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Field and Swamp: Animals and Their Habitats

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Places to See (Habitats/Environments)

Below are descriptions of great places to see interesting animals and plants, mostly in the Durham area.  They include links to other pages on this website or to other websites describing them.  I have also listed my favorite animals and plants there (and which appear in photos elsewhere on this website).   Also see the Swamp Animals Page.   Jump down to NC County Map.

"My neighborhood swamp" in Durham, NC (on private property): This was once a duckweed-covered swamp fronted by a marsh with several types of grasses including cattails and false nutsedge, although the marsh has taken over after several droughts.   I have seen a Green Heron, a Great Blue Heron,  a Lesser Yellowlegs, many Canada Geese, flocks of mourning doves and a number of songbirds including an Indigo Bunting and American Goldfinches in the swamp part, while Red-winged Blackbirds are sometimes found in the cattails.  Insects seen in the marsh include several species of Ladybug Beetles (both adults and larvae), most commonly the Coleomegilla genus beetles, Soft-winged Flower Beetles, Rice Stink Bugs, Two-lined Froghoppers (Prosapia bicincta), Common Buckeyes, Dion Skippers, Fiery Skippers, Toad Bugs, Shore Bugs, Marsh Flies, Flower Flies, Wolf Spiders, Six-spotted Fishing Spiders, Marsh Beetles, Citrine Forktails, Fragile Forktails and numerous grasshoppers.  Ladybug Beetle Pupae appeared on leaves of trees maybe 50 feet from the swamp's edge.  Northern Cricket Frogs show up at the marsh's periphery.   Pictured is a Green Heron in the swamp.
  My neighborhood powerline cut mini-swamp in Durham, NC.  I have seen Golden and Clavate Tortoise Beetle adults and a larva, a Burdock Beetle, a Lixus genus weevil, a male Common Green Darner, a rhopalid bug, two courting stilt bugs, several Northern Cricket Frogs and an American Toad mating pair.  Pictured: an adult Burdock Beetle eating a Horse Nettle leaf.
"My neighborhood creek/pond" is an optimal combination of both: it's narrow enough for me to see most of the bottom, but the water is practically still.  I have photographed crayfish of all sizes and relatively large members of several fish species (rainbow trout, bluegill, madtom) there.  Dragonflies, including Eastern Amberwings, Great Blue Skimmers and Slaty Skimmers abound all summer.  During droughts, part of the creek has dried up, leaving little puddles in which very small crayfish and tubifex worms were easily visible, while Green Frogs sat on the dry parts of the creek bed.  Pictured are Red Maple blossoms (Acer rubrum) which fell into the creek in early spring.
Penny's Bend Nature Preserve, Durham County, NC: A very unusual habitat, with alkaline soil more characteristic of the Midwest.  Its best-known rare species are the Blue Indigo and the Smooth Coneflower.  Controlled burns in some areas keep trees from dominating other flora.  Animals: several species of solitary bees (accompanied by Large Bee Flies), a Fawn Darner, a Calico Pennant, many Widow Skimmers, Ashy Clubtails, a very fancy Northern Cricket Frog, Six-spotted Green Tiger Beetles, Blue Corporals, an American Snout, Checkered Skippers, Chinese Mantids, Ambush Bugs, a Toad Bug, a Puss Caterpillar, graphocephalid leafhoppers, a bright red Mirid Bug nymph and a Pselliopus cincta (a kind of assassin bug).   Pictured is a group of wildflowers including an Early Saxifrage and some Trout Lilies.
Duke Forest Gate #12, Durham, NC:  This is a power line cut with varied scrub plants.  Animals:  A Springtime Darner, Checkered Skippers, Variegated Fritillaries, Orange Sulphurs, Eastern Tiger Swallowtails, Mantid egg cases, and jumping spiders.  Visit their website.
Duke Forest, Korstian Division, Orange County, NC:  The trail here is near to the banks of New Hope Creek, bordering a thick forest.  An unusual number of uncommon species show up here.  Animals: Mormidea lugens (stink bug), Wheel Bug nymph, unidentified click beetle, Ground Skink, Harvester butterflies, Oak Treehopper.  Pictured: a foot-wide Tooth Fungus (Hericium erinaceus), with ID made referring to mushroomexpert.com.
