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SREL
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"Herps of the Southeast"
Virtual Walk
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Stop
6
Francis Marion
National Forest (SC) |
Featured Herp
Scarlet Kingsnake
(Lamprpeltis triangulum) |
The East Aiken Elementary students made their way from the Pee Dee
area of coastal South Carolina, south along the Great Pee Dee River, across the Black
River to Georgetown (SC), and finally arrived in Francis Marion National Forest on October
11, 1999. Francis Marion National Forest is one of two National Forests in South Carolina
(the other being the three separate compartments of Sumter National Forest). The United
States Forest Service, a federal agency under the U.S. Department of Agriculture, manages
the National Forests. [See the Forest Service
web site for links to all southern National Forests, including Francis Marion
NF; see
additional
Francis Marion info].

Different stages of forest
management |
The Forest Service is responsible for over 191 million acres of
federal land in 44 states, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Many legislative acts
throughout the last 100 years or so have contributed to the formation and management of
the National Forests. The Creative Act of 1891 created forest reserves from land that was
public domain. In 1897 Congress passed the Organic Act to improve and protect forests or
secure favorable water flows and to furnish a continuous supply of timber for citizens of
the United States. The Act of February 1, 1905 placed the administration of the Nation's
forest reserves under the Department of Agriculture. The Weeks Act of 1911 authorized the
purchase of private lands to establish National Forests, which allowed the creation of
National Forests in the East where there were few public-domain lands. |
The Multiple
Use/Sustained Yield Act of 1960 stated that National Forests would be administered for
outdoor recreation, range, timber, watershed, and wildlife and fish purposes. National
Forests are intended to be managed in a way that provides for the long-term sustainability
of the various renewable resources within Forests without impairment of the productivity
of the land. The National Forests are managed for multiple uses, on a sustained yield basis, using sound ecological
principles.
| Public benefits of such management include clean water, wood and paper
products, a high quality environment for outdoor recreation, energy and minerals,
wilderness preservation, forage for grazing livestock, and abundant fish and wildlife. The
multiple-use aspect of National Forests is illustrated by a comparison of the
"timber" and "recreation" uses of Forests. The Forest Service
anticipates that, in the year 2000, National Forests will generate $110.7 billion from
recreation, compared to $3.5 billion from timber harvest. |
 |
For additional links to Forest
Service places, programs, etc., see: Forest Service
home page, Forest
ServiceWildlife management, What is the Forest Service?, and
Conservation education, including
ideas for elementary schools.
Scarlet
Kingsnake
Lampropeltis triangulum |
As the East Aiken classes walk through the Francis Marion
National Forest, they
will focus their attention on the impacts of 1989s
Hurricane Hugo. As a result of the winds of Hugo, many pine trees were
killed. These dead trees now provide excellent habitat for this weeks
animal, the scarlet kingsnake. |

Scarlet kingsnake |
A habitat is a place where an organism lives, basically an
"address" for an organism. Just as people have different addresses and live in
different places, organisms live in different habitats and even have different habitat
preferences. Thus, a place (or habitat) that makes a wonderful home for one species may
not be suitable for another species. On a broad scale, some species do well in wetlands
while others thrive in terrestrial habitats. Some organisms prefer sparsely vegetated
sandhills while others need an old hardwood forest habitat. Scarlet kingsnakes seem to
live primarily in pine forests, and are sometimes found underneath the loose bark of dead
pines. |
| Snakes in the kingsnake genus (Lampropeltis) are commonly
kept as pets. As is the case for any pet, the pet owner must be committed to the proper
care of the pet so that it remains healthy. An important additional consideration is the
"health" of wild populations of snake species. Although keeping small numbers of
common snake species can be very educational, one should not remove rare or
hard-to-maintain snake species from the wild. For more information on captive rearing and
breeding of kingsnakes, see the herpetoculture web site at Kingsnake.com. |

Scarlet
Kingsnake Fact Sheet |
The Life of General Francis Marion
(by Horry and
Weems)Excerpt--"
when British armies, with their Hessian, and Indian,
and Tory allies, overran my afflicted country, swallowing up its fruits and filling every
part with consternation; when no thing was to be seen but flying crowds, burning houses,
and young men, (alas! too often,) hanging upon the trees like dogs, and old men wringing
their withered hands over their murdered boys, and women and children weeping and flying
from their ruined plantations into the starving woods! When I think, I say, of these
things, oh my God! how can I ever forget Marion, that vigilant, undaunted soldier, whom
thy own mercy raised up to scourge such monsters, and avenge his country's wrongs.
The Washington of the south, he steadily
pursued the warfare most safe for us, and most fatal to our enemies. He taught us to sleep
in the swamps, to feed on roots, to drink the turbid waters of the ditch, to prowl nightly
round the encampments of the foe, like lions round the habitations of the shepherds who
had slaughtered their cubs. Sometimes he taught us to fall upon the enemy by surprise,
distracting the midnight hour with the horrors of our battle: at other times, when our
forces were increased, he led us on boldly to the charge, hewing the enemy to pieces,
under the approving light of day. Oh, Marion, my friend! my friend! never can I forget
thee."
(Quote from Peter Horry, in The
Life of General Francis Marion, by Horry and Weemsfull text available) |
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