Listed Species in Dougherty County
(updated May 2004)

SpeciesFederal StatusState StatusHabitatThreats
Bird 
Bald eagle

Haliaeetus leucocephalus
TEInland waterways and estuarine areas in Georgia.  Active eagle nests were located in Dougherty County in 1997-1999 and 2000-2002. Major factor in initial decline was lowered reproductive success following use of DDT. Current threats include habitat destruction, disturbance at the nest, illegal shooting, electrocution, impact injuries, and lead poisoning.
Red-cockaded woodpecker

Picoides borealis
EENest in mature pine with low understory vegetation (<1.5m); forage in pine and pine hardwood stands > 30 years of age, preferably > 10" dbhReduction of older age pine stands and to encroachment of hardwood midstory in older age pine stands due to fire suppression
Wood stork 

Mycteria americana
EEPrimarily feed in fresh and brackish wetlands and nest in cypress or other wooded swampsDecline due primarily to loss of suitable feeding habitat, particularly in south Florida. Other factors include loss of nesting habitat, prolonged drought/flooding, raccoon predation on nests, and human disturbance of rookeries.
Reptile 
Alligator snapping turtle

Macroclemys temminckii
No Federal StatusTRivers, lakes, and large ponds near stream swamps.Destruction and modification of habitat and overharvesting.
Barbour's map turtle

Graptemys barbouri
No Federal StatusTRestricted to the Apalachicola River and larger tributaries including the Chipola,
Chattahoochee, and Flint Rivers in eastern Alabama, western Georgia, and western Florida.
 
Eastern indigo snake

Drymarchon corais couperi
TTDuring winter, den in xeric sandridge habitat preferred by gopher tortoises; during warm months, forage in creek bottoms, upland forests, and agricultural fields Habitat loss due to uses such as farming, construction, forestry, and pasture and to overcollecting for the pet trade
Gopher tortoise

Gopherus polyphemus

No Federal StatusTWell-drained, sandy soils in forest and grassy areas; associated with pine overstory, open understory with grass and forb groundcover, and sunny areas for nestingHabitat loss and conversion to closed canopy forests. Other threats include mortality on highways and the collection of tortoises for pets.
Amphibian 
Georgia blind salamander

Haideotriton wallacei
No Federal StatusTSubterranean waters of upland limestone karst system; restricted to Dougherty Plain region of Georgia  
Invertebrate 
Fat three-ridge mussel

Amblema neislerii
EEMain channels of small to large rivers with slow to moderate currents, in substrates ranging from gravel to a rocky rubble mixture of sand and sandy mud to a mixture of sand, sandy/clay substrates Habitat modification, sedimentation, and water quality degradation
Gulf moccasinshell mussel

Medionidus pencillatus

EEMedium streams to large rivers with slight to moderate current over sand and gravel substrates; may be associated with muddy sand substrates around tree roots Habitat modification, sedimentation, and water quality degradation
Oval pigtoe mussel

Pleurobema pyriforme

EERiver tributaries and main channels in slow to moderate currents over silty sand, muddy sand, sand, and gravel substrates Habitat modification, sedimentation, and water quality degradation
Purple bankclimber mussel

Elliptoideus sloatianus

TTMain channels of ACF basin rivers in moderate currents over sand, sand mixed with mud, or gravel substratesHabitat modification, sedimentation, and water quality degradation
Shiny-rayed pocketbook mussel

Lampsilis subangulata

EEMedium creeks to the mainstems of rivers with slow to moderate currents over sandy substrates and associated with rock or clay Habitat modification, sedimentation, and water quality degradation
Fish 
Bluestripe shiner

Cyprinella callitaenia
No Federal StatusTBrownwater streams 
Plant 
American chaffseed

Schwalbea americana

EEFire-maintained wet savannahs in the Coastal Plain (with grass pinks, colic root, huckleberry and gallberry); grassy openings and swales of relict longleaf pine woods in the Piedmont Fire suppression, habitat conversion, and incompatible agriculture and forestry practices
Cooley meadowrue

Thalictrum cooleyi
EEOn fine sandy loam in open, seasonally wet mixed pine-hardwoods and in adjacent wet savannahs; in Georgia, may be restricted to roadsides and powerline right-of-ways Most extirpated populations were eliminated by fire suppression and/or silvicultural or agricultural development. 
Buckthorn

Sideroxylon  thornei
No Federal StatusEOak flatwoods where soil normally is saturated for long periods after floods/heavy rain (i.e., calcareous swamps; woods bordering cypress ponds)   
Pickering's morning-glory

Stylisma pickeringii
No Federal StatusTCoarse white sands on sandhills near the Fall Line and on a few ancient dunes along the Flint and Ohoopee Rivers