The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows a group of Nawarddeken women elders hunt for turtles with homemade tools on floodplains near Gunbalanya, Arnhem Land, Australia, October 31, 2021. They spent all day finding just two turtles, which are a popular delicacy. Soon the grass will be burned to make the hunt easier. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
World Press Photo of the Year: 'Kamloops Residential School' by Amber Bracken, to commemorate children who died at the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia. Photo: Amber Bracken for The New York Times / World Press Photo
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows Stray dogs stare at meat hanging in a butcher's shop in Vila da Ressaca, an area previously mined for gold but now almost completely abandoned, in Altamira, Para, Brazil, on Sept. 2, 2013. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows A billboard with a message of support to President Bolsonaro stands alongside the Trans-Amazonian Highway, Altamira, Para, Brazil, July 20, 2020. It was financed by local farmers. Agribusiness is one of the president's main pillars of political support (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows A member of the Quilombola community – an Afro-Brazilian community consisting of Black Brazilians, some of whom are descendants of enslaved peoples from the African continent – lies passed out drunk on a bench, in Pedras Negras, Sao Francisco do Guapore, Rondonia, Brazil, Jan. 29, 2021. The process of providing land deeds to communities started by former enslaved people was already slow before Jair Bolsonaro's election. It has now stalled completely, as a result of the president's resolve not to demarcate further land for such communities in the Amazon. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows A boy rests on a dead tree trunk in the Xingu River in Paratizao, a community located near the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam, Par·, Brazil, on August 28, 2018. He is surrounded by patches of dead trees, formed after the flooding of the reservoir. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award, shows Women and children from the Piraha community, standing next to their camp on the banks of the Maici River, watch drivers passing by on the Trans-Amazonian highway hoping to be given snacks or soft drinks, Humaita, Amazon, Brazil, Sept. 21, 2016. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows Members of the Munduruku community line up to board a plane at Altamira Airport, in Para, Brazil, on 14 June 2013. After protesting at the site of the construction of the Belo Monte Dam on the Xingu River, they traveled to the national capital Brasilia to present their demands to the government. The Munduruku community inhabit the banks of another tributary of the Amazon, the Tapajos River, several hundred kilometers away, where the government has plans to build further hydroelectric projects. Despite pressure from indigenous people, environmentalists and non-governmental organizations, the Belo Monte project was built and completed in 2019. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows An aerial view of the construction of the Belo Monte Dam on the Xingu River, Altamira, Para, Brazil, Sept. 3, 2013. More than 80% of the river's water has been diverted from its natural course to build the hydroelectric project. The drastic reduction in water flow has an adverse impact both on the environment and on the livelihoods of traditional communities living downstream of the dam. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
A part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award, shows massive deforestation is evident in Apui, a municipality along the Trans-Amazonian Highway, southern Amazon, Brazil, August 24, 2020. Apui is one of the region's most deforested municipalities. Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows Nawarddeken elder Conrad Maralngurra burns grass to protect the Mamadawerre community from late-season 'wildfires', in Mamadawerre, Arnhem Land, Australia, May 3, 2021. The late-evening fire will die out naturally once the temperature drops and moisture levels rise. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows Stacey Lee, 11-years-old, left, setting the bark of trees alight to produce a natural light source to help hunt for file snakes (Acrochordus arafurae), in Djulkar, Arnhem Land, Australia, on July 22, 2021. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows A black kite (subspecies Affinis of Milvus migrans) flies above a cool-burn fire lit by hunters earlier in the day, in Mamadawerre, Arnhem Land, Australia, May 2, 2021. The raptor, also known as a firehawk, is native to Northern and Eastern Australia, and hunts near active fires, snatching up large insects, small mammals, and reptiles as they flee the flames. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows a group of Nawarddeken women elders hunt for turtles with homemade tools on floodplains near Gunbalanya, Arnhem Land, Australia, October 31, 2021. They spent all day finding just two turtles, which are a popular delicacy. Soon the grass will be burned to make the hunt easier. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
World Press Photo of the Year: 'Kamloops Residential School' by Amber Bracken, to commemorate children who died at the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia. Photo: Amber Bracken for The New York Times / World Press Photo
