~The Natural State~.....KENTUCKY

olena

<font color=green>Emerald Angel<br><font color=mag
Joined
May 12, 2001
State Bird

Northern Cardinal

Cardinalis cardinalis
Red Cardinal

Description 8-9" (20-23 cm). Male bright red with crest, black face, stout red bill. Female buff-brown tinged with red on crest, wings, and tail.
Voice Rich what-cheer, cheer, cheer; purty-purty-purty-purty or sweet-sweet-sweet-sweet. Also a metallic chip.
Habitat Woodland edges, thickets, brushy swamps, and gardens.
Nesting 3 or 4 pale green eggs, spotted with red-brown, in a deep cup of twigs, leaves, and plant fibers concealed in a thicket.
Range Resident in eastern United States and southern Canada (locally) south to Gulf Coast, and from southern California, Arizona, and southern Texas southward.
Discussion This species, named after the red robes worn by Roman Catholic cardinals, has extended its range northward into southern Canada in recent decades. Cardinals are aggressive birds that occupy territories year-round. Both sexes are accomplished songsters and may be heard at any time of year, rather than just in the spring when most other birds are singing. Seeds form a main part of the diet, although insects are eaten in the breeding season. These birds often come to feeders in winter.

cardinal
 
State Flower

Goldenrod

Solidago odora

Description A smooth, tall, anise-scented plant bearing crowded, cylindrical clusters of yellow flower heads along one side of slightly arching branches.
Flowers: Head about 1/8" (4 mm) long.
Leaves: 1-4" (2.5-10 cm) long, smooth, narrow, stalkless, with small, translucent dots.
Height: 2-3' (60-90 cm).

Flower July-September.

Habitat Dry fields and open woods.

Range Nova Scotia; New Hampshire and Vermont south to Florida, west to Texas, and north to Missouri, Kentucky, and Ohio.

Discussion The crushed leaves of Sweet Goldenrod give off an anise scent that readily identifies this widespread species. A tea can be brewed from its leaves and dried flowers.


gr
 
State Fish

Kentucky Spotted Bass

Description

Micropterus is
Greek meaning "small fin". The species epithet punctulatus, Latin for "dotted," refers to rows of dark spots on the lower sides. Coloration is similar to that of Guadalupe bass, but does not extend as low on the body.
Biology

Spotted bass seem to be segregated by habitat type from closely related species. They tend to be found in areas with more current than largemouth bass, and they usually inhabit areas that are too warm, turbid, and sluggish for smallmouth bass. Although a large proportion reach maturity within a year, spotted bass found in spawning areas are usually three to four years old. Rock and gravel are usually chosen as suitable spawning areas at water temperatures of 57-74°F. Nest depths may vary widely. Females may lay between 1,150 and 47,000 eggs. Males guard the eggs during incubation and for up to four weeks after they have hatched. As young fish grow their diet shifts from zooplankton to insects, and finally to fish and crayfish.
Range
Spotted bass are distributed throughout the Ohio River basin as well as the central and lower Mississippi River basin. The species may be found in Gulf Coast states from Texas east to Florida. Spotted bass are native to portions of East Texas from the Guadalupe River to the Red River.

bass
 
State Tree

Tulip Tree

Liriodendron tulipifera
Yellow Poplar

Description One of the tallest and most beautiful eastern hardwoods, with a long, straight trunk, a narrow crown that spreads with age, and large showy flowers resembling tulips or lilies.
Height: 80-120' (24-37 m).
Diameter: 2-3' (0.6-0.9 m), sometimes much larger.
Leaves: 3-6" (7.5-15 cm) long and wide. Blades of unusual shape, with broad tip and base nearly straight like a square, and with 4 or sometimes 6 short-pointed paired lobes; hairless; long-stalked. Shiny dark green above, paler beneath; turning yellow in autumn.
Bark: dark gray; becoming thick and deeply furrowed.
Twigs: brown, stout, hairless, with ring scars at nodes.
Flowers: 1 1/2-2" (4-5 cm) long and wide; cup-shaped, with 6 rounded green petals (orange at base); solitary and upright at end of leafy twig; in spring.
Fruit: 2 1/2-3" (6-7.5 cm) long; conelike; light brown; composed of many overlapping 1- or 2-seeded nutlets 1-1 1/2" (2.5-4 cm) long (including narrow wing); shedding from upright axis in autumn; the axis persistent in winter.
Habitat Moist well-drained soils, especially valleys and slopes; often in pure stands.
Range Extreme S. Ontario east to Vermont and Rhode Island, south to N. Florida, west to Louisiana, and north to S. Michigan; to 1000' (305 m) in north and to 4500' (1372 m) in southern Appalachians.
Discussion Introduced into Europe from Virginia by the earliest colonists and grown also on the Pacific Coast. Very tall trees with massive trunks existed in the primeval forests but were cut for the valuable soft wood. Pioneers hollowed out a single log to make a long, lightweight canoe. One of the chief commercial hardwoods, Yellow Poplar is used for furniture, as well as for crates, toys, musical instruments, and pulpwood.


