~The Natural State~......NORTH CAROLINA

olena

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

Highbush Blueberry

Vaccinium corymbosum



Description A multi-stemmed shrub with green, or often red, twigs and terminal clusters of small, urn-shaped white flowers.
Flowers: 1/4-1/2" (6-13 mm) long; corolla 5-toothed.
Leaves: 1 1/2-3" (3.8-7.5 cm) long; elliptic, entire, smooth above but usually somewhat hairy beneath.
Fruit: blue berry with whitish bloom.
Height: 5-15' (1.5-4.5 m).
Flowering: Flowers, May-June; fruit June-August.
Habitat Swamps or dry upland woods.
Range Quebec to Nova Scotia; south to Georgia; west to Alabama, north to Wisconsin.
Discussion Cultivated blueberries have been derived from the tall-growing shrub. It is often found in wet areas, but closely related growths occur in dry sites. These plants are very important to wildlife: their berries are relished by songbirds, game birds, bear, and small mammals; the twigs and foliage are eaten by deer and rabbits. Because of their food value and spectacular red fall foliage, these shrubs are excellent for naturalized landscaping.


berry
 
State Reptile

Eastern Box Turtle

Terrapene carolina


Description 4-8 1/2" (10-21.6 cm). Terrestrial. Movable plastron hinge allows lower shell to close tightly against carapace. Carapace high-domed and keeled; variable in color and pattern. Plastron often as long as carapace; tan to dark brown, yellow, orange, or olive; patternless or with some dark blotching. Males usually have red eyes and depression in rear portion of plastron; females have yellowish-brown eyes.
Subspecies Eastern (T. c. carolina), carapace brightly marked, 4 toes on hind feet; s. Maine south to Georgia, west to Michigan, Illinois, and Tennessee.
Gulf Coast (T. c. major), largest ssp., not brightly marked, rear margin of carapace noticeably flared, 4 toes on hind feet; coastal plain from Florida panhandle to Louisiana.
Three-toed (T. c. triunguis), carapace tan or olive with obscure pattern, head and front legs orange-spotted, usually 3 toes on hind feet; Missouri south to Alabama and Texas.
Florida (T. c. bauri), carapace brightly patterned with radiating lines, side of head with 2 stripes, usually 3 toes on hind feet; peninsular Florida and Keys.
Breeding Nests May to July. Lays 3-8 elliptical, thin-shelled eggs, averaging about 1 3/8" (35 mm), in a 3-4" (76-102 mm) deep flask-shaped cavity. Hatchlings sometimes overwinter in the nest. Females are capable of storing sperm and can produce fertile eggs for several years after a single mating. Mature in 5 to 7 years.
Habitat Moist forested areas, but also wet meadows, pastures, and floodplains.
Range S. Maine south to Florida Keys and west to Michigan, s. Illinois, Missouri, and e. Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. Isolated population in extreme se. Wisconsin.
Discussion Box Turtles are usually seen early in the day, or after rain; they often retire to swampy areas during the hot summer months. They are fond of slugs, earthworms, wild strawberries, and mushrooms poisonous to man - which habit has killed many a human who has eaten their flesh. New York Indians are responsible for eliminating this turtle from much of the area between Ohio and New England; they ate Box Turtle meat, used the shells for ceremonial rattles, and buried turtles with the dead. A few specimens are known to have lived more than 100 years, having served as "living records," with fathers then sons carving their names or other family records on the shell. If habitat conditions remain constant, a Box Turtle may spend its life in an area scarcely larger than a football field.

turtle


Here is a pic of the Box Turtle that was mesting in my garden last year.
DSC01918.JPG
 
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 Salt Water Fish

Red Drum

Sciaenops ocellatus

Redfish/Channel Bass

Description To 5' (1.5 m); 90 lbs (41 kg). Elongate, moderately compressed, ventral profile nearly straight; iridescent silvery gray, copper, bronze, or reddish; 1 or more large, black, ocellated spots on caudal peduncle; dorsal and caudal fins dusky; anal and pelvic fins pale. Snout conical; mouth horizontal, inferior; maxilla reaches back of eye; no chin barbels; preopercular margin smooth. Third and fourth dorsal spines longest; caudal fin truncate in adults. Lateral line extends to tip of caudal fin; scales large, ctenoid.
Habitat Surf zone to offshore waters, depending on season and age of individuals; also occasionally enters fresh water.
Range Along coast from New York to Florida, west to Laguna Madre, Mexico. Most abundant from Florida to Texas.
Discussion Red Drums run in schools during their spring and fall migrations, which makes them popular with anglers. Large specimens, usually much smaller than 5' (1.5 m), are called "bullreds," small ones "ratreds." They migrate in response to temperature, salinity, and food availability.


