13 creepy photos of the microscopic world around us that will make your skin crawl

Publish date: 2024-06-28

Most days, we don't think about the tiny world bustling right under our noses.

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Small organisms live out their lives, catching prey, laying eggs, and doing their best to survive. Usually, we can't see any of this.

But skilled photographers can use microscopes to reveal the hidden — and sometimes disturbing — world beyond what the eye can see. To celebrate that microscopic mastery, the Nikon Small World contest has awarded the best photographs taken through a microscope each year for decades.

Read more: The best microscope photos of the year reveal a strange and hidden universe in astonishing detail

For the 45th year of the contest, four judges reviewed more than 2,000 pictures submitted from nearly 100 countries. A little more than 100 photos stood out from the pack. Some of them capture the beauty of tiny flowers or reveal the complex, dazzling patterns behind something as simple as a water droplet.

Others reveal up close the creepies and crawlies that lurk below the surfaces of lakes and in the corners of your home.

Here are the 13 creepiest microscopic photos of 2019.

Spiders strike many people as creepy when seen with the naked eye. Under a microscope, the effect is far more dramatic.

A focus-stacked photo of a female lynx spider (Oxyopes dumonti). Antoine Franck/Nikon Small World

This photo a female lynx spider took 14th place in the Nikon contest.

Even fewer people are cool with lice — especially when they cling to strands of hair, as this one is.

A focus-stacked image of a louse hanging from a hair. Walter Ferrari/Nikon Small World

Head lice feed on blood from the human scalp. (Feeling itchy yet?)

A microscope photo of a head louse (Pediculus humanus capitis). Outi Paloheimo/Nikon Small World

Another common pest — the biting house fly — looks downright alien under a microscope.

A microscopic photo of a stable fly (Stomoxys calcitrans). Özgür Kerem Bulur/Nikon Small World

One day, these orb-shaped egg chambers will sprout fully formed fruit flies ready to haunt your kitchen and your dreams.

A focus-stacked photo of strings of fruit fly egg chambers, arranged from young to old, each comprising a cluster of cells (grey) connected by ring canals (red). Dr. Jasmin Imran Alsous and Dr. Stanislav Y. Shvartsman/Nikon Small World

This is what the silverfish that you might find in your bathroom look like up close. If one of those antennae falls off, the insect can grow it back.

A focus stacked image of a silverfish (Lepisma saccharina). Marco Jongsma/Nikon Small World

Underwater creatures can be even creepier under the microscope. This sea-dwelling eunicid worm has five antennae.

A microscope photo of a eunicid worm. Dr. Ekin Tilic/Nikon Small World

This fluorescent skeleton of a fangtooth fish is the stuff of nightmares.

A fluorescent-stained deep-sea fangtooth (Anoplogaster cornuta) skeleton. Dr. Leo Smith/Nikon Small World

The skull of a longnose gar fish looks straight out of Beetlejuice.

A fluorescent-stained longnose gar fish (Lepisosteus osseous) skull. Dr. Leo Smith/Nikon Small World

Even the name of the phantom midge makes it seem spooky. This creature (the photo below shows its larva), is also known as a glassworm and lives in lakes all over the world. Its claw-like appendage unfurls to catch tiny prey.

A focus-stacked photo of phantom midge larva. Christopher Algar/Nikon Small World

Baby dung beetles aren't so cute, either. One day, the compact wrinkles in this embryo will become spiky black legs and a pair of long horns.

A fluorescent photo of a bull-headed dung beetle embryo. Dr. Eduardo E. Zattara/Nikon Small World

Spider legs, meanwhile, look quite hairy up close. White hairs on this tiny spider surround multiple pairs of black eyes.

A focus-stacked image of a small spider. Javier Rupérez/Nikon Small World

This photo took sixth place in Nikon's contest.

But bugs and other tiny creatures aren't the only beings that look creepy up close. These tangled fibers are human neurons; you have billions of them inside your brain.

A fluorescent microscope photo of human neurons, derived from neural stem cells. Jianqun Gao/Nikon Small World

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