rock at Breakwater in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Melissa Anne Thomas
A sea anemone sits above sea stars in Breakwater, Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Melissa Anne Thomas
A shiny barnacle is nestled in a sea anemone in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Jody Parker
Sea lions congregate on a pier in Moss Landing in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Cat Harper
Sea lions swim near the Coast Guard pier in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Melissa Anne Thomas
Sea lions relax on rocks in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Melissa Anne Thomas
A curious sea otter floats in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Aura Leaf Kaila Edmondson
A sea otter rests at Moss Landing in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Cat Harper
A sea otter hauled out on a beach in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Tera Killip
A sea otter enjoys a snack near Lover's Point in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Peter Richardson
A sea otter surprises the photographer at Monterey Wharf in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Michelle Manson
A sea otter mother holds her fluffy pup in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Curtis Wee
While sea otters will usually wrap themselves in kelp to keep from drifting while they nap, this one had wrapped himself in a sheet of plastic that he had found in the harbor at Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Plastic marine debris can threaten marine life like sea otters. Photo: Douglas Croft
A six-armed star (Leptasterias ) navigates the minus tide with its tube feet reaching in a field of surfgrass (Phyllospadix ) at Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Stephanie Stock
A snowy plover stands on Gazos Creek Beach. The band indicates that it was born and banded at Oceana Dunes in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Jack Sutton
Tiny strawberry anemones reach out for food atop a bed of orange sponge at Asilomar State Beach in Pacific Grove in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Stephanie Stock
A large sunburst anemone is reflected in the surface of its tide pool in Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Stephanie Stock
Two stubborn western gulls play tug-of-war over lunch before taking the struggle airborne and into the water at Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Stephanie Stock
Amidst crashing waves, a seal peeps above the surf in Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Nancy Jacobson
A basking shark, mouth wide open, feeds on zooplankton in Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Carolyn O'Connor
A humpback whale breaches off the coast of Provincetown in Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Will Fitzgerald
Humpback whales feed on the southern edge of Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Will Fitzgerald
A pair of humpback whales "kick feed": they raise their flukes out of the water and slap them down to create bubbles to corral fish, then come up with open mouths. Photo: Carolyn O'Connor
A humpback whale spyhops in Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. Photo: Allison Kader
Please note that we may use any of the photos we received for this contest on our website, on social media, and in other NOAA and National Marine Sanctuary Foundation publications. We will provide credit to photographers whenever we use any of the photos.