tulip
 


State Game Animal

Eastern Gray Squirrel

Sciurus carolinensis



Description Gray above, with buff underfur showing especially on head, shoulders, back, and feet; underparts paler gray. Flattened tail bushy, gray with silvery-tipped hairs. In Canada, some have rufous bellies and tails. Black phase common in northern parts of range. L 17–19 3/4" (430–500 mm); T 8 1/4–9 3/8" (210–240 mm); HF 2 3/8"–2 3/4" (60–70 mm); Wt 14 1/8–25 oz (400–710 g).
Similar Species Eastern Fox Squirrel is larger and has orange- or yellow-tipped tail hairs.
Breeding 1 litter of 2 or 3 young born in spring; second litter born in late summer. Gestation about 44 days.
Habitat Hardwood or mixed forests with nut trees, especially oak-hickory forests.
Range Eastern U.S. east of s Manitoba, e North Dakota, most of Iowa, e Kansas, e Oklahoma, and e Texas. This species has also been introduced to many locations outside of its native range including San Francisco CA and Seattle WA.
Discussion Especially active in morning and evening, the Eastern Gray Squirrel is abroad all year, even digging through snow in intense cold to retrieve buried nuts. The only large squirrel in much of the northeastern U.S., it feeds especially heavily on hickory nuts, beechnuts, acorns, and walnuts. It does not cache nuts where it finds them, but carries them to a new spot, burying each nut individually in a hole dug with the forefeet and then tamped down with the forefeet, hindfeet, and nose. Most nuts are buried at the surface, with few more than 1/4 inch (6–8 mm) below the ground. In this fashion, many trees are propagated, although the animal may nip off the germinating end of the nut before burying it, which prevents germination. About 85 percent of the nuts may be recovered. Nuts buried by scientists conducting an experiment were recovered by the squirrels at about the same rate as nuts they buried themselves, indicating that memory is not involved in nut recovery. This squirrel can smell buried nuts under a foot of snow; when snow is deep, the squirrel tunnels under it to get closer to the scent. Besides nuts, the Eastern Gray Squirrel feeds on a great number of other items as available, including maple buds, bark, and samaras, tulip tree blossoms, apples, fungi, and a wide variety of seeds, as well as the occasional insect. These squirrels are ever on the move about their home ranges, so are always abreast of the many potential food items. They usually feed on just one food at a time, changing the item as additional sources come along. Buried nuts and other items are the mainstays in winter and in spring, but other foods are heavily consumed as they ripen. There is a great increase of activity in fall, when the squirrels spend most of their time cutting and burying nuts. Sometimes there is a rain of nuts on the forest floor, especially when the animals cut white oak acorns. The Eastern Gray Squirrel dens in trees year-round, using either natural cavities, old woodpecker holes, or leaf nests in stout mature trees or standing dead ones, especially white oaks, beeches, elms, and red maples. Tree cavities must be at least 12 inches (300 mm) deep and have an opening at least 3 inches (75 mm) in diameter. Both males and females build winter nests and more loosely constructed summer nests, which are likely to be near dens but are not always in the same trees. Rough population estimates have been made by assuming one and one-half leaf nests per squirrel. Leaf nests are difficult to spot in summer because they are made of green leaves, but nests are very obvious in winter. The more permanent nests are woven together well to weather the elements. Extremely ramshackle nests may have been damaged by the elements but are likely to have been built by juveniles or as temporary shelters near corn or other attractive crops. The Eastern Gray Squirrel mates in midwinter; a mating "chase" is often involved, with several males following a female as she moves about during the day. Frequently the spring litter of young is born in a tree cavity, while the second, late-summer litter is born in a leaf nest. Females often move their litters back and forth between cavity dens and leaf nests, perhaps because of changes in the weather or to escape predation or parasite infestation. The young are weaned in about 50 days. The second litter stays with the female over the winter. The characteristic aggressive bark of the Eastern Gray Squirrel—que, que, que, que—is usually accompanied by flicks of the tail. It makes other calls as well, including a loud, nasal cry. This animal’s tail is used primarily for balance in trees, but serves as a sunshade, an umbrella, a blanket, and a rudder when swimming; it gives lift when the squirrel leaps from branch to branch and slows descent should the squirrel fall. Overpopulation may trigger major migrations of this squirrel species. In the early 19th century, when vast tracts of the East were covered by dense hardwood forest, observers reported migrations in which squirrels never touched ground but moved great distances from tree to tree. A major migration of thousands of squirrels took place in October 1968 in Tennessee, Georgia, and North Carolina. This movement was attributed to substantial nut production and a high reproduction rate in 1967, followed by a late frost and little nut production in 1968. Black and gray phases of this species often are found together, leading some to think they are two different species. There are albino colonies in Olney, Illinois; Trenton, New Jersey; and Greenwood, South Carolina.


