~The Natural State~......TENNESSEE

olena

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

Largemouth Bass

Micropterus salmoides


Description To 3'2" (97 cm); 22 1/4 lbs (10.1 kg). Moderately deep, robust; back olive to dark green, mottled; sides greenish yellow with dark midlateral stripe; head greenish gold. Mouth large, extends beyond posterior edge of eye. 14-15 pectoral soft rays; median fins olive; dorsal fins almost separate, 10 spines, 12-13 soft rays, 3 anal fin spines, 11 soft rays. Lateral line complete, 59-77 scales; 7-9 scale rows above lateral line, 14-17 below; no scales on bases of soft dorsal and anal fins; 24-28 caudal peduncle scale rows.
Habitat Quiet, clear to slightly turbid streams, ponds, lakes, and reservoirs, often with vegetation.
Range S. Ontario south through Great Lakes, Mississippi River system, and Coastal Plain from N. North Carolina to Texas and NE. Mexico. Also introduced throughout S. Canada and United States.
Discussion The Largemouth Bass, one of the most highly sought sport fishes in the United States, is caught with live and artificial bait. It is more tolerant of warm water than the Smallmouth Bass, but at higher temperatures it becomes less active. Adults feed primarily on other fishes. The average life span is about 16 years.


bass
 
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 Commercial Fish

Channel Catfish

Ictalurus punctatus


Description To 3'11" (1.2 m); 58 lbs (26.3 kg). Slender; back blue-gray; sides light blue to silvery with scattered dark olive to black spots; belly white; fins olive to dusky. Head wide, flat to slightly rounded above; eyes large, above midline of head; upper jaw overhangs lower; 4 pairs of barbels. Adipose fin present; outer edge of anal fin rounded, 24-31 rays; caudal fin deeply forked.
Related Species Headwater Catfish (I. lupus) has shorter pectoral fin spine; 22-27 anal fin rays; caudal fin less deeply forked; found in Pecos River drainage in S. and W. Texas, and E. New Mexico. Spotted Bullhead (I. serracanthus) has pale yellow spots, shorter anal fin, caudal fin shallowly notched; occurs in deep holes or large streams over firm bottom from SW. Georgia to N. central Florida.
Habitat Rivers and large creeks in slow to moderate current over sand, gravel, or rocks; ponds, lakes, reservoirs.
Range S. Quebec west to S. Alberta; central and E. central United States. Widely introduced.
Discussion The Channel Catfish, a very popular sport and food fish, is harvested commercially in some areas. It is the principal catfish reared in aquaculture.


catfish
 
State Insect #1

Pyralis Firefly

Photinus pyralis
Lightning Bug

Description 3/8-1/2" (10-14 mm). Head concealed from above by rounded front of pronotum. Pronotum is rosy pink with dull yellow edges and black spot in center. Elytra are mostly blackish brown with dull yellow on sides and down middle. Both sexes have flashing yellow light, smaller in female, which does not fly.
Food Adult eats nothing. Larva feeds on insect larvae, slugs and snails.
Life Cycle Eggs are left on damp soil. Larvae overwinter at end of 1st and 2nd year, then pupate in chambers in moist soil.
Habitat Meadows.
Range East of the Rocky Mountains.
Discussion This species is named after a fly fabled for rising from the fire. The smaller Scintillating Firefly (P. scintillans), 1/4-3/8" (5-10 mm), is yellow and pink and has a large black spot on its pronotum. It is found from New England to Kansas and Texas.


firefly
 


State Insect #2

Convergent Lady Beetle

Hippodamia convergens


Description 1/4-3/8" (6-8 mm). Oval, convex above. Pronotum black with white border and 2 converging white stripes. Elytra are red or orange with 13 black spots (1 spot at scutellum and 6 on each elytron); sometimes spots are enlarged to form 3 transverse bands. Larva is velvety black with 8 orange spots. Pupa is black with red spots.
Food Aphids and other small insects.
Life Cycle Female may lay up to 500 eggs during a lifespan of a few months; clusters of 5-30 eggs are attached on leaves and twigs. Larvae feed, then pupate attached by the back end to some support. Many generations a year, if food supply is good.
Habitat Woods, meadows, and gardens.
Range Throughout North America.
Discussion Large numbers of ladybugs occasionally find their way into houses in autumn looking for places to spend the winter. In the West huge swarms fly into mountain canyons, overwinter under leaves, and return to valleys in the spring. Overwintering beetles are sometimes purchased by mail and freed near crops that are vulnerable to aphids.


