


Name: Pandora Maund
Picture title: Taken by a Ghost
Category: Other Animals
Nationality: UK
Occupation: Full-time photographer and tutor
Technical information
Camera: OM System OMD1
Lens: M. Zuiko Digital ED 300mm F4.0 IS PRO
EXIF: 1/2500 at F4.0 ISO 500
Accessories: No accessories, camera was handheld
HIGHLY COMMENDED CATEGORY OTHER ANIMALS
Pandora Maund | Taken by a Ghost
Name: Pandora Maund
Picture title: Taken by a Ghost
Category: Other Animals
Nationality: UK
Occupation: Full-time photographer and tutor
Technical information
Camera: OM System OMD1
Lens: M. Zuiko Digital ED 300mm F4.0 IS PRO
EXIF: 1/2500 at F4.0 ISO 500
Accessories: No accessories, camera was handheld
Pandora Maund says:
I had originally hoped to return to South Africa in 2023 for another safari, but that didn’t pan out. However, a friend invited me to join her family in the Seychelles for a couple of weeks. Having never been before, I wasn’t quite sure what to expect in terms of wildlife photography. I reached out to the ICS (Island Conservation Society) team on the island and mentioned that I would be on Desroches Island for a couple of weeks. I offered to provide any photography services and get involved with any conservation projects while I was there. After working with the Giant Aldabra Tortoises, I was invited to join an early morning beach patrol to monitor bird species and track where turtles had come from the sea overnight to lay their eggs on the beach.
I had hoped to witness and photograph turtle hatchlings making their way to the sea as the sun rose. The hatchlings instinctively wait until the sand cools, indicating nighttime, when there’s less risk of predation. As the sun rises, they use its light to guide them to the sea and as far away from shore as possible, where predation is highest. Unfortunately, only around 1 in 1000 hatchlings survive to adulthood. Once they leave the nest, predators such as birds, ghost crabs, and fish pose a significant threat.
Ghost crabs are abundant on the beach, scavenging anything from fallen fruit and plants to decaying animals—and unfortunately, live turtle hatchlings. As I walked along the beach, I spotted several horned ghost crabs. One of them had something in its claws, and I realized it had caught one of the stragglers on its first journey to the sea. I immediately lay flat on the sand and switched my lens to a 300mm (600mm equivalent) prime. The crab was scuttling along the beach, dropping its prize and picking it up again. I waited patiently until it turned to face me, capturing the shot. Though it’s difficult to identify the species of the turtle, it was likely a critically endangered Hawksbill, which can be found around this remote island.


Pandora Maund
UK
Pandora gave up a 32 year career in telecommunications following a charity trip to South Africa in 2010 for which she bought her first camera. Despite having no photography knowledge it was a lightbulb moment and she immediately felt this was something she had been looking for all her life, so after a year learning alongside her day job she decided to make the leap and set up her own business.
Initially she explored all genres of photography but her childhood love of animals and conservation made her always drawn to wildlife photography. For the past 13 years she has built up a successful photography workshop company for beginners up to more experienced photographers wanting to learn a new skill and this has been her main focus but left very little time to really pursue her own photography. Earlier this year she decided to sell her teaching business and focus more on her own work and teaching clients privately, leading photography tours and getting more involved in conservation projects. This is actually the first year she has entered a photography competition.