Orange County NC Website
23 <br /> Carolina Friends School Biological Inventory Report Orange County, N.C. <br /> • Odocoileus virginianus (white-tailed deer) <br /> • Emberizidae (seed-eating species of songbirds [e.g., sparrows]) <br /> • Accipitridae (hawks) <br /> • Urocyon cinereoargenteus (gray fox) <br /> • Didelphis virginiana (Virginia opossum) <br /> • Procyon lotor(racoon) <br /> • Canis latrans (coyote) <br /> • Sylvilagus floridanus (eastern cottontail) <br /> Dry-Mesic Oak-Hickory and Mesic Mixed Hardwood Forests (Piedmont Subtypes) <br /> These community types are comprised of closed-canopy hardwoods. Topography within <br /> these community types is gentle to moderate slopes. The mesic mixed hardwood slopes <br /> occur primarily on east or north facing slopes. The dry-mesic hardwoods occur on south <br /> and/or west facing slopes. Species indicative of these communities include, but are not <br /> limited to, the following: <br /> • Liriodendron tulipifera var. tulipifera (yellow poplar) <br /> • Acer rubrum var. rubrum (red maple) <br /> • Liquidambar styraciflua (sweetgum) <br /> • Quercus alba (white oak) <br /> • Fagus grandifolia var. caroliniana (American beech) <br /> • Benthamidia florida (flowering dogwood) <br /> • Cercis canadensis (redbud) <br /> • Pinus taeda (loblolly pine) <br /> • Quercus coccinea (scarlet oak) <br /> • Quercus rbra (northern red oak) <br /> • Quercus velutina (black oak) <br /> • Carya tomentosa (mockernut hickory) <br /> • Carya glabra (pignut hickory) <br /> Unlike the maintained/disturbed community type,these community types do not possess a <br /> high percentage of edge or transitional habitat, and sunlight availability to the forest floor <br /> is limited. As a result, these communities do not possess a good juxtaposition of structural <br /> cover, or a diverse groundcover stratum. Herbs and grasses are limited to canopy gaps or <br /> outside edge transitions. While these community types are less diverse and possess poorer <br /> quality cover for wildlife, they do support a handful of wildlife species which are adapted <br /> to persisting in forest-interior habitats. Animal species that show increased use of these <br /> community types include, but are not limited to, the following: <br /> • Picidae (woodpeckers [e.g., downy woodpecker, hairy woodpecker, red-bellied <br /> woodpecker,yellow-bellied sapsucker,pileated woodpecker, and northern flicker]) <br /> • Sittidae (nuthatches [e.g., white-breasted nuthatch and brown-headed nuthatch]) <br /> • Baeolophus bicolor(tufted titmouse) <br /> • Poecile carolinensis (Carolina chickadee) <br /> 3 December 2024 <br />