24 hours on Earth in one image Stephen Wilkes

Transcriber: TED Translators Admin
Reviewer: Rhonda Jacobs

Nature reveals itself to us
in unique ways,

if we stop and look at the world
through a window of time.

Over the last decade,

I’ve observed endangered species
and habitats around the world,

using a photographic technique
that captures the passage of time,

literally from day to night,

all within a single image.

It has allowed me to witness

the fleeting moments
between wildlife and the natural habitat

as time changes
over the course of a single day.

In the Serengeti,
during a five-week drought,

I discovered a watering hole
and watched, for 26 hours,

diverse and competitive wildlife

calmly share our planet’s
most precious resource:

water.

On Lake Bogoria in Kenya, I photographed
the great migration of flamingos.

This happens normally
during the peak of dry season,

but climate change has created
evening thunderstorms,

turning normally dry hills green

and creating freshwater streams
in which the flamingos joyously bathe.

Our planet is changing before our eyes.

But to witness that change

is also to witness the remarkable
relationships between all of nature,

to see the infinite beauty of it,

to learn how much bigger than us it is

and why it is worth fighting for.

In 2019, the Greenland ice sheet
was experiencing its largest melt

in recorded history:

200 billion tons of ice
liquified into the ocean.

When glacial ice melts,

caving icebergs release sediments
and particles into the seawater,

initiating our ocean’s food chain.

Plankton feed on the sediment,

krill eat plankton,

and the humpback whales feed on the krill.

This photograph is the result
of witnessing with my camera

a 36-hour feast by humpback whales.

We assume that the greatest
threat of glacial melt

will be sea level rise,

which will certainly have
major impacts on coastlines

and populations around the world.

But within this image,

we discover that perhaps
the greatest threat from glacial melt

might be our ocean’s ability
to feed itself.

Without ice,

the ocean food chain may break.

Creating this photograph
opened my consciousness.

I hope through your willingness
to look and see,

it may open yours.

抄写员:TED Translators Admin
Reviewer:Rhonda Jacobs

Nature
以独特的方式向我们展示自己,

如果我们停下来,
透过时间之窗看世界。

在过去的十年里,

我观察
了世界各地的濒临灭绝的物种和栖息地,

使用一种摄影
技术捕捉时间的流逝,

从白天到黑夜,

所有这些都在一张图像中。

它让我见证


野生动物和自然栖息地之间的转瞬即逝的时刻,

因为时间
在一天的过程中发生了变化。

在塞伦盖蒂,
在为期五周的干旱期间,

我发现了一个水坑,
并在 26 小时内观看了

多样化且竞争激烈的野生动物

平静地分享我们星球上
最宝贵的资源:

水。

在肯尼亚的柏哥利亚湖,我拍摄
了火烈鸟的大迁徙。

这通常发生
在旱季的高峰期,

但气候变化造成了
傍晚的雷暴,

使通常干燥的山丘变绿,

并形成淡水溪流
,火烈鸟在其中欢快地沐浴。

我们的星球正在我们眼前发生变化。

但见证这种

变化也就是见证
整个自然之间的非凡关系

,看到它的无限美

,了解它比我们大得多,

以及为什么值得为之奋斗。

2019 年,格陵兰冰盖
正在经历

有记录以来最大的融化:

2000 亿吨冰
液化到海洋中。

当冰川融化时,

崩塌的冰山会将沉积物
和颗粒释放到海水中,从而

启动我们海洋的食物链。

浮游生物以沉积物为

食,磷虾以浮游生物为食,

而座头鲸以磷虾为食。

这张照片是
用我的相机见证座

头鲸 36 小时盛宴的结果。

我们假设
冰川融化的最大威胁

将是海平面上升,

这肯定会对

世界各地的海岸线和人口产生重大影响。

但在这张图片中,

我们发现
冰川融化的最大威胁

可能是我们的海洋
自给自足的能力。

没有冰

,海洋食物链可能会断裂。

创作这张照片
打开了我的意识。

我希望通过你的
观察和观察,

它可以打开你的。