A gigantic adult male Gulf Coast Box Turtle (Terrapene carolina major), Leon County, Florida
Adult male / Captured on Rabbit Path Rd in Alna Twp by Lynne Flaccus on 7/17/2018 / released at same location on 7/31/18 / collected nail samples for DNA / Habitat is mature hardwood forest bordered by shrubby powerline ROW
Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Chordata, subphylum: Vertebrata, Class: Reptilia, Order: Testudines, Species: Box Turtle.
The distinguishing features I saw was a broad flat body, legs splayed out and bent at the knee, and the scutes on the shell.
I observed this animal in Mountain Home, AR on April 24, about 1 in the afternoon. Seen among the rocks in the woods. It was on top of another turtle.
WARNING: This observation is Rated "5F" (another "Fossilized Foto From the Fingers Files"!), recently unearthed from the rich Cretaceous Period deposit that I call my basement, haha! This is me and my cousin Pete (@jdanch) as 16 year-old kids having an awesome day in the beautiful New Jersey Pine Barrens, finding 2 adult Northern Pine Snakes within a a few yards of each other. Both of us went on in our careers to contribute much understanding to and validation for the State Threatened level of protected status for this species in NJ - with presence/absence surveys, radio-telemetry studies, home range/hibernaculae/distance requirement assessments, and more. I have seen hundreds of individuals of this species in all growth stages, from egg to 6' 7" adults - (including a one-eyed, adult female wild albino!), and engaging in virtually all their behaviors in the wild - and after nearly 50 years, the thrill I get when I encounter this majestic member of the genus Pituophis in the field still (to paraphrase the old-school rock 'n roll band, "Foreigner") - "feels like the first time"! Hope some of you iNat herpers will get a kick out of this 40-some year old "blast from the past" encounter of mine!
Found in leaf litter under thick growth of Chinese privet next to my yard. Nearby trees are pecan, oak, eastern redbud, holly.
We hiked the High Falls trail in Cheaha National Forest and at the falls there were thousands of centipedes!!! In the photos of the waterfall there are brown patches along the left hand side of the waterfall. Those are centipedes. There were also mats of centipedes in the water.
Lifer! Male near base of sand prairie mound. Second photo in situ. Super fun morning looking for these guys.
Recap male # 25
Male, # 105
Residential neighborhood. Box turtle (F) crossing road N to S. JW0-69
AOR female.
Old male with white face.
Not sure if this is a box turtle. Orange on head is throwing me.
Poor little guy has an injury on rear right leg, it doesn’t extend as far as the other 3. I did not pick it up to see the underside.
Crane Wildlife Management Area - it looks like it got hit with a mower or brush hog during the State's maintenance of the area as grassland.
Old female found crossing a busy highway. There wasn’t much habitat left for her in the area, but we were forced to let her stay. She likely predates most of the major development that has occurred in the area.
Growing on Water Birch (Betula occidentalis) at a forest edge.
Matagorda CBC Selkirk Island
"The Art of Mother Nature".
These images represent the brief but beautiful display we get on the first hard freeze of a winter--if we get such a morning at all at our latitude. We've had a few cold mornings just below freezing in Austin over the past few weeks, but this Arctic blast was enough to keep the temperature in the teens and 20's for several hours. The result for Frostweed is frozen sap which splits the base of the stem and comes curling out in fantasticly beautiful "shaved ice" forms. Botanical icicles. The shapes are as diverse as snowflakes.
Collected on intertidal mud flat
Found under a leaf at the base of a tree. Tiny, maybe 1.5 inch length.
Juvenile that wandered into yard
Turtle with large, rounded shell. Turtle would retract into itself and appear to close off shell, a key characteristic in box turtles.
Wikipedia.org/box_turtle
Turtle was found grassland near multiple small ponds. Box turtles are common throughout the United States, including the State of Florida.
Kingdom: animalia
Phylum: chordata
Class: reptilia
Order: testudines
Suborder: cryptodira
Family: emydidae
Genus: terrapene
Adult observed at edge of dune-swale habitat along immediate coast, digging for invertebrates. Temperature 59°F.
Found munching in my neighbor's garden.