Showing posts with label Diamond-backed Terrapin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diamond-backed Terrapin. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Diamond-backed Terrapin


This evening I went kayaking to a small salt pond nearby that is only accesible via kayak at high tide.  It was a pretty neat place as it's quite deep in the middle and held some decent sized fish (which I heard jumping) but the inlet is heavily shoaled so it's only accessible at low tide.  While I did find a Least Tern colony, I was more excited to spot this Diamond-backed Terrapin heading back into the water, presumably after laying eggs.  I have seen this species of turtle on very few occasions - almost always crossing the road - so it was cool to see one on land and then heading into the water.  A solid reminder that even though we have developed so much of this island, there are plenty of wild areas left to cherish.




After photographing the turtle I stopped to watch and photograph the Least Terns that were coming and going from the colony.  Then I saw a horseshoe crab move back from the shoreline into the water - which you see below.  The shorebirds in the photos were feeding on freshly laid horseshoe crab eggs so they have the fuel to continue migration or raise a family.  Such is the tough way of nature.



Saturday, July 10, 2010

A Turtle and a Deer with some Bugs mixed in


This week has been pretty varied when it comes to non-bird wildlife.  I found plenty of insects in my yard and at the bay along with a Diamondbacked Terrapin (above - only the 4th time I've seen this species) and some white-tailed deer (below).

Seaside Dragonlets are the only dragonfly species in our parts that live in salt marshes.  They are also a favorite meal for the Purple Martin.  Below is a female (note the yellow).

This Ruby Meadowhawk was patient for me after work one evening:

A Pearl Crescent Butterfly fed on flowers in my yard:

and an American Copper utilized the same plant the following day:

A milkweed bug clung to a blade of grass early in the morning:

And a few more shots of the Diamondbacked Terrapin on her way to lay eggs:

Full body shot...