Sarah P. Duke Gardens, Durham, NC:  A large cultivated garden, with an Asian plant section that also attracts relatively unusual insects.  Animals:  Great Blue Herons, exotic ducks, a Common Sanddragon, Dion Skippers, Eastern Amberwings, a Clavate Tortoise Beetle, Variegated Fritillaries, a Question Mark, Eastern Amberwings, a leafhopper (Sibovia occatoria, subfamily Cicadellinae).  Pictured: flowering Lotus plants.
A Jordan Lake Game Land (Chatham County), off Route 751 near the bridge:  This trail is mainly used by bird hunters.   Species seen here is special abundance are Turkey Vultures, Variegated Fritillaries, Northern Cricket Frogs, Yellow-and-black Argiopes, Pearl Crescents, and Cloudless Sulphurs, as well as Midges and (in puddles) Water Boatmen.  Pictured: a Salt-marsh Fleabane with ants and an inchworm on its buds.
Indian Creek Wildlife Observation Trail, a Jordan Lake Game Land, Chatham County, NC:  Animals: A Northern Water Snake, a White-M Hairstreak, several Falcate Orangetips (first seen in late March), Northern Cricket Frogs fairly far inland, a Dog-day Cicada fighting off a wasp attack, arrow-shaped Micrathenas, Tiger Beetles (Six-spotted Green and Common Sidewalk), a Bush Cricket, a Horse Fly (Tabanus Fulvulus), a Stilt Bug, a Broad-headed Bug, a Banded Pennant, a Long-legged Fly, a Clay-colored Beetle, an oakworm moth, a Star-bellied Spider, Common Baskettails, Gemmed Satyrs, Carolina Satyrs, Sleepy Duskywings, and Juvenal's Duskywings.  Pictured: a group of Crane Fly Orchid leaves.  To see some animals from one expedition, see the July 2006 expeditions page.  NOTE: The parking lot for this trail is currently closed.
Santee National Wildlife Refuge, SC: A beautiful natural area covering parts of four counties.  Animals:  Duskywings, Large Bee Flies, Common Baskettails, Falcate Orangetips.  Pictured: water lilies.
Eno River State Park, NC, Orange and Durham Counties:  The Old Cole Mill Road Access has had a number of uncommon species until recently, especially near Bobbitt's Hole, an area of locally deep water in the Eno River.  Animals:  Brown Snake (pictured), River Cooters, Yellowbelly Sliders, Common Wood Nymphs, Northern Pearly Eyes, Carolina Satyrs, Delaware Skippers, Henry's Elfins, a Tawny Emperor, Arrow-shaped Micrathenas, a Horse Fly, sharpshooters (a kind of leafhopper), a Banasa calva stink bug, Wheel Bug nymphs, a Fruit Fly (Tephritidae family), and both two young (inch-long) and adult Praying Mantids, including two that were mating in the brushy power line cut.  The Fews Ford Access has an interesting trail over Cox Mountain on which appeared these animals: Sleepy Duskywings, Bess Beetles, a Velvet Mite, a Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, adult Northern Fence Lizards and some small Ground Skinks.
Occoneechee Mountain State Natural Area, Orange County, NC:  An area of locally high elevation and unusual trees.  Animals:  Brown Elfins (pictured), Common Wood Nymphs, Cremastocheilus genus beetles (?), Eastern Tiger Swallowtails, Eastern Fence Lizards, various Duskywings, Zabulon Skippers (on the power line cut), Blue Corporals on the mountain.  Near the pond, Common Baskettails and Lancet Clubtails.
River Park North, Greenville, Pitt County, NC:  This contains several habitats: an open field, a swamp with many very large Water Tupelos and Bald Cypresses, a large lake and a power line cut.  Animals: During a brief pass through this park in mid-February, I saw several Great Blue Herons and two feral (wild members of imported species) geese, a Gray Pomeranian and an Embden. 
Haw River State Park, Guilford & Rockingham Counties, NC:  This park contains wooded, grassy and swamp areas, as well as a pond and the headwaters of the Haw River.   It is still under development, so many relatively uncommon species are found here, such as Gray Petaltail dragonflies, Appalachian Brown butterflies, One-spotted Tiger Beetles, Glowworm Beetles and Sparkling Jewelwing damselflies, and a mysterious aquatic insect.  Some species common here are Calico Pennants (near the pond late in the day), Spangled Skimmers (in grassy areas), Whirligig Beetles, Black Horse Flies, and various skink species.  Pictured: Two Fire Pink (Silene virginica) flowers.
