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NGE >> Land and Resources >> Environment >> Ecology >> Plants and Animals >> Mammals |
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Mammals Although mammals represent less than 10 percent of all living vertebrates (animals with backbones), they are perhaps the most diverse in both their body forms and the environments they inhabit. Some
Geographic Distribution of Mammals in Georgia Georgia is composed of five regions: the Blue Ridge, Appalachian Plateau, Valley and Ridge, Piedmont, and Coastal Plain. Each region is distinguished by elevation, geology, topography, and other physical features. These features, along with the habitats in each region, determine which mammals occur there. Some mammals, such as the Virginia opossum, are found throughout all the regions, whereas others, like the red squirrel, are restricted in range, occurring in one region or in only part of a region. Other species, like the black bear, are found in more than one region in Georgia but only in limited areas within those regions. The Blue Ridge, in the northeast corner of the state, is characterized by irregular mountains and ridges covered predominantly by hardwood forests. This region contains the highest elevations in the state, and the mammal communities at these elevations are characteristic of communities in the northern United States. Many species that are common farther north, like the smoky shrew and deer mouse, occur in Georgia but only in the Blue Ridge. Some boreal species (species that occur primarily at northern latitudes), such as the masked shrew and southern red-backed vole, occur at high elevations throughout the Appalachian Mountains down into the Blue Ridge of Georgia, which mimics northern conditions closely enough to allow their survival. The Ridge and Valley and the Cumberland Plateau are in the northwestern corner of the state. As the name implies, the Ridge and Valley is formed by a series of parallel ridges and valleys that support a variety of hardwood, pine, and mixed pine-hardwood habitats. The Cumberland Plateau is the smallest region in Georgia but is part of a larger expanse that extends from Alabama to New York. A unique feature of both regions is the large number of caves formed in the underlying limestone. These caves provide roosting habitat for many bat species, including the gray bat, which is found nowhere else in the state. The Piedmont
The fall line represents the northern extent of ancient seas and separates the Coastal Plain from the Piedmont. At the fall line the land changes rapidly from the clay soils of the Piedmont to the deep sands of the Coastal Plain. Although many of the same mammals occur in both regions, some mammals are adapted to conditions in only one region or the other. For example, the southeastern pocket gopher occurs only in the Coastal Plain because it requires loose sand for burrowing. One of the largest swamps in North America, the Okefenokee Swamp, lies in the Coastal Plain. It provides habitat for a variety of mammal species, including the round-tailed muskrat, a little-known species found only in the grassy swamps and marshes of Florida and southeastern Georgia. Only about
Mammal Habitats Like all organisms, each mammal species has its own habitat requirements. Some species have broad requirements and occur in a variety of habitats. These species tend to be widely distributed across Georgia. For example, the raccoon is highly adaptable to a variety of conditions and occurs in all parts of the state. The numbers of such adaptable species have increased—rather than decreased—as humans have altered habitats. Other mammals have narrow habitat requirements and occur in the limited areas where those requirements can be met. The woodland jumping mouse, for example, occurs exclusively in the moist, high-elevation forests of the Blue Ridge. Habitats are constantly changing as a result of human activities and of natural disturbances such as fire, tornadoes, and hurricanes. From the European settlement of the state in the 1700s until the mid-twentieth century, much of Georgia was under cultivation, primarily for cotton. In the first half of the twentieth century, as farming decreased, many fields were left fallow and eventually returned to forest. The process of plant communities changing from grasses and other herbaceous vegetation to forest is called succession. As succession occurs and habitats change, the mammals found in the area also change. A typical abandoned field in Georgia will initially be inhabited by a variety of small mammals like cotton rats,
As the site becomes a forest, the mammal community becomes vastly different from what it had been thirty years earlier. Forest species like fox squirrels, gray squirrels, southern flying squirrels, and woodland voles are common. The foliage of large trees provides roosting habitat for red and hoary bats. Dead trees are used by evening bats, which roost in abandoned woodpecker cavities or under peeling bark. Although the mammal community generally changes along with the plant community, many mammals, such as the white-tailed deer, black bear, raccoon, Virginia opossum, and bobcat, will inhabit the community at each stage for some aspect of their lives. Extirpated, Endangered, and Exotic Mammals Several mammals that occurred in Georgia at the time of European settlement have since been extirpated—they can no longer be found in this part of their range. Bison have been extirpated from their former range in the eastern United States, including Georgia, but still occur in other areas of the country. The red wolf no longer lives in Georgia and currently remains only in a few reestablished populations in the Southeast. Although the eastern cougar is thought to still occur in parts of the state, no wild cougars have been confirmed in Georgia since the early twentieth century. The beaver and river otter were extirpated from much of their range by the mid-twentieth century as a result of habitat loss and overhunting for fur, but both have been successfully reintroduced and now thrive throughout the state. Populations of other Georgia mammals have declined over the course of the twentieth century to the point of near extinction. An endangered species is one that is in danger of becoming extinct from all or part of its range unless it receives immediate protection. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service classifies species as threatened or endangered under the guidelines established by the Endangered Species
A few mammals from other parts of the world have been introduced into Georgia, where they now breed and thrive. The Norway rat, black rat, and house mouse were all introduced as stowaways aboard the ships of European settlers coming to the New World. These mammals typically occur in association with human habitations, but they sometimes occur in natural habitats as well. The nutria (or coypu), native to South America, was introduced into the United States as an escapee from fur ranches and perhaps was released directly into the wild. The nutria is not as common in Georgia as in other coastal states, where it has been detrimental to native marsh habitats. The nine-banded armadillo, not known in Georgia until the 1950s, has expanded its range and now occurs as far north as Athens in the upper Piedmont. Similarly, coyotes were not known in the eastern United States before the twentieth century, but they now occur in practically every eastern state, including Georgia. Mammals are incredibly diverse and interesting, and they provide important benefits, including economic ones, to society through observation, photography, and hunting. More important, mammals
Suggested Reading Frank B. Golley, Mammals of Georgia: A Study of Their Distribution and Functional Role in the Ecosystem (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1962). J. O. Whitaker Jr. and William J. Hamilton Jr., Mammals of the Eastern United States, 3d ed. (Ithaca, N.Y.: Comstock, 1998). Steven B. Castleberry, University of Georgia Published 1/7/2005 |
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