~The Natural State~......SOUTH CAROLINA

olena

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

Carolina Wolf Spider

Lycosa carolinensis


Description
Male 3/4" (18-20 mm), female 7/8-1 3/8" (22-35 mm). Cephalothorax gray-brown. Abdomen may have darker stripe along midline. Female has sparse covering of gray hair; somewhat paler in male.
Food
Insects.
Life Cycle
Female digs a burrow 6-8" (150-203 mm) deep, often with a high rim around the entrance. Female often produces more than 1 egg sac, which gradually darkens from satiny white to earth color before spiderlings emerge. Female guards egg sacs in burrow but does not interfere with spiderlings as they emerge and disperse.
Habitat
Open fields on the ground.
Range
Throughout the United States and southern Canada.
Discussion
The Carolina Wolf Spider is the largest wolf spider in North America. It hunts almost exclusively at night.


spider
 
State Bird

Carolina Wren

Thryothorus ludovicianus

Description

5 1/2" (14 cm). Rich brown above, buff below, with conspicuous white eyebrow.
Voice

Loud whistled tweedle-tweedle-tweedle or tea-kettle, tea-kettle, tea-kettle tea, sung all day long in all seasons.
Habitat

Woodland thickets, ravines, and rocky slopes covered with brush.
Nesting

5 brown-spotted whitish eggs in a feather-lined, domed stick nest with an entrance on the side. The nest is placed in stone walls, hollow tree stumps, tin cans, mail boxes, birdhouses, and even coat pockets on clotheslines.
Range

Resident in southeastern United States, north to Wisconsin and Michigan, southern Ontario, New York, and southern New England.
Discussion

These wrens do not migrate. At the northern edge of their range they increase in mild years, but a severe cold season with heavy snows will often decimate their numbers. They live in thickets and swamps, frequenting brush piles and old wooden buildings.


wren
 
State Grass

Yellow Indian Grass

Sorghastrum nutans (Sorghastrum avenaceum)

Indian Grass

Description A tall, loosely tufted grass with spikelets forming shiny, golden-brown, plumelike masses on tall stems.
Flowers: tiny, lacking petals; stamens 3, with prominent, yellow anthers protruding; styles 2. Flowers enclosed in hairy scales, with a long, slender, twisted bristle projecting. Scales grouped into spikelets up to 1/3” (8 mm) long; spikelets in a narrow cluster to 10” (25 cm) long.
Leaves: blades to 2’ (60 cm) long, 1/2” (1.3 cm) wide; projecting from the stem at a 458 angle.
Height: 3—8’ (90—240 cm).
Flower August—September
Habitat Prairies; dry fields.
Range S. Ontario and Quebec; south through New England to Florida; west to Texas; north to North Dakota, Wyoming, and Manitoba.
Discussion This is a beautiful grass with a somewhat metallic golden sheen to its flowering parts. It is an important associate in the tallgrass prairies and is relished by livestock. It appears to be favored by occasional flooding and repeated burning and sometimes forms nearly pure stands in the lowlands.


grass
 
State Flower

Yellow Jessamine

Gelsemium sempervirens

Evening Trumpet-flower, Carolina Jessamine

Description
A woody vine with short, axillary clusters of very fragrant, yellow, trumpet-shaped flowers.
Flowers: about 1" (2.5 cm) wide at the flaring mouth and 1 1/2" (3.8 cm) long; corolla 5-lobed. Bloom January-April.
Leaves: 1-4" (2.5-10 cm) long; evergreen, opposite, untoothed, lanceolate, margins rolled.
Fruit: oblong capsule.
Height: vine, with stem to 17' (5.1 m) long.
Habitat
Thickets, dry woods, sandy areas.
Range
Southeastern Virginia; south to Florida; west to Texas and Arkansas.
Discussion
This high-climbing vine is very common in parts of the South, frequently found in abandoned fields. The flowers, leaves, and roots are poisonous and may be lethal to livestock. Rankin's Yellow Jessamine (G. rankinii), with odorless flowers, occurs in swamps from North Carolina to Florida.