Downtown Greenville, Pitt County, NC:  There is a small park on the northern border of this area which was very springlike early in the year.  Animals: During a brief pass through this area in mid-February, I saw a (very green) Orange Sulphur, a winter-form Sleepy Orange, and some some half-grown Rainbow Trout in a river.
Johnston Mill, Orange County, NC:  A heavily wooded area with trails going near New Hope Creek and crossing a power line cut.  It has relatively few insects, although regionally uncommon species represented are disproportionately common there.  Spiders are common, with some unusual species.  Animals:  A Pileated Woodpecker and Downy Woodpeckers, Harvesters, a Praying Mantis, Silvery Checkerspots, a Menecletes Insertus Stink Bug, hawks (at least Red-shouldered Hawks) and White-tailed Deer.  Pictured is part of a Sugar Hackberry (Celtis laevigata) tree.
Pettigrew State Park, Creswell, NC:  This area is remarkably warm in winter, with very little wind.  Animals:  On 1/1/06, I saw two Sleepy Oranges, a Ladybug Beetle and numerous small Wolf Spiders.  A large number of very vocal birds, apparently grackles, went from tree to tree.  Pictured is part of a large Sycamore (Platanus genus) tree.
Audubon Swamp Garden, Charleston County, SC. This used to be a rice plantation.  Animals: Anhingas, Great Egrets, Little Blue Herons, White Ibises, Blue-winged Teals (pictured), Green Anoles,  Common Moorhens, Swamp Sparrow, Yellowbelly Sliders, and American Alligators.  The latter two species coexist peacefully to a surprising degree.  Pictured: an Anhinga.  Visit their website .
Bogue Banks, Carteret County, NC.  This is a barrier island off the coast of North Carolina; it is linked to the mainland via bridges to Swansboro and Morehead City.  It includes Fort Macon State Park, the Theodore Roosevelt Natural Area and several municipalities including Atlantic Beach and Pine Knoll Shores.  Animals: Tiger beetles (Cicindela dorsalis and marginata), bee flies, White Ibises, Ospreys, Sand Fiddler Crabs, Seaside Dragonlets (a species of dragonfly), sharpshooters and Zebra Heliconians (in summer of 2008, anyway!)  Northern Mockingbirds dominate the land.  Pictured:  A Passionvine (Passiflora genus) flower
Mason Farm Biological Reserve (of the North Carolina Botanical Garden), Orange County, NC:   This former farm is used by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for biological research purposes.  There are extensive brushy areas and a swamp called Siler's Bog.  Animals:  Gray Treefrogs, Green Treefrogs, Hackberry Emperors, Orange Sulphurs, Sleepy Oranges, Appalachian Browns, Least Skippers, a Phaon Crescent, Star-bellied Spiders, Micrathena mitrata spiders, a jumping spider with a red abdomen, many damselflies and Tiger Beetles.  Pictured: a Jack-in-the-pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum).
:North Carolina Botanical Garden, Orange County, NC:   This includes a nature trail through the woods as well as both cultivated gardens and areas designed to resemble coastal and mountain habitats.  Animals:  Eastern Comma, Black Rat Snake, Bullfrog, Green Frog, Acanaloniid Planthopper Nymph, Orange Sulphurs, Gray Hairstreaks, Cedar Waxwings, Cloudless Sulphurs, Pearl Crescents, American Ladies, Fiery Skippers, and a few dragonflies.  Pictured: Jack-in-the-Pulpit berries.  Go to their website.
Craggy Mountain, off the Blue Ridge Parkway, Macon County, NC.  This approx. 5500-feet tall mountain is covered mainly with Angelica on top (where Craggy Gardens is located), with some mountain phlox and blueberry bushes, but its wooded sides have the really interesting fauna, such as Common Scorpionflies and the pictured leafhopper (Evacanthus ustanucha, subfamily Cicadellinae [Hamilton, 1986]), which has been sighted only on two other Blue Ridge mountains.
Little Scaly Mountain, Macon County, NC:   Animals: A Sleepy Orange, a Beelike Tachinid Fly, and a Fruit Fly (Tephritidae family).  Little Scaly Mountain is located near the Georgia border and has an elevation of about 4100 feet.  Pictured: Indian Pipes (Monotropa uniflora) flower. 