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo is part of a video composed of digital and film photographs titled Blood is a Seed (La Sangre Es Una Semilla) by Isadora Romero which won the World Press Photo Open Format award, and questions the disappearance of seeds, forced migration, colonization, and the subsequent loss of ancestral knowledge. (Isadora Romero / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows Stray dogs stare at meat hanging in a butcher's shop in Vila da Ressaca, an area previously mined for gold but now almost completely abandoned, in Altamira, Para, Brazil, on Sept. 2, 2013. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows A billboard with a message of support to President Bolsonaro stands alongside the Trans-Amazonian Highway, Altamira, Para, Brazil, July 20, 2020. It was financed by local farmers. Agribusiness is one of the president's main pillars of political support (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows A member of the Quilombola community – an Afro-Brazilian community consisting of Black Brazilians, some of whom are descendants of enslaved peoples from the African continent – lies passed out drunk on a bench, in Pedras Negras, Sao Francisco do Guapore, Rondonia, Brazil, Jan. 29, 2021. The process of providing land deeds to communities started by former enslaved people was already slow before Jair Bolsonaro's election. It has now stalled completely, as a result of the president's resolve not to demarcate further land for such communities in the Amazon. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows A boy rests on a dead tree trunk in the Xingu River in Paratizao, a community located near the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam, Par·, Brazil, on August 28, 2018. He is surrounded by patches of dead trees, formed after the flooding of the reservoir. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award, shows Women and children from the Piraha community, standing next to their camp on the banks of the Maici River, watch drivers passing by on the Trans-Amazonian highway hoping to be given snacks or soft drinks, Humaita, Amazon, Brazil, Sept. 21, 2016. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows Members of the Munduruku community line up to board a plane at Altamira Airport, in Para, Brazil, on 14 June 2013. After protesting at the site of the construction of the Belo Monte Dam on the Xingu River, they traveled to the national capital Brasilia to present their demands to the government. The Munduruku community inhabit the banks of another tributary of the Amazon, the Tapajos River, several hundred kilometers away, where the government has plans to build further hydroelectric projects. Despite pressure from indigenous people, environmentalists and non-governmental organizations, the Belo Monte project was built and completed in 2019. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
This image provided by World Press Photo, part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award,, shows An aerial view of the construction of the Belo Monte Dam on the Xingu River, Altamira, Para, Brazil, Sept. 3, 2013. More than 80% of the river's water has been diverted from its natural course to build the hydroelectric project. The drastic reduction in water flow has an adverse impact both on the environment and on the livelihoods of traditional communities living downstream of the dam. (Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo via AP)
A part of a series titled Amazonian Dystopia, by Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo/Panos Pictures which won the World Press Photo Long-Term Project award, shows massive deforestation is evident in Apui, a municipality along the Trans-Amazonian Highway, southern Amazon, Brazil, August 24, 2020. Apui is one of the region's most deforested municipalities. Lalo de Almeida for Folha de Sao Paulo / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows Nawarddeken elder Conrad Maralngurra burns grass to protect the Mamadawerre community from late-season 'wildfires', in Mamadawerre, Arnhem Land, Australia, May 3, 2021. The late-evening fire will die out naturally once the temperature drops and moisture levels rise. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows Stacey Lee, 11-years-old, left, setting the bark of trees alight to produce a natural light source to help hunt for file snakes (Acrochordus arafurae), in Djulkar, Arnhem Land, Australia, on July 22, 2021. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows A black kite (subspecies Affinis of Milvus migrans) flies above a cool-burn fire lit by hunters earlier in the day, in Mamadawerre, Arnhem Land, Australia, May 2, 2021. The raptor, also known as a firehawk, is native to Northern and Eastern Australia, and hunts near active fires, snatching up large insects, small mammals, and reptiles as they flee the flames. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo
The photo which won the World Press Photo Story Of The Year award by Matthew Abbott for National Geographic Magazine/Panos Pictures, titled Saving Forests With Fire, shows a group of Nawarddeken women elders hunt for turtles with homemade tools on floodplains near Gunbalanya, Arnhem Land, Australia, October 31, 2021. They spent all day finding just two turtles, which are a popular delicacy. Soon the grass will be burned to make the hunt easier. Matthew Abbott for National Geographic / Panos Pictures / World Press Photo