jessamine
 


State Shell

Lettered Olive

Oliva sayana


Description
1 3/4-2 3/4" (4.4-7 cm) high. Elongate, almost cylindrical, smooth, glossy, with a small, pointed, conical spire; grayish or yellowish, with fine, irregular, reddish-brown zigzag markings, which are darker below suture and in 2 broad spiral bands on body whorl; sometimes all orange or white. Spire whorls smooth, flat-sided, flaring out at bottom to a sharp spiral ridge bordering narrow, deep, channeled suture. Body whorl long, slightly convex. Base has a sharp, raised edge bordering low, broad, flat siphonal band. Aperture narrow, wider at base. Parietal wall has a callus with spiral ridges, and a broader, raised callus at base, with about 4 strong, slanting ridges. Siphonal notch broad.
Habitat
In sand, from near low-tide line to water 150' (46 m) deep.
Range
North Carolina to Florida, Texas, and Brazil.
Discussion
This abundant species usually lives just below the surface with only its siphon extended above the sand. It preys on bivalves, especially egg cockles and coquina shells, seizing them and folding them in the hind part of the foot, then carrying them under the sand to digest. Apparently it also feeds on small crustaceans, such as sand crabs (Emerita), since it is often caught on hooks fishermen bait with them. Females release round egg capsules that float about in the water currents for about a week before the young escape.


olive
 
State Reptile

Loggerhead

Caretta caretta

Loggerhead Sea Turtle

Description

31-48" (79-122 cm). Ocean-dwelling, with paddlelike limbs. Carapace elongated and heart-shaped, keeled (3 keels in young), reddish-brown; 5 or more costal scutes, 1st touching nuchal; 3 scutes on bridge. Plastron cream-yellow, with 2 ridges (lost with age). Two pairs of prefrontal scales between eyes. Male's tail extends well beyond shell.
Endangered Status

The Loggerhead is on the U.S. Endangered Species List. It is classified as endangered in Alabama, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, and Virginia. Development of beaches and coastal islands has destroyed many of its nesting sites. Hatchlings, normally attracted to light reflected off the ocean, are sometimes confused by artificial highway lights and crawl toward them, and many are accidentally killed. In the past, many Loggerheads drowned in shrimp nets, but the introduction of turtle excluder devices, which allow them to escape from the nets, have reduced this threat significantly.
Breeding

Nests along Atlantic and Gulf coasts from New Jersey to Texas. At night, from May to August, during periods of high tides, females come ashore on wide, sloping beaches and lay about 125 spherical, 1 5/8" (41 mm) eggs. Hatching takes 7-9 weeks.
Habitat

Coastal bays, lagoons, estuaries, open seas.
Range

Warm waters of Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans. In summer, Atlantic Loggerheads range north to New England (occasionally Newfoundland); Pacific Loggerheads occasionally reache s. California.
Discussion

There are reports of Loggerheads taken in the past weighing 1,000 pounds (455 kg) or more. Such giants are probably gone, now that their numbers have been severely reduced. These sea turtles are omnivorous, their diet including sponges, molluscs, crustaceans, sea urchins, and marine plants.


loggerhead
 
State Insect

Praying Mantis

Mantis religiosa


Description 2-2 1/2" (50-65 mm), including wings, which extend beyond abdominal tip. Green to tan. Compound eyes tan to chocolate-brown, darker at night. Fore coxae bear black-ringed spot beneath, which is lacking in the Chinese Mantis and Carolina Mantis.
Food Diurnal insects, including caterpillars, flies, butterflies, bees, and some moths.
Life Cycle Eggs overwinter in flat mass attached to exposed twigs above snow. They hatch almost simultaneously in late spring. Nymphs are dispersed by wind or eat one another. Survivors are solitary. 1 generation matures in late summer or early autumn.
Habitat Meadows, on foliage and flowers.
Range Eastern United States into Ontario.
Discussion This mantid was accidentally introduced in 1899 on nursery stock from southern Europe. At a time when Gypsy Moth Caterpillars were burgeoning in the eastern states, it was recognized almost immediately as a beneficial predator. However, mantids are so cannibalistic that they are rarely numerous enough to have much effect in depleting caterpillar populations.


