| FWC Home : Recreation : Wildlife Viewing : Wildlife Through the Year June | Wildlife Through the Year: June | - Black skimmers hatch young on beaches.
- It is the height of the gopher tortoise nesting season.
- Laughing gulls hatch young on beaches and mangrove islands in Florida Bay.
- It's nesting season for least terns, oystercatchers, and black skimmers. They nest on islands, undisturbed beaches, and rooftops.
- Most animals -- including alligators, southern flying squirrels, black-necked stilts, and red-cockaded woodpeckers -- are nesting.
- Peak month for wildfires, which rejuvenate many Florida plant communities.
- Red and Seminole bats give birth.
- Blooming tarflowers in flatwoods signal the beginning of summer.
- Cicadas emerge and begin the song of summer.
- Leatherback, loggerhead and green sea turtles continue to crawl ashore to lay eggs.
- Lights Out! Sea turtles emerge from their nests and head for the ocean. Females may become confused by lights on the beach.
- Juvenile green sea turtles forage on hard bottom close to the southeast coast.
- Female alligators are building nests.
- Eighteen-month old black bears separate from their mothers.
- Whelks spawn, laying long necklaces of eggs.
- Black sea urchins spawn throughout the summer at each full moon along the Keys.
- Sea squirts spawn on the grass flats.
- Migrating tarpon can be found almost anywhere in the Keys.
- Snook begin moving out to inlets and passes.
- Indigo snakes lay their eggs, sometimes in gopher tortoise burrows.
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