~The Natural State~.......SOUTH DAKOTA

olena

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

Wheatgrass

Pseudoroegneria spicata (Agropyron spicatum)


Description Grows in large bunches, with stiff, straight flowering stalks; often blue-green.
Flowers: tiny, lacking petals, stamens 3, styles 2, not easily visible; flower clusters flat, arranged in narrow spikes 3 1/2—6” (8—15 cm) long; June—August.
Leaves: long, hairy on upper surface, green or blue-green.
Fruit: a small grain
Height: 20—40” (60—100 cm).
Habitat Dry slopes, plains, open woods.
Range Washington to California, east to Montana, New Mexico, also North and South Dakota.
Discussion A former dominant of the intermountain grasslands, this species is now much diminished in distribution due to competition from Downy Brome and Sagebrush.


wheatgrass
 
State Animal

Coyote

Canis latrans

Description Grizzled gray or orangish gray above, with buff underparts. Long, rusty or yellowish legs with dark vertical line on lower foreleg. Bushy tail with black tip. Ears prominent. Slender, pointed snout. Nose pad to 1" (2.5 cm) wide. Ht 23–26" (58–66 cm); L 3' 5"–4'4" (105–132 cm); T 11 3/4–15 1/4" (30–39 cm); HF 7 1/8–8 5/8" (18–22 cm); Wt 20–40 lb (9.1–18.2 kg); a very large individual may reach 55 lb (25 kg).
Similar Species Gray and Red wolves are larger, with larger nose pads; both hold tail horizontal. "Coydogs," hybrids of Coyote and domestic dog, especially shepherd mixtures, are larger, usually lack dark vertical line on lower foreleg, and have relatively shorter and thicker snouts.
Breeding Mates February–April; 1 litter of 1–19 young born April–May, in a crevice or underground burrow.
Habitat In West, open plains; in East, brushy areas.
Range Generally common throughout e and s Alaska, s and w Canada, and all of w U.S., but has extended its range into entire U.S.
Discussion The Coyote’s scientific name means "barking dog"; its common name comes from coyotl, the name used by Mexico’s Nahuatl Indians. The best runner among the canids, the Coyote cruises normally at 25 to 30 mph (40–50 km/h), getting up to 40 mph (65 km/h) for short distances, and can make 14-foot (4.25 m) leaps. Tagged Coyotes have been known to travel great distances, up to 400 miles (640 km). The Coyote runs with its tail down, unlike the domestic dog (tail up) or wolves (tail straight). In feeding, the Coyote is an opportunist, eating rabbits, mice, ground squirrels, pocket gophers, and other small mammals, as well as birds, frogs, toads, snakes, insects, and many kinds of fruit. Carrion from larger animals, especially deer, is an important food source in winter. The Coyote usually hunts singly, but may combine efforts with one or two others, running in relays to tire prey or waiting in ambush while others chase the quarry toward it. Sometimes an American Badger serves as an involuntary supplier of smaller animals: While it digs for rodents at one end of a burrow, a Coyote waits to pounce on any that emerge from an escape hole at the other end. The Coyote stalks like a pointer, "freezing" before it pounces, and chases down larger prey, such as Snowshoe Hares and cottontails. A strong swimmer, it does not hesitate to enter water after prey. Like most carnivores, Coyotes have maternal dens for raising the young, but do not have permanent homes. The typical den is a wide-mouthed tunnel, 5 to 30 feet (1.5–9 m) long, terminating in an enlarged nesting chamber. The female may dig her own den, take over and enlarge a fox or badger burrow, or use a cave, log, or culvert. If the den area is disturbed, the female will move the pups to a new home. The Coyote may pair for several years or even for life, especially when populations are low. Its vocalizations are varied, but the most distinctive—given at dusk, dawn, or during the night—consists of a series of barks and yelps, followed by a prolonged howl and ending with short, sharp yaps. This call keeps the band alert to the locations of its members and helps to reunite them when separated. One call usually prompts other individuals to join in, resulting in the familiar chorus heard at night in the West (although noticed increasingly in the East, as Coyotes grow in number there). Barking alone, with no howling, seems to be a threat display employed in defense of a den or a kill. Although captive Coyotes have lived for 18 years, and one was known to live in the wild for 14 1/2 years, most individuals probably live only 6 to 8 years. Predators once included Grizzly Bears, Black Bears, Mountain Lions, and wolves, but with declining populations of these animals, they are no longer a threat. Humans are the major enemy, purportedly killing Coyotes to protect livestock, as Coyotes are accused, often unjustly, of killing lambs, pigs, and poultry. In the 1970s and 1980s, Coyote pelts became quite valuable, but since the collapse of the fur industry, there has been little demand for them. Despite years of being trapped, shot, and poisoned, Coyotes have maintained their numbers and continue to increase in the East.