mantis
 


State Tree

Cabbage Palmetto

Sabal palmetto

Cabbage Palm, Swamp Cabbage

Description Medium-sized, spineless, evergreen palm with stout, unbranched trunk and very large, fan-shaped leaves spreading around top.
Height: 30-50' (9-15 m) or more.
Diameter: 1 1/2' (0.5 m).
Leaves: 4-7' (1.2-2.1 m) long and nearly as broad. Folded into many long, narrow segments; long-pointed and drooping; coarse, stiff, and leathery; splitting apart nearly to the stout midrib; with threadlike fibers separating at edges; shiny dark green. Very stout, stiff leafstalks 5-8' (1.5-2.4 m) long; green, ridged above, with long, fibrous, shiny brown sheath at wedge-shaped base, which splits and hangs down with age.
Trunk: gray-brown; rough or ridged.
Flowers: 3/16" (5 mm) long; with deeply 6-lobed whitish corolla; fragrant; nearly stalkless; in curved or drooping, much-branched clusters arising from leaf bases; in early summer.
Fruit: 3/8" (10 mm) in diameter; nearly round berries; shiny black; with thin, sweet, dry flesh; 1-seeded; maturing in autumn.
Habitat
Sandy shores, crowded in grooves; inland in hammocks.
Range
Near coast from SE. North Carolina to S. and NW. Florida, including Florida Keys.
Discussion
The trunks are used for wharf pilings, docks, and poles. Brushes and whisk brooms are made from young leafstalk fibers, and baskets and hats from the leaf blades. An ornamental and street tree, it is the northernmost New World palm and one of the hardiest. Formerly, plants were killed in order to eat the large leaf buds as a cabbagelike salad. The names are from the Spanish palmito, meaning "small palm."


palm
 
State Amphibian

Spotted Salamander

Ambystoma maculatum


Description
6-9 3/4" (15.2-24.8 cm). Stoutly built, black, blue-black, dark gray, or dark brown above, with 2 irregular rows of round, yellow or orange spots beginning on head and extending to tail tip. Belly slate-gray. Costal grooves, usually 12.
Breeding
March to April in North, January to February in the Great Smokies, December to February in South. Heavy rains and warming temperatures prompt migration to breeding ponds. Female lays 1 or more compact, clear or milky egg masses, 2 1/2-4" (6.4-10.2 cm) in diameter, each containing about 100 eggs, that adhere to submerged branches. Larvae hatch in 1-2 months, are 1/2" (13 mm) long; transform in 2-4 months at 2 1/2" (64 mm).
Habitat
Hardwood forests and hillsides around pools and flooded depression.
Range
South-central Ontario to Nova Scotia, south to Georgia and e. Texas.
Discussion
This species spends most of the time underground, so adults are rarely encountered. Spotted Salamanders often share a breeding pond with Marbled Salamanders; their larvae are commonly seen together. Acid rains have so polluted the water in some Northeast ponds that eggs cannot develop and populations have died out. Developing egg masses turn green from a beneficial algae. May live 20 years.


