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Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and PreserveA banded water snake lays right next to a turtle on a log at the Barataria Preserve.
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Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve
Nature & Science
 

South Louisiana is known for alligators, Spanish moss, and live oak trees, but it is also home to armadillos, otters, and hundreds of species of birds. The Barataria Preserve south of New Orleans is the park's wildest site with 20,000 acres of swamp, marsh, trails, and waterways, a living laboratory of Louisiana's endangered wetlands.

The natural world is never far away at any site, however. Chalmette Battlefield provides a resting place for birds traveling along the Mississippi River flyway, bayous meander behind the Acadian Cultural Center and the Wetlands Acadian Cultural Center, open farmland surrounds the Prairie Acadian Cultural Center, and butterflies migrate over the French Quarter Visitor Center.

 
Natural Resource Reports - summaries and full text articles for many of the park's natural resource reports are available on the National Park Service Gulf Coast Inventory and Monitoring Network website. For more information on a particular report, e-mail the park.
 
 
Vultures arrive on land.  

Did You Know?
Vultures do not have many predators. But if an enemy does approach, the vulture will face its enemy and projectile vomit. This cool bird also has a unique way to stay cool: it will urinate on its legs. The urine also helps kill any germs picked up while treading through a carcass.

Last Updated: August 19, 2006 at 12:35 EST