May 202014
 

This afternoon, my wife and I went for a four and a half mile hike in the Eastern Palisades section of Chattahoochee National Recreation Area, just inside the Perimeter on the northwest side of Atlanta.  During our outing, I got the chance to get “up close and personal” with a variety of critters living there.  I am still reaping the result — two ticks found so far, and counting.  These photos renew my appreciation for the rich diversity of life on Earth, and particularly here in the Atlanta region — even just a short distance from I-285!

The first creature I encountered was a gorgone checkerspot butterfly (Chlosyne gorgone), considered by the Butterflies of Georgia Field Guide to be a “local and uncommon resident”, though abundant in the Midwest.  It frequents open woodlands and stream corridors; I found this one on a trail along the Chattahoochee River.

 

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A bit further down the trail, I noticed a southern golden tortoise beetle (Charidotella sexpunctata sexpunctata).  This is one of three species of tortoise beetles found in the United States.  I am proud to say that I did not disturb him (or her) while taking this photograph, because the beetle’s dome remains a bronze color.  When disturbed, the beetle will display black spots against the bronze.  Tortoise beetles feed on a variety of host plants, including sweet potato.

 

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Nearby, I noticed a large black ant on a leaf, and it noticed me, too.  It opened its jaws wide, holding its ground against my camera lens pointed in its direction.

 

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The riverside trail eventually climbed steeply upward toward a ridge perhaps 100 feet above the water’s edge.  There, I encountered rhododendrons in bloom.  For a change of pace, I photographed the blossoms; only later did I realize that the blooms contained tiny eight-legged pollen mites.

 

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We took a spur trail downhill toward the Chattahoochee River again.  On our way down off the ridge, I noticed this juvenile common snapping turtle (Chelydra serpentina), its shell perhaps an inch and a half across, standing on the trail.  He (or she) was a bit annoyed at my ministrations with the camera, as you can see by his (or her) expressions in these photographs.

 

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Finally, toward the end of our walk, shortly before we headed down off the final ridge to the river’s floodplain again, I stumbled upon a patent leather beetle (Odontotaenius disjunctus) on the path.  After seeing a close-up of this beetle’s mouthparts, I am comforted by the fact that it feeds on rotting wood.  This beetle was perhaps one and a half inches long — nearly the same size as the young snapping turtle!

 

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