coyote
 
State Agricultural 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
 
State Floral Emblem

American Pasqueflower

Pulsatilla patens (Anemone patens)
Prairie Crocus

Description From a cluster of deeply cut basal leaves rises a silky-hairy stalk with a solitary, blue to purple or white flower above a circle of 3 unstalked leaves with linear segments.
Flowers: about 2 1/2" (6.3 cm) wide; sepals 5-7, petal-like, about 1" (2.5 cm) long; petals absent; stamens numerous; pistils numerous, with long styles.
Leaves: basal to 3" (7.5 cm) long, hairy, palmately divided into segments cut again into narrow divisions; leaves beneath flowers hairy, divided into linear lobes.
Fruit: seed-like, in heads with long, feathery styles.
Height: 6-16" (15-40 cm).
Flower April-June.
Habitat Grasslands.
Range Nw. Canada east to n. Wisconsin and Michigan; south through Illinois and Missouri to Texas; west beyond our range.
Discussion The feathery, silky fruiting head is the distinctive feature of this western grassland species. The common name refers to the Eastertime flowering throughout much of its range.

pasque
 
State Bird

Ring-necked Pheasant

Phasianus colchicus


Description 30-36" (76-91 cm). Larger than a chicken, with a long pointed tail. Male has red eye patch, brilliant green head, and (usually) white neck ring; body patterned in soft brown and iridescent russet. Female mottled sandy brown, with shorter tail.
Voice Loud crowing caw-cawk! followed by a resonant beating of the wings. When alarmed flies off with a loud cackle.
Habitat Farmlands, pastures, and grassy woodland edges.
Nesting 6-15 buff-olive eggs in a grass-lined depression concealed in dense grass or weeds.
Range Introduced from British Columbia, Alberta, Minnesota, Ontario, and Maritime Provinces south to central California, Oklahoma, and Maryland. Native to Asia.
Discussion The North American birds of this species are descended from stock brought from several different parts of the Old World and thus are somewhat variable. They are very tolerant of humans and can get by with a minimum of cover; they often nest on the outskirts of large cities. Although successful in most grassland habitats, this species has its North American headquarters in the central plains. After the breakup of winter flocks, males establish large territories and mate with several females. At first the chicks feed largely on insects but soon shift to the adult diet of berries, seeds, buds, and leaves.

pheasant
 
State Tree

Black Spruce

Picea mariana


Description Tree with open, irregular, conical crown of short, horizontal or slightly drooping branches; a prostrate shrub at timberline.
Height: 20-60' (6-18 m).
Diameter: 4-12" (0.1-0.3 m).
Needles: evergreen; 1/4-5/8" (6-15 cm) long. Stiff, 4-angled, sharp-pointed; spreading on all sides of twig from very short leafstalks; ashy blue-green with whitish lines.
Bark: gray or blackish, thin, scaly; brown beneath; cut surface of inner bark yellowish.
Twigs: brown; slender, hairy, rough, with peglike bases.
Cones: 5/8-1 1/4" (1.5-3 cm), long; egg-shaped or rounded; dull gray; curved downward on short stalk and remaining attached, often clustered near top of crown; cone-scales stiff and brittle, rounded and finely toothed; paired, brown, long-winged seeds.

Habitat Wet soils and bogs including peats, clays, and loams; in coniferous forests; often in pure stands.

Range Across N. North America near northern limit of trees from Alaska and British Columbia east to Labrador, south to N. New Jersey, and west to Minnesota; at 2000-5000' (610-1524 m).

Discussion Black Spruce is one of the most widely distributed conifers in North America. Uses are similar to those of White Spruce; however, the small size limits lumber production. The lowest branches take root by layering when deep snows bend them to the ground, forming a ring of small trees around a large one. Spruce gum and spruce beer were made from this species and Red Spruce.

spruce
 
State Fish

Walleye

Stizostedion vitreum


Description
To 3'5" (1 m); 25 lbs (11.3 kg). Elongate, slightly compressed; olive-brown to brassy greenish-yellow above with dusky to black mottlings, belly whitish with yellow-green tinge. Mouth extends to eye, has canine teeth; preopercle serrate. Dorsal fins separate; first dorsal fin dusky with black edge, black blotch on membranes of last 2-3 spines; caudal fin forked, tip of lower lobe white. Lateral line complete, 82-92 scales.

Habitat
Deep waters of large streams, lakes, and reservoirs over firm sand, gravel, or rocks.
Range
From s. Hudson Bay drainage west to MacKenzie River; south through Great Lakes and Mississippi River system to Arkansas. E. Gulf drainage, Alabama and Mississippi. Widely introduced.

Discussion
The Walleye is the largest North American species in the perch family and one of the most sought sport and food fishes. The largest catch was taken in Old Hickory Lake, Tennessee, in 1960. The Walleye feeds on aquatic insects, crustaceans, amphibians, and almost any available species of fish.


walleye





Previous Natural States
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Idaho
Iowa
Kansas
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Mississippi
Montana
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
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
Saskatchewan
 
Heather, you are so amazing. All of your natural states have been awesome. Thank you for all of the time and energy it has taken to put them all together.
 
Isn't that Pasqueflower amazing? :D
 
Originally posted by olena
Isn't that Pasqueflower amazing? :D

It certainly is!! ::yes:: Lovely....:)

"The Coyote’s scientific name means "barking dog"...I didn't know this, nor did I realize they could have up to 19 (wow!) in a litter! :eek:

We have lots of pheasants up at the cottage. Sometimes you don't even know they're there until you're almost on top of them, and they suddenly fly up. It can scare the heck out of you! They sometimes fly into the windows too...yikes.

Thank you Heather, as always, a wonderful job!! :)

Heather, you should do the CB honours, I have that serious DIS affliction, remember? ;) :teeth:
 
19 in a litter? No wonder she's barking all the time......:teeth:
 

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