ladybug
 
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 Bird

Northern Mockingbird

Mimus polyglottos

Description 9-11" (23-28 cm). Robin-sized. A slender, long-tailed gray bird with white patches on wings and tail.
Voice A long series of musical and grating phrases, each repeated 3 or more times; often imitates other birds and regularly sings at night. Call a harsh chack.
Habitat Residential areas, city parks, farmlands, open country with thickets, and desert brush.
Nesting 3-5 blue-green eggs, spotted with brown, in a bulky cup of sticks and weed stems in a bush or low tree.
Range Breeds from northern California, eastern Nebraska, southern Ontario, and Maritime Canada southward. Winters in southern part of range.
Discussion This bird's beautiful song is richest on warm, moonlit nights in spring, when the bird may spend hours giving amazing imitations of other species. The songs of 36 other species were recognized from the recording of one mockingbird in Massachusetts. Birds in the western part of the species' range have less musical songs and are less imitative. Mockingbirds are strongly territorial and, like a number of other birds, will attack their reflection in a window, hubcap, or mirror, at times with such vigor that they injure or kill themselves. At mating time, the male Northern Mockingbird becomes increasingly exuberant, flashing his wings as he flies up in an aerial display, or singing while flying from one song post to another. After breeding, each parent establishes and vigorously defends its own winter territory. Mockingbirds require open grassy areas for their feeding; thick, thorny, or coniferous shrubs for hiding the nest; and high perches where the male can sing and defend his territory.


mockingbird
 


State Wildflower

Passionflower

Passiflora incarnata
Purple Passionflower, Maypop, Apricot-vine

Description A climbing or trailing vine with large, strikingly fringed flowers.
Flowers: 1 1/2-2 1/2" (3.8-6.3 cm) wide; 5 outer sepals and 5 petals form a whitish or bluish, wheel-like backdrop, upon which rests a fringe of 2-3 circles of purple and pinkish, thread-like segments; stamens 5, drooping, suspended around 3-styled pistil.
Leaves: 3-5" (7.5-12.5 cm) wide, palmately 3-lobed; 2 conspicuous glands on petiole near blade; tendrils present.
Fruit: yellow berry, 2-3" (5-7.5 cm) long.
Flower June-September.
Habitat Sandy thickets, open areas.
Range Southwestern Pennsylvania to Maryland; south to Florida; west to Texas; north to Oklahoma, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio.
Discussion This unusual flower is widely distributed in the South, especially from Florida to Texas. The name relates to the resemblance of the floral parts to aspects of the crucifixion story. The 10 petal-like parts represent the disciples, excluding Peter and Judas; the 5 stamens the wounds Jesus received; the knob-like stigmas the nails; the fringe the crown of thorns. Yellow Passion Flower (P. lutea), a small yellow-flowered species, occurs from southeast Pennsylvania to Florida, west to Louisiana, and north to Missouri, Illinois, and West Virginia.


flower
 
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 Bird

Northern Bobwhite

Colinus virginianus


Description 8-11" (20-28 cm). A small, chunky, brown bird; underparts pale and streaked; face patterned in black and white in males, buff and white in females. Usually seen in groups called coveys.
Endangered Status The Masked Bobwhite, a southwestern subspecies of the Northern Bobwhite, is on the U.S. Endangered Species List. It is classified as endangered in Arizona. The Masked Bobwhite was eliminated from Arizona around the turn of the 20th century when its natural grassland habitat was devastated by the establishment of large cattle ranches in the area. Small numbers of these elusive quail survive in Mexico, and efforts are being made to restore and protect their habitat there. Masked Bobwhite habitat has been reestablished in Arizona's Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has reintroduced the bobwhite there.
Voice Clear, whistled bob-WHITE or poor-bob-WHITE.
Habitat Brushy pastures, grassy roadsides, farmlands, and open woodlands.
Range Permanent resident from Kansas, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and Cape Cod southward. Fluctuating populations farther north and west. Introduced locally elsewhere.
Discussion The Northern Bobwhite is mainly an eastern and Mexican bird but is also found in the foothills of the southern Rocky Mountains. One of our most popular game birds, the Northern Bobwhite is more numerous now than it was when unbroken forest covered most of the eastern United States; but in recent years the species has declined somewhat due to the cutting of roadside brush, the trimming of farmland borders, and the gradual replacement of former pastures with dense stands of young trees. After the breeding period these birds live together in a covey, huddling together at night and in cold weather. When danger threatens they fly out in every direction, startling the would-be predator, who often catches none of the birds.