drum
 


State Floral Emblem and Tree

Flowering Dogwood

Cornus florida

Description A lovely, small, flowering tree with short trunk and crown of spreading or nearly horizontal branches.
Height: 30' (9 m).
Diameter: 8" (20 cm).
Leaves: opposite; 2 1/2-5" (6-13 cm) long, 1 1/2-2 1/2" (4-6 cm) wide. Elliptical; edges slightly wavy, appearing not toothed but with tiny teeth visible under a lens; 6-7 long curved veins on each side of midvein; short-stalked. Green and nearly hairless above, paler and covered with fine hairs beneath; turning bright red above in autumn.
Bark: dark reddish-brown; rough, broken into small square plates.
Twigs: green or reddish, slender, becoming hairless.
Flowers: 3/16" (5 mm) wide; with 4 yellowish-green petals; many of these tiny flowers tightly crowded in a head 3/4" (19 mm) wide, bordered by 4 large broadly elliptical white petal-like bracts (pink in some cultivated varieties) 1 1/2-2" (4-5 cm) long; in early spring before leaves. The flower heads (with bracts) 3-4" (7.5-10 cm) across are commonly called flowers.
Fruit: 3/8-5/8" (10-15 mm) long; berrylike, elliptical, shiny red; several at end of long stalk; thin mealy bitter pulp; stone containing 1-2 seeds; maturing in autumn.
Habitat Both moist and dry soils of valleys and uplands in understory of hardwood forests; also in old fields and along roadsides.
Range S. Ontario east to SW. Maine, south to N. Florida, west to central Texas, and north to central Michigan; to 4000' (1219 m), almost 5000' (1524 m) in southern Appalachians.
Discussion Flowering Dogwood is one of the most beautiful eastern North American trees with showy early spring flowers, red fruit, and scarlet autumn foliage. The hard wood is extremely shock-resistant and useful for making weaving-shuttles. It is also made into spools, small pulleys, mallet heads, and jeweler's blocks. Indians used the aromatic bark and roots as a remedy for malaria and extracted a red dye from the roots.

dogwood
 
State Insect

Honey Bee

Apis mellifera
Description Male drone 5/8" (15-17 mm); queen 3/4" (18-20 mm); sterile female worker 3/8-5/8" (10-15 mm). Drone more robust with largest compound eyes; queen elongate with smallest compound eyes and larger abdomen; worker smallest. All mostly reddish brown and black with paler, usually orange-yellow rings on abdomen. Head, antennae, legs almost black with short, pale erect hair densest on thorax, least on abdomen. Wings translucent. Pollen basket on hind tibia.
Food Adult drinks nectar and eats honey. Larva feeds on honey and royal jelly, a white paste secreted by workers.
Life Cycle Complex social behavior centers on maintaining queen for full lifespan, usually 2 or 3 years, sometimes up to 5. Queen lays eggs at intervals, producing a colony of 60,000-80,000 workers, which collect, produce, and distribute honey and maintain hive. Workers feed royal jelly to queen continuously and to all larvae for first 3 days; then only queen larvae continue eating royal jelly while other larvae are fed bee bread, a mixture of honey and pollen. By passing food mixed with saliva to one another, members of hive have chemical bond. New queens are produced in late spring and early summer; old queen then departs with a swarm of workers to found new colony. About a day later the first new queen emerges, kills other new queens, and sets out for a few days of orientation flights. In 3-16 days queen again leaves hive to mate, sometimes mating with several drones before returning to hive. Drones die after mating; unmated drones are denied food and die.
Habitat Hives in hollow trees and hives kept by beekeepers. Workers visit flowers of many kinds in meadows, open woods, and gardens.
Range Worldwide.
Discussion Settlers brought the Honey Bee to North America in the 17th century. Today these bees are used to pollinate crops and produce honey. They are frequently seen swarming around tree limbs. Honey Bees are distinguished from bumble bees and bees in other families mostly by wing venation.

honeybee
 
Longleaf Pine
Pinus palustris


Description Large tree with the longest needles and largest cones of any eastern pine and an open, irregular crown of a few spreading branches, 1 row added each year.
Height: 80-100' (24-30 m).
Diameter: 2-2 1/2' (0.6-0.8 m).
Needles: evergreen; mostly 10-15" (25-38 cm) long, on small plants to 18" (46 cm). Densely crowded, 3 in bundle; slightly stout, flexible; spreading to drooping; dark green.
Bark: orange-brown, furrowed into scaly plates; on small trunks, gray and rough.
Twigs: dark brown; very stout, ending in large white bud.
Cones: 6-10" (15-25 cm) long; narrowly conical or cylindrical; dull brown; almost stalkless; opening and shedding at maturity; cone-scales raised, keeled, with small prickle.
Habitat Well-drained sandy soils of flatlands and sandhills; often in pure stands.
Range Coastal Plain from SE. Virginia to E. Florida, and west to E. Texas. Usually below 600' (183 m); to 2000' (610 m) in foothills of Piedmont.
Discussion Longleaf Pine is a leading world producer of naval stores. The trees are tapped for turpentine and resin and then logged for construction lumber, poles and pilings, and pulpwood. Frequent fires caused by man or by lightning have perpetuated subclimax, pure stands of this species. The seedlings pass through a "grass" stage for a few years, in which the stem grows in thickness rather than height and the taproot develops rapidly. Later, the elongating, unbranched stem produces very long needles.