salamander
 
State Fish

Striped Bass

Morone saxatilis

Description To 6' (1.8 m); 125 lbs (56.7 kg). Elongate, moderately compressed; back olive-green to dark blue, sides silvery, belly white; upper sides with 6-9 dark, uninterrupted stripes; median fins dusky. Mouth large, lower jaw slightly projecting. Teeth small, in bands on jaws, vomer, and palatine bones, and in 2 parallel patches on tongue. Opercle has 2 flat spines near posterior edge. First dorsal fin with 8-10 strong spines, separated from second dorsal by deep notch. Scales extend onto all fin bases except spinous dorsal.
Habitat Inshore over various bottoms; some permanently in fresh water.
Range Atlantic Ocean and associated rivers from St. Lawrence River to St. Johns River, Florida; Appalachicola River, W. Florida, to Lake Ponchartrain, Louisiana. Most abundant from Hudson River to Chesapeake Bay. Widely introduced into rivers and lakes in much of Mississippi River system, Colorado River, and coastal streams in Washington, Oregon, and California.
Discussion The Striped Bass is a very important sport and commercial fish throughout its range, and large individuals are caught by surf fishing, especially on the Atlantic Coast. It is a delicious food fish. It is anadromous, and spawns prolifically in fresh water.

bass
 
State Butterfly

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail

Papilio glaucus

Description 3 1/8-5 1/2" (79-140 mm). Males and some females above and below are yellow with black tiger-stripes across wings and black borders spotted with yellow. Long, black tail on each HW. HW above and below usually has row of blue patches inside margin, with orange spot above and sometimes much orange below, running through yellow. Dark form females are black above with border-spotting of yellow, blue, and orange (blue sometimes becomes cloud on HW), below brown-black with shadowy "tiger" pattern. Yellow spots along outer edge of FW below are separate in all but northernmost populations. Most have orange uppermost spot on outer margin of HW above and below and orange spot on trailing edge.
Similar Species Western Tiger Swallowtail has spots on outer margin of lower FW that run together into band; uppermost spot on border of HW is yellow; blue spots are more violet-tinted. Spicebush Swallowtail is distinguished from dark female Tigers by bluish-green spotting around margins above and orange spot on costa of HW (not outer border).
Life Cycle Yellow-green, globular egg, 1/32" h x 3/64" w (0.8 x 1.2 mm), very large for a butterfly. Young caterpillar brown and white, resembling bird droppings; mature caterpillar, to 2" (51 mm), is green, swollen in front, with big, false, orange and black eyespots and band between 3rd and 4th segments. Mottled green or brown sticklike chrysalis, to 1 1/4" (32 mm), overwinters. Great variety of host plants, mostly broadleaf trees and shrubs; favorites include willows and cottonwoods (Salicaceae), birches (Betulaceae), ashes (Fraxinus), many cherries (Prunus), and tulip-poplars (Liriodendron tulipifera).
Flight 1-3 broods; spring-autumn, actual dates vary with latitude.
Habitat Broadleaf woodland glades, gardens, parks, orchards, and roads and rivers.
Range Central Alaska and Canada to Atlantic; southeast of Rockies to Gulf. Rarer at northern and southern edges of range.
Discussion This species is the most widely distributed tiger swallowtail, and one of the most common and conspicuous butterflies of the East. Alaskan, Canadian, and northeastern butterflies are smaller and paler than those of the eastern states. Feeding in groups, adults take nectar from a wide range of flowers. The black female form has evolved to mimic the distasteful Pipevine Swallowtail; its presence in the population reflects the abundance of the species it mimics.

ts
 
State Wild Game Bird

Wild Turkey

Meleagris gallopavo



Description Male, 48" (1.2 m); female, 36" (91 cm). Unmistakable. Dusky brown, barred with black, with iridescent bronze sheen; head and neck naked, with bluish and reddish wattles; tail fan-shaped, with chestnut, buff, or white tail tips. Male has spurs and long "beard" on breast. Female smaller, lacks spurs and usually "beard." Domestic turkeys similar, but usually tamer and stockier.
Voice Gobbling calls similar to those of domestic turkey.
Habitat Oak woodlands, pine-oak forests.
Nesting 8-15 buff-colored eggs, spotted with brown, in a shallow depression lined with grass and leaves.
Range Resident in much of southern United States from Arizona east, as far north as New England. Introduced to many western states, including California.
Discussion Although the Wild Turkey was well known to American Indians and widely used by them as food, certain tribes considered these birds stupid and cowardly and did not eat them for fear of acquiring these characteristics. By the end of the 19th century, the Wild Turkey had been hunted almost to extinction in much of its original range. Now, with protection, restocking programs, and the return of the mature forests favored by turkeys, this species is making a marked comeback. It is now common in areas where it was totally absent a few decades ago. Turkeys are swift runners and quite wary. They often roost over water because of the added protection that this location offers. They are polygamous, and the male gobbles and struts with tail fanned to attract and hold his harem.