quail
 
State Wild Animal

Common Raccoon

Procyon lotor

Description Usually gray-brown or orange-brown above, with much black; grayish below. Face has black mask outlined in white. Tail bushy, with 4–6 alternating black and brown or brownish-gray rings. Ears are relatively small. L 24–37" (603–950 mm); T 7 1/2 –16" (192–406 mm); HF 3G –5 3/8" (83–138 mm); Wt 12–48 lb (5.4–21.6 kg).
Similar Species White-nosed Coati has long, thin, indistinctly banded tail, and much less prominent mask. Ringtail lacks mask and has longer tail.
Breeding Mates January–March; litter of 1–8 young born April–May after gestation of 63 days. Birth weight 2 oz (60 g).
Habitat Various wooded and wetland habitats; common along wooded streams. Often found in cities and suburbs as well as in rural areas.
Range Southern Canada through most of U.S. except for portions of Rocky Mountains, c Nevada, Utah, and Arizona.
Discussion Native only to the Americas, the Common Raccoon is nocturnal and solitary except when breeding or caring for its young. An accomplished climber, it can ascend a tree of any size and is able to come down backward or forward. Few animals can descend a tree headfirst; the raccoon does this by rotating the hindfoot 180 degrees. On the ground this animal usually walks, but it can run and is a good swimmer. During very cold spells, the raccoon may sleep for several days or even a month or more at a time, but it does not hibernate. It may be out during warmer periods in winter, and sometimes even forages then, but it does not need to feed, as it stores a third or so of its body weight as fat and can survive the entire winter without eating. Omnivorous, the Common Raccoon eats grapes, nuts, berries, pawpaw, and black cherry; grubs, grasshoppers, and crickets; voles, deer mice, squirrels, and other small mammals; and bird eggs and nestlings. It spends most nights foraging along streams and may raid Common Muskrat houses to eat the young and to prey on rice rats nesting in the muskrat’s walls (afterward perhaps taking the house as its den). The raccoon swims in woodland streams, prowling for crayfish, frogs, worms, fish, dragonfly larvae, clams, turtles, and turtle eggs; climbs trees to cut or knock down acorns; and, in residential areas, tips over or climbs into garbage cans. The Common Raccoon’s nimble fingers, almost as deft as a monkey’s, can easily turn doorknobs and open refrigerators. (In fact, the animal’s common name is derived from aroughcoune, an Algonquin Indian word meaning "he scratches with his hands.") If water is conveniently close, this animal sometimes appears to wash its food, a trait reflected in its species name, lotor, which means "washer." The raccoon’s objective, however, is not to clean the food but to knead and tear at it, feeling for inedible matter that should be discarded. Normally this is done with food found in the water. The Common Raccoon uses its den for bearing young, for winter sleep, and for temporary shelter. Communal denning is common—up to 23 raccoons have been reported in a single den—but usually only one adult male is present. During the day in summer, the Common Raccoon may simply sleep on top of a log, in a nest, or on a clump of vegetation. Although Common Raccoons are sedentary, males travel miles in search of mates. After mating, the male may remain with a female a week or so before leaving to seek another mate. The female is lethargic during pregnancy; she prefers to make a leaf nest in a large, hollow tree, but may also use a protected place, such as a culvert, cave, rock cleft, Woodchuck den, or space under a wind-thrown tree. Young are born in spring and open their eyes at about three weeks; they clamber about the den mouth at seven or eight weeks, and are weaned by late summer. At first the mother carries them about by the nape of the neck, as a cat carries kittens, but she soon leads them on cautious foraging expeditions, boosting them up trees when threatened and attacking predators ferociously if cornered. Some young disperse in autumn; others may remain in the den until the female drives them out upon expecting a new litter, as den space is limited. This creature’s vocalizations are varied and include purrs, whimpers, snarls, growls, hisses, screams, and whinnies. Upon meeting, two raccoons whose territories overlap growl, lower their heads, bare their teeth, and flatten their ears; the fur on the back of their necks and shoulders stands on end. Usually both animals back off without coming to blows.
Foxes, Bobcats, Coyotes, owls, and other predators undoubtedly kill many young raccoons, but the automobile, disease, and accidents probably are more important causes of death. In some regions, "coon" hunting is a popular sport in late autumn, when raccoons are very active, fattening themselves for winter. Such hunting expeditions involve dogs trailing the raccoon until it is treed, at which point the hunters shoot the animal. Sometimes, however, instead of climbing a tree, the raccoon leads hounds to a stream or lake. A dog that swims well can easily overtake a Common Raccoon in the water, but the raccoon, a furious fighter, can defeat a single dog. Raccoon pelts were valuable until the fur industry declined; interest in the animal’s fur probably peaked during the 1920s, when owning a coonskin coat was a collegiate craze.


