The marvellous sky image has been made by Christian Buil. I took it from
Linkname: Fisheye images from Pic du Midi Observatory
URL: http://astrosurf.fr/buil/gallery/fisheye/img.htm
(it's the last image there) and made two adaptations to make the continuous zodiac light along ecliptic, which is visible there, more apparent. I've rotated a diminished original image counterclockwise 90 degrees (smaller and with -quality 70, to reduce its size, pic4_1r_sm.jpg): this way it is oriented with the south down, north up, like usual with small skymaps.

Then I've applied a transformation to the luminance 0-255 values of the original large image, using gimp, making them change very much between 55 to 75. In this way, the difference of the zodiac and surrounding sky becomes very pronounced. A small (shown) version is pic4_z_sm.jpg, a fullscale one is pic4_zr.jpg.

0.17 MB sky image

The brightest, thickest part at lower right is the Gegenschein, a bright spot exactly opposite to the sun. From its position, two things are evident: the image was taken at late night (Gegenschein is well right from the local meridian, nearing the southwestern horizon) and around the verge of August/September: the counterglow is in Aquarius, just a bit right from lambda Aqr.

When viewed by zgv, where brightness may be changed quickly by pressing 2, 3, or 4, zodiac and its bright part, counterglow, are visible well even in the original image. A rotated version makes it easier to navigate among stars. You can even identify Uranus and Neptune in the image (within the Zodiac, of course...) -- with Uranus, it's easy, as it is the first star to left from λ Aqr, (on a screen, just a tiny bit lower, towards quarter to nine; with respect to the horizon, it's at quarter past nine).

As for zodiac: if you know where the ecliptic runs and where the antisolar point is, you may notice the zodiac light with the bright spot of counterglow also on the image with moving stars, the previous one within the URL: Christian Buil's all-sky gallery. It was taken closer to local midnight, so the Gegenschein is higher in the sky...

(I mentioned continuous zodiac light and planets apparent on this fantastic image in September already writing on Light pollution monitoring using all sky camera. As I look on the magnificent gallery page now, I see that the second image contains setting Moon, not a rising one as written there.)

For a commented image of Gegenschein see http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap990625.html, a whole gallery of images is by Marco Fulle.