turkey
 
State Animal

White-tailed Deer

Odocoileus virginianus

Description Size varies greatly; a small to medium-size deer. Tan or reddish brown above in summer; grayish brown in winter. Belly, throat, nose band, eye ring, and inside of ears are white. Tail brown, edged with white above, often with dark stripe down center; white below. Black spots on sides of chin. Buck’s antlers have main beam forward, several unbranched tines behind, and a small brow tine; antler spread to 3' (90 cm). Doe rarely has antlers. Fawn spotted. Ht 27–45" (68–114 cm); L 6' 2"–7' (1.88–2.13 m); T 6–13" (15–33 cm); HF 19–20" (47.5–51.2 cm); Wt male 150–310 lb (68–141 kg), female 90–211 lb (41–96 kg).
Endangered Status Two subspecies of the White-tailed Deer are on the U.S. Endangered Species List. The Key Deer is classified as endangered in Florida, and the Columbian White-tailed Deer is classified as endangered in Washington and Oregon. The Key Deer declined in number as more and more of its habitat in the Florida Keys underwent development throughout the 20th century. Development continues to be a threat to the subspecies today. In 1961 the National Key Deer Refuge was established to protect the deer. The population has risen from a possible low of 25 animals in 1955 to about 250 to 300 today. The Columbian White-tailed Deer once ranged from Puget Sound to southern Oregon, where it lived in floodplain and riverside habitat. The conversion of much of its homeland to agriculture and unrestricted hunting reduced its numbers to a just a few hundred in the early 20th century. It now lives in a few scattered populations, and its numbers have climbed to over 6,000. Julia Butler Hansen Refuge for the Columbian Whitetail Deer provides critical habitat for these deer in southern Washington.

