Wildlife Care Support

Pictured: Ruffner Mountain Executive Director, Carlee Sanford, Representative of Alabama House District 54, Neil Rafferty, and Ruffner Mountain Wildlife Care Naturalist, Emily Stauss

Pictured: Ruffner Mountain Executive Director, Carlee Sanford, Representative of Alabama House District 54, Neil Rafferty, and Ruffner Mountain Wildlife Care Naturalist, Emily Stauss

Big thanks to Neil Rafferty, Representative for Alabama House District 54, for supporting Jefferson County greenspaces. The benefits of educating with live animals are well established, but caring for wildlife requires skilled staff, time, and expense. This funding provides food, bedding, exhibit maintenance equipment, and enrichment items for our animal ambassadors. Grady, the gray ratsnake thanks you, too!


Leave No Trace

We all want to be good and considerate stewards when we visit and hike on Ruffner Mountain, right?

We like the Leave No Trace Seven Principles from the Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics:

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1. Plan ahead and prepare.

2. Travel and camp on durable surfaces.

3. Dispose of waste properly.

4. Leave what you find.

5. Minimize campfire impacts.

6. Respect wildlife.

7. Be considerate of other visitors.

These are good rules for anyone visiting the outdoors!

Disposing of waste properly is a big one here. We understand that sometimes trash is dropped or left behind by accident, but the impact on nature is nevertheless the same.

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How long will it be there? You might be surprised.

plastic bottle: 100-1000 years

aluminum can: 200 years

wet wipe: 100 years

plastic bag: 10-20 years

cigarette butt: 10 years

wrappers: 5 years

orange peel: 2 years

cardboard: 3 months

paper: 2-6 weeks

Tent Caterpillars

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We don’t like to think of eastern tent caterpillars (Malacosoma americanum) as pests, but instead, they are juicy nuggets of protein for the birds. Since birds and other wildlife eat them, we advise against using pesticides or the destruction of silky tents. And since the moths reproduce only one generation per year, there’s plenty of time for the defoliated section to recover.

The life cycle of the lappet moth is a long and interesting one. Soon after emergence from their cocoons, the moths mate, and females attach eggs to branches in masses of 150 to 400 eggs. In about 3 weeks, embryos develop to first-stage larvae and spend summer, fall and most of the winter unhatched. Eggs begin to hatch in early spring, just as leaves begin to develop on trees. Newly hatched caterpillars feed on the egg mass covering and then move to a nearby fork in the branches where they spin their silken tents. As the caterpillars grow, the tent is added onto to accommodate their size.

Vulnerable to birds, parasitic insects, squirrels, lizards, frogs, and other forest dwellers when they leave the nest to feed on leaves, they return to the warmth and safety of the family tent to rest and grow. By leaving exploratory trails, the caterpillars follow the pheromone paths back to the nest. After 4 to 6 weeks and 6 larval instars, caterpillars are fully grown. They then leave the tent alone and spin a silk cocoon in a protected nook. The pupal stage lasts 3 to 4 weeks. The adult moths live about 5 days. Images by Project Manager, Stella Pfau

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Pop Quiz: Which Plant is Poison Ivy?

Have you heard the saying, “leaves of three, let it be” because it’s probably poison ivy? Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) is an annoying plant to many, but it plays a crucial role in our ecosystem as an important food source — leaves, berries, and all — to animals in the forest. There is a lot of poison ivy creeping into our trails during the summer, and you do need to watch out for it, but there are some other leaves of three that you don’t have to worry about.

Can you identify which plant in the photo is actual poison ivy?

(Answers below. No peeking!)

Pictured: 1.) Fragrant sumac (Rhus aromatica) 2.) Tick trefoil (Hylodesmum nudiflorum) 3.) Common dewberry (Rubus flagellaris) 4.) Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans)

*** Virginia Creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) is another species often misidentified as Poison Ivy. Click here for identification.