squirrel
 
State Butterfly

Viceroy

Limenitis archippus



Description 2 5/8-3" (67-76 mm). Above and below, rich, russet-orange with black veins, a black line usually curving across HW, white-spotted black borders, and white spots surrounded by black in diagonal band across FW tip. Color ranges from pale tawny in Great Basin to deep, mahogany-brown in Florida.
Similar Species Monarch and female Mimic, Queen, and Tropic Queen lack blue line across HW.
Life Cycle Egg compressed oval. Caterpillar, 1-1/4" (25-32 mm), mottled brown or olive with saddle-shaped patch on back; fore parts humped; 2 bristles behind head. Chrysalis, to 7/8" (22 mm), also brown and cream-colored with brown, rounded disk projecting from back. Willows (Salix) are preferred host plants but also poplars and aspens (Populus), apples (Malus), and cherries and plums (Prunus).
Flight 2, 3, or more broods depending upon latitude; April-September in middle latitudes, later in South. Sometimes a distinct gap between broods, with no adults for some weeks in mid- to late summer.
Habitat Canals, riversides, marshes, meadows, wood edges, roadsides, lakeshores, and deltas.
Range North America south of Hudson Bay, from Great Basin eastward, and west to eastern parts of Pacific States.
Discussion In each life stage, the Viceroy seeks protection through a different ruse. The egg blends with the numerous galls that afflict the willow leaves upon which it is laid. Hibernating caterpillars hide themselves in bits of leaves they have attached to a twig. The mature caterpillar looks mildly fearsome with its hunched and horned foreparts. Even most birds pass over the chrysalis, thinking it is a bird dropping. The adult, famed as a paramount mimic, resembles the distasteful Monarch. Since birds learn to eschew Monarchs, they also avoid the look-alike Viceroy. Southern populations of Viceroys mimic the much deeper chestnut-colored Queen instead. In flight, the Viceroy flaps frenetically in between brief glides.


viceroy




Previous Natural States
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Idaho
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
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New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
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Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Washington
West Virginia


Previous Natural Provinces
Alberta
British Columbia
Manitoba
New Brunswick
Newfoundland
Northwest Territories
Ontario
Prince Edward Island
Quebec
Saskatchewan
Yukon Territory
 
What???????

No Kentucky Blue Grass?
No Kentucky (Derby) Horse?
No Kentucky Woman? :p

Thank you very much, Olena!!! :flower3:
 


Well, there is no official grass. Kentucky does have an official soil and fossil though. The official horse is the Thoroughbred.
 
I love Cardinals. Thanks for the great photos and info, Heather.
 

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