Watauga County, NC (mainly Boone) and surrounding areas:  in the northeastern corner of the Blue Ridge Mountains and some areas south and west.  Animals: Many butterflies in Boone in 2008 (especially Pipevine Swallowtails, Silver-spotted Skippers, Aphrodite Fritillaries, Great Spangled Fritillaries, Eastern Tiger Swallowtails, Peck's Skippers, a Harvester, as well as a few Orange Sulphurs), a Striped Lynx spider, praying mantises, a Golden Tortoise Beetle, Ambush Bugs, White-lined Burrower Bugs, several stink bug nymphs.  Off the Blue Ridge Parkway, saw an unusual picture-winged fly, many Scorpionflies, many tachinid flies and Great Spangled Fritillaries.  Pictured: a Tarnished Plant Bug on a Spotted Jewelweed (Impatiens capensis) flower.
Puerto Rico:  Isla Verde (a San Juan district) and nearby rural areas:  Mystery skippers, Great Southern Whites, a land-based hermit crab, snails with striped shells, anoles, Antillean Grackles.  Mayaguëz:  Puerto Zoo animals.  Ponce: many Monarch caterpillars on supersized milkweed plants.    Pictured: a rainbow over the Atlantic Ocean (looking northwards from Isla Verde).
Francis Marion National Forest: Sewee Visitors Center and Environmental Education Center, Awendaw, SC (Charleston County):   Although insects are sparse here, uncommon and probably rare species are disproportionately common here.  Animals: At the nature trail near the Sewee Visitors Center, I saw an American Anhinga, many juvenile Blue Corporals, and many Palamedes Swallowtails.  At the I'on Swamp (once a rice plantation), I saw three baby American Alligators, a mysterious checkerspot-like Crescent (pictured), a Lace-winged Roadside-skipper, and a Tetrigidae family grasshopper.  Pictured: a member of a mysterious crescent species. 
Ocracoke Island, Hyde County, NC:  Most of this island is protected by the federal government and is undeveloped.  Animals: Red Admirals, Salt Marsh Skippers, Little Wood Satyrs, Argus Tortoise Beetle, a Stilt-legged Fly, Ghost Crabs, a Black-crowned Night Heron, Tricolored Herons, Cattle Egrets, Royal Terns, an American Coot, a Spotted Sandpiper, Greater Yellowlegs, a Great Crested Flycatcher, a European Starling, Brackish-water Fiddler Crabs, American Oystercatchers, Ruddy Turnstones, a Greylag Goose/Canada Goose couple and their offspring, and a Juniper Hairstreak.  Pictured: Prickly Pear cactuses (Opuntia genus) and a Scallop shell.
J.C. Raulston Arboretum at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC:  This is a horticultural garden, with many new species patented by NCSU faculty.  Butterflies:  Green Frog, Great Spangled Fritillary, Variegated Fritillary, Checkered White, American Snout, Black Swallowtail.  Pictured: Saucer Magnolia (Magnolia x soulangiana).
Carolina Beach State Park, New Hanover County, NC:  With its long-leaf pine-dominated white sand landscape, containing a water lily pond and several other less permanent ponds, it has few animals, but a relatively large proportion are local to this area.  Animals include the Cicindela gratiosa Tiger Beetle, Golden Silk Spiders, the Southern Bee Killer (an unusual type of Robber Fly), the Carolina Saddlebags dragonfly, the Little Blue Dragonlet, Wharf Crabs, Cedar Waxwings, American Snout Butterflies and common species such as Cloudless Sulphurs, Common Buckeyes, Monarchs, and the occasional Eastern Tailed Blue and Sleepy Orange.  Pictured: Venus Fly Trap (Dionaea muscipula). Go to their website.
Fort Fisher State Recreation Area, New Hanover County, NC:  One of the few subtropical areas in North Carolina.  The Basin Trail goes through a large marsh and ends up at the Cape Fear River.  Animals: Queen (relative of the Monarch butterfly), Greater Yellowlegs, American Oystercatchers, Common Buckeyes, Needham's Skimmer (pictured).
White Pines Nature Preserve, Chatham County, NC (Triangle Land Conservancy):  Of all the places I've been, the one with the most unidentifiable species!   Among the few I was able to recognize without a major struggle was the Henry's Elfin.   Those shown on other pages which we identified include a Velvet Ant (Dasymutilla genus) and a Yellow-throated Warbler.  Pictured is a large group of Jack-in-the-pulpit plants.  See my White Pines Nature Preserve page.
 Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge, Dare County, NC:  Animals:  Copperhead Snake (pictured), Bullfrog, Ground Skink, Autumn Meadowhawk, Palatka Skippers, Least Skipper, Palamedes Swallowtails.

© 2006-2009 Dorothy E. Pugh


Map Courtesy of Digital Map Store