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Georgia Habitats

Georgia Habitats. The Georgia Piedmont is south of the mountains. A thick layer of red clay soil covers much of this area This habitat has many rolling hills. Has many streams and small rivers. Three communites : Rural Suburan Urban. Georgia Piedmont Habitat.

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Georgia Habitats

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  1. Georgia Habitats

  2. The Georgia Piedmont is south of the mountains. A thick layer of red clay soil covers much of this area This habitat has many rolling hills. Has many streams and small rivers. Three communites: Rural Suburan Urban Georgia Piedmont Habitat

  3. Piedmont Habitat Land Animals The white tailed deer is the smallest deer in North America! Raccoon These nocturnal animals are found in urban, suburban, and rural habitats. They are also found from the mountains to the coast! This is the Red Fox. It hunts alone or in small family groups!

  4. Piedmont Land Animals and Birds

  5. Piedmont Water Animals Reptiles Snakes, frogs, and lizards Because they are reptiles, they like to be near water! Cottonmouth – water moccasin

  6. Piedmont Habitat – Trees Dogwood The Live Oak is Georgia’s state tree Georgia Pine Trees Sweet Gum

  7. Piedmont Plants Iris Cherokee Rose Azaleas

  8. Georgia Mountains Habitat • Climate • Northern part of Georgia. • Gets more rain and snow than any other part of the state. • The mountains can be warm in summer and freezing in the winter. • Mountain Habitat consist of the Valley and Ridge, Appalachian Plateau, and Blue Ridge Mountains.

  9. Georgia Mountains Habitat Animals • Animals that live here must be able to survive cold winters. • Bobcats and skunks grow more fur in winter to help them stay warm. • Bats hibernate in mountain caves. • Many animals, like snakes and turtles, are less active during the winter. • Squirrels hide food and store it until winter. • Birds migrate south every winter • These animals have adaptations that help them survive.

  10. Georgia Mountains Habitat Soil and Plants • Mountain soils are usually very rocky and shallow. • Where the soil is only a few inches deep, grasses, wildflowers, and small shrubs grow. • Where the soil is deeper, forest of oaks, maples, poplars, and beeches grow. • Evergreen trees such as the eastern hemlock grow near the tops of the mountains. • The soil is loamy, a mixture of clay, silt, and sand.

  11. Mountain Habitat The trees and plants in the mountain habitat are the same as the Piedmont!

  12. Mountain HabitatLand Animals Bobcat Eastern Cottontail Rabbit Mountain Lions

  13. Mountain Habitat Land Animals Black Bear Red Fox

  14. Mountain Habitat Water Animals Brown trout River Otters American Toad This frog prefers to be in rocky, mountainous places, but you can find it in lots of other habitats too!

  15. Mountain AnimalsBirds Great Horned Owl

  16. Marsh / Swamp Habitat • The Okefenokee Swamp is in the Georgia Plains region. • Okefenokee comes from the Indian word which means “Land of the Trembling Earth”

  17. WetlandsMarsh, Bogs, and Swamp Habitat • A wetland is an area of land that is wet all or most of the time. • The soil is usually wet and spongy.

  18. Marsh, Bogs, and Swamp Habitat Trees • Trees include giant tupelos and bald cypresses. Tupelo Trees Cypress Trees Plants have long stems that grow under water to help them stay in place.

  19. Marsh / Swamp Habitat Plants Bladderworts live in shallow water and have small air sacs that catch small bugs, water fleas, and worms. Pitcher Plants eat live bugs! The bugs are attracted to the smell and they crawl inside. Once inside, they are trapped. The flower has strong chemicals that immediately dissolve the bug. Their smell is an adaptation The Sundew flower has sticky stuff on the plant. When bugs land, they are stuck. Then the flower can eat the bug.

  20. Marsh and Swamp Habitat Land Animals White Tailed Deer The black bear eats plants and animals.

  21. Marsh and Swamp HabitatWater Animals River Otters Water Moccasin One of Georgia’s few venemous snakes. It can coil, bite, and coil again in ½ second! Did you know a full grown alligator can grow up to 15 feet and weigh 700 pounds?

  22. Swamp and Marsh Habitat Birds The Sandhill Crane Ospreys Anhingas These birds feed on small prey such as lizards, rats, and snakes.

  23. Swamp and Marsh Birds Egret

  24. Coastal Habitat • The land is flat and the soil is sandy. • It has mild winters and hot summers. • The coastal habitat is the southeastern portion of the Coastal Plains region of Georgia. It is the coastline that separates the plains from the sea. • You can see the coastal habitat in the picture below.

  25. Coastal Habitat Plants Grasslands Wire Grass A variety of plants

  26. Coastal HabitatTrees Spanish moss on a Live Oak tree

  27. Coastal Habitat Birds • Is the beak of that bird an adaptation? If so, what is it used for? • Are the legs an adaptation? If so, what are they used for?

  28. Coastal HabitatBirds Snowy Egret

  29. Coastal Habitat Animals What adaptation do you often see on animals that did burrows?

  30. Atlantic Ocean Habitat Every year Loggerhead sea turtles lay their eggs on the beach, but make their home in the ocean. That is why you found them in the Coastal Habitat as well!

  31. Atlantic Ocean HabitatMarine Life Right Whale Crabs

  32. Atlantic Ocean HabitatMarine Life These dolphins were spotted just of the coast of Tybee Island

  33. Habitat PowerPoint Credits for information and photographs: http://www.forsyth.k12.ga.us//131020720124511840/lib/131020720124511840/Documents/Habitats/habitats.htm http://www.nhptv.org/natureworks/nwep7i.htm http://www.okeswamp.com/ts_Animals/plants_animals.html http://www.uga.edu/gardenclub/m2s/mountains.html

  34. Changes in Habitats Pollution Deforestation Forest Fires Natural Disasters

  35. Pollution Pollution also is a major reason for the loss of habitat. When it rains, many chemicals and debris from roads, cars, lawns, construction sites and dumps - just to name a few - run into streams and finally into the estuaries and bays. When this habitat is destroyed by the chemicals, poor farming or building too close to streams - fish die. They die because their nesting and feeding areas are destroyed. These areas where fish can not survive are called "Dead Zones". One of these dead zones extends 7,000 miles into the Gulf of Mexica off Texas and Louisiana due to pollution. *Courtesy ofhttp://www.howard.k12.md.us/res/habitat/pollution.html

  36. Effects of Pollution on Habitats *Courtesy of http://www.howard.k12.md.us/res/habitat/pollution.html

  37. Deforestation After Before

  38. Forest Fires http://www.borealforest.org/world/innova/images/burned_woods.jpg

  39. Oil Spills Oil water logs a bird's feathers so that it drowns, dies of cold or is poisoned by swallowing oil when trying to clean its plumage. Most oil pollution is accidental but some is deliberate, such as ships illegally washing out their tanks at sea.  http://www.rspb.org.uk/policy/marine/pollution/index.asp

  40. Natural DisastersHurricanes and Tornadoes Hurricanes destroy a mangrove forest coastal habitat.

  41. Natural DisastersHurricanes and Tornadoes

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