llp
 


state Fruit

Muscadine

Vitis rotundifolia



Description Muscadine is a vigorous, high-climbing or prostrate, deciduous vine, sometimes reaching lengths in excess of 90 ft. Large leaves are round and shiny with broad, blunt teeth. Shiny, purple-black to bronze berries ripen in Sept. and Oct. and fall promptly. The bark of this wild grape is not exfoliating.
Habitat Open woods.
Range Florida to e. Texas, north to Maryland and Missouri.
Discussion The berries make good jelly.



grape
 
State Dog

Plott Hound

Description:
Sleek and agile, the long eared plott hound is a muscular streamlined dog. Plott hounds have webbed toes and well muscled thighs. They have inquisitive eyes and their long tail is held high when they are excited.
Country of Origin: US
Height: 20-24 inches (51-61 cm.)
Weight: 45-55 pounds (20-25 kg.)
Colors: Plott Hounds come in a variety of colors including various shades of brindle mixed with: yellow, buckskin, tan, brown, chocolate, liver, orange, red, light or dark gray, blue or Maltese, dilute black, and black. Solid black, any shade of brindle, with black saddle, and black with brindle trim. Also red fawn, sandy red, light cream, and yellow ochre, to dark fawn and golden tan.
Coat: The short harsh coat of the Plott hound requires weekly brushing. The plott hound's feet and coat should be checked after hunting for signs of tears, ripped nails or fleas.
Temperament: Eager to please, intelligent and willing, the Plott Hound was originally and is still bred as a hunting dog. This dexterous, determined and agile breed is loving and excellent with children. Plotthounds drool and slobber but are extremely courageous and have a distinct high pitched bark.
Life Expectancy: About 12-14 years.
Living Environment: Plott Hounds are bred for hunting and tracking and therefore are not suited for indoor life. They require plenty of exercise and may wander. This breed can sleep outdoors.


hound
 
State Shell

Scotch Bonnet

Phalium granulatum



Description 1-3 5/8" (2.5-9.2 cm) high. Broadly ovate; pale yellowish-white to white, with 3 or more spiral rows of squarish, reddish-brown to reddish-yellow spots. Axial grooves usually present, which may result in a beaded or checkered appearance, especially on spire whorls and upper part of body whorl. Body whorl large, convex, often with spiral grooves, sometimes smooth. Parietal wall usually covered by a callus, which extends over lower columella area as a freestanding, roughened shield. Outer lip usually thickened and with teeth.
Habitat On sand in shallow water.
Range North Carolina to Texas and Brazil.
Discussion Large numbers of these shells may be tossed up on our beaches after storms or long periods of strong winds blowing toward shore. Because this species is quite variable, numerous names have been given to the varieties that at some time or another have been considered distinct species or subspecies. The female deposits egg capsules that resemble elevated, round towers; she sits on them as she lays the eggs. The Scotch Bonnet is the official state shell of North Carolina.


bonnet
 
State Mammal

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 Red Berry

Wild Strawberry

Fragaria virginiana

Virginia Strawberry

Description This low perennial forms runners and produces several small, white flowers and long-stalked, 3-parted basal leaves.
Flowers: 3/4" (2 cm) wide; sepals 5; petals 5, roundish; stamens many, numerous; pistils many, on a dome-like structure.
Leaves: leaflets 1-1 1/2" (2.5-3.8 cm) long, toothed, and with hairy stalks.
Fruit: dry, seed-like, sunken within enlarged, fleshy cone--the "strawberry."
Height: creeper, with flower stalk 3-6" (7.5-15 cm) high.
Flower April-June.
Habitat Open fields, edges of woods.
Range Throughout North America, except Arctic islands and Greenland.
Discussion Found in patches in fields and dry openings, this plant produces the finest, sweetest, wild strawberry. The edible portion of the strawberry is actually the central portion of the flower (receptacle) which enlarges greatly with maturity and is covered with the embedded, dried, seed-like fruit. Cultivated Strawberries are hybrids developed from this native species and the South American one. The similar Wood Strawberry (F. vesca) has seed-like fruit on the surface, not embedded, and sepals that point backwards.


sberry





Previous Natural States
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Delaware
Florida
Idaho
Iowa
Kansas
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Mississippi
Montana
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Rhode Island
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Washington
West Virginia


Previous Natural Provinces
Alberta
British Columbia
Manitoba
New Brunswick
Northwest Territories
Ontario
Prince Edward Island
Quebec
 
Wow Olena - You are really doing a wonderful job with these informational postings! Thank you so much. :D
 
North Carolina has many natural symbols. They have an official Red and Blue berry. I love the State fruit though. Muscadine jelly is heavenly on a hot, buttered biscuit or toasted PB&J.....:D

There aren't too many states with official dogs though.
 
An official dog? Wow...bow wow! Very cool! :teeth:

I love blueberries, strawberries, but I've never had muscadine anything! Sounds yummy. :)

We have a pair of cardinals hanging around in our yard. I love seeing them splashing in the birdbath! :)

Great garden turtle pic!

Another great post Olena, thank you very much! :) :)
 
How interesting that this state has a "state dog". I've never heard of a Plott Hound.

Thanks for doing these wonderful essays for us, Heather.

Katholyn
 
Thanks, Kath! It's great to see you back....:D
 

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