Similar Species Mule Deer has antlers with both main beams branching; tail tipped with black.
Breeding Reproductive season varies: first 2 weeks in November in north, January or February in south. 1–3 young born after gestation of about 6 1/2 months.
Habitat Farmlands, brushy areas, woods, and suburbs and gardens.
Range Southern half of southern tier of Canadian provinces; most of U.S., except far Southwest.
Discussion Although primarily nocturnal, the White-tailed Deer may be active at any time. It often moves to feeding areas along established trails, then spreads out to feed. The animal usually beds down near dawn, seeking concealing cover. This species is a good swimmer. The winter coat of the northern deer has hollow hair shafts, which fill with air, making the coat so buoyant that it would be difficult for the animal to sink should it become exhausted while swimming. The White-tailed Deer is also a graceful runner, with top speeds to 36 mph (58 km/h), although it flees to nearby cover rather than run great distances. This deer can make vertical leaps of 8 1/2 feet (2.6 m) and horizontal leaps of 30 feet (9 m). The White-tailed Deer grazes on green plants, including aquatic ones in the summer; eats acorns, beechnuts, and other nuts and corn in the fall; and in winter browses on woody vegetation, including the twigs and buds of viburnum, birch, maple, and many conifers. The four-part stomach allows the deer to feed on items that most other mammals cannot eat. It can obtain nutrients directly from the food, as well as nutrients synthesized by microbes in its digestive system. This deer eats 5 to 9 pounds (2.25–4 kg) of food per day and drinks water from rain, snow, dew, or a water source. When nervous, the White-tailed Deer snorts through its nose and stamps its hooves, a telegraphic signal that alerts other nearby deer to danger. If alarmed, the deer raises, or "flags," its tail, exhibiting a large, bright flash of white; this communicates danger to other deer and helps a fawn follow its mother in flight.There are two types of social grouping: the family group of a doe and her young, which remain together for nearly a year (and sometimes longer), and the buck group. The family group usually disbands just before the next birth, though occasionally two sets of offspring are present for short periods. Bucks are more social than does for most of the year, forming buck groups of three to five individuals; the buck group, which constantly changes and disbands shortly before the fall rut, is structured as a dominance hierarchy. Threat displays include stares, lowered ears, and head-up and head-down postures. Attacks involve kicking and, less commonly, rearing and flailing with the forefeet. Bucks and does herd separately most of the year, but in winter they may gather together, or "yard up." As many as 150 deer may herd in a yard. Yarding keeps the trails open through the movement of large groups of animals, and provides protection from predators. The leadership of the yards is matriarchal. Deer may occupy the same home range year after year, and may defend bedding sites, but otherwise are not territorial. The White-tailed Deer is less polygamous than other deer, and a few bucks mate with only one doe. The extended rutting season begins at about the time the male is losing his velvet, which varies with latitude. At this time, bucks are still in buck groups, and sparring for dominance increases. (Sparring consists of two deer trying to push each other backward.) The buck group then breaks up, and several bucks begin following a doe at a distance of 150 feet (50 m) or so. They follow the doe’s scent; the largest buck stays closest to the female. A buck attempts to dominate other bucks and may mate with several does over the breeding season. He produces "buck rubs" and also "scrapes," revisiting them regularly during the rut; glandular secretions are left on the rubs. Does visit the scrapes and urinate in them; bucks then follow the trails of the does. After the mating season, the doe returns to the subherd until spring (May or June in the North; January to March in the deep South). A young doe bred for the first time usually produces one fawn, but thereafter has twins and occasionally triplets if food is abundant. The female remains near the fawns, returning to feed them only once or twice a day. Twin fawns are separated, which serves to protect them. Weaning occurs between one and two and a half months. Fawns stay with the mother into the fall or winter, sometimes for up to two years, but the doe generally drives off her young of the previous year shortly before giving birth. The Whitetail’s first antlers are usually a single spike (the "spikehorn"). A three-year-old would be expected to have eight points, but there can be more or less, as the number of tines is influenced greatly by nutritional factors. A Whitetail’s age is determined not by the number of tines on its horns but by the wear on its teeth.
Once nearly exterminated in much of the Northeast and Midwest, this deer is now more abundant than ever, owing to hunting restrictions and the decline in number of its predators, wolves and the Mountain Lion. It has become the most plentiful game animal in eastern North America and is even something of a pest in many areas, eating garden plants and contributing to the spread of Lyme disease. Thinning the deer population is best done by hunting both does and bucks, as hunting bucks only alters the herd rather than reducing it.
There are two dwarf subspecies of White-tailed Deer: the Coues’ Deer, or Arizona Whitetail (O. v. couesi), of the Arizona desert, and the Key Deer (O. v. clavium) of the Big Pine Key area in the Florida Keys. The Coues’ Deer, which has somewhat enlarged ears and tail relative to the other Whitetails, reaches a maximum of about 100 pounds (45 kg). The tiny, dog-size Key Deer weighs 45-75 pounds (21-34 kg) or less. Some mammalogists classify the Key Deer as a separate species.

deer




Previous Natural States
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Idaho
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Montana
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Rhode Island
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
 
:eek: :eek: :eek:

They have a state spider? :eek: Seeing that first thing in the morning kind of wakes you up really quickly!! :p

South Carolina certainly makes up for Indianas lack of symbols!

The Yellow Jessamine is lovely!! :)

Thank you, Heather, for another well done and interesting presentation! :) :)
 
The spider does get your attention. I love the turtle though....:D
 
A state spider <i>and</i> a state insect??

Great info, Heather. Thanks for this.

Katholyn
 

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