raccoon
 
State Butterfly

Zebra Swallowtail

Eurytides marcellus


Description 2 3/8-3 1/2" (60-89 mm). Long triangular wings with swordlike tail. Above, chalk-white to hint of blue-green with black stripes and bands; HW above has 2 deep blue spots at base and bright scarlet spot closer to body. Below, black-bordered scarlet stripe runs through middle of HW. Width of black stripes and length of tails vary with season and brood: spring zebras are paler, smaller, shorter tailed; summer individuals are larger and darker with very long white-edged tails, exceeding 1" (25 mm). Antennae rust-colored.
Similar Species Dark Zebra has straight, parallel black and white markings near margins; more heavily black with black antennae.
Life Cycle Green egg. Caterpillar, to 2 1/8" (54 mm), banded with black and yellow, band on hump broader than others. Overwintering chrysalis, to 1" (25 mm), is green or brown, stockier and more compact than that of other U.S. swallowtails. Host plant is pawpaw (Asimina triloba) in North and other Asimina species in South.
Flight March-December in 4 broods on Gulf, April-October in 2 broods in Midwest; 1st brood most numerous.
Habitat Waterside woodland passageways, shrubby borders, meadows, riversides, lakeshores and marshes; absent from mountains.
Range Lake States and Ontario, east to S. New England, south along Atlantic to central Florida and Gulf, and west to E. Great Plains.
Discussion The aptly named Zebra is the most abundant regular North American representative of the kite swallowtails, named for their triangular wings and long sharp tails. Despite a large range, the Zebra occurs only near pawpaw or its relatives - it usually fails to adapt to suburban growth and development of the countryside. Yet the Zebra is very common along the banks of the Potomac near Washington, D.C., and by small rivers in Virginia. Formerly called Graphium marcellus.

zebra
 
State Bicentennial Tree

Carolina Buckthorn

Frangula caroliniana (Rhamnus caroliniana)
Indian-cherry, Yellowwood, Carolina False Buckthorn

Description Shrub or small tree with spreading crown of many slender branches.
Height: 30' (9 m).
Diameter: 6" (15 cm).
Leaves: 2-5" (5-13 cm) long, 3/4-1 1/2" (2-4 cm) wide. Elliptical; finely wavy-toothed; with many nearly straight side veins; covered with rust-colored hairs when young. Becoming dark green above, paler and often hairy beneath; turning yellow in autumn.
Bark: gray, often with blackish patches; thin, slightly fissured.
Twigs: green or reddish; slender, becoming hairless; foul-smelling when crushed; ending in hairy naked buds of tiny brown leaves.
Flowers: 3/16" (5 mm) wide; bell-shaped; with 5 pointed greenish-yellow sepals; in clusters of several flowers at leaf bases; in late spring and early summer.
Fruit: 3/8" (10 mm) in diameter; berrylike; ripening from red to shiny black; with thin juicy pulp; usually 3 seeds; maturing in late summer and autumn, often remaining attached.
Habitat Moist soils of stream valleys and upland limestone ridges.
Range Extreme S. Ohio and West Virginia south to central Florida, west to central Texas, and north to central Missouri; to 2000' (610 m); also NE. Mexico.
Discussion Songbirds and other wildlife consume the berries, which apparently have medicinal properties but can be toxic. Although called a buckthorn, this species has no spines. It was discovered in South Carolina, hence the common and Latin species names.


tree




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4 insects! They love their bugs!


I just pulled a tiny tulip tree that popped up in my flower bed.
 
I remember your turtle pic, Heather, very cool!!! :sunny:

I love those wild and wacky-looking Passionflowers!! ::yes::

We have lots of raccoons up at the cottage. They're almost like little people....furry little people. :)

Thank you Heather, another great thread!!! :flower3: :flower3:
 
Heather, you know that I love your photo essays. Channel cat as the state fish? They don't taste very good but interesting state choice, huh?
 
"Tennessee Christmas" is one of my very favorite Christmas Carols. I love Christmastime in the Smokey Mountains.

"They say there's more snow in Colorado
Than our roofs will ever see
But a Tender Tennessee Christmas
Is the only Christmas for me."


And I've never lived in Tennessee!

Bobbi:wave:
 
Originally posted by bobbiwoz
"Tennessee Christmas" is one of my very favorite Christmas Carols. I love Christmastime in the Smokey Mountains.

"They say there's more snow in Colorado
Than our roofs will ever see
But a Tender Tennessee Christmas
Is the only Christmas for me."


And I've never lived in Tennessee!

Bobbi:wave:

Neat! :D

These threads have brought out some interesting stuff from others....:D
 

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