Apalachicola River - Wildlife
The area’s outstanding wildlife habitats, including floodplain forest, sawgrass marshes and pine flatwoods, support significant populations of both rare and common wildlife. The Apalachicola ecosystem supports the highest diversity of amphibians and reptiles in North America, north of Mexico, as well as the greatest number of freshwater fish species in Florida.
From the wildlife viewing tower at Sand Beach, you might see bald eagles, osprey, brown pelicans, red-shouldered hawks, northern harrier, red-bellied woodpeckers, pileated woodpeckers, barred owls, swamp sparrows, marsh wrens, and various waterfowl, wading birds and shorebirds. If you walk along the nature trail in the adjacent maritime hammock, you will find neo-tropical birds during spring and fall and summer. More than 280 species of native birds have been spotted.
You may also observe deer, raccoons and opossums along the nature trail. From the pier look for fiddler crabs, alligators and dolphins in the bay.
During spring and fall migrations, the boat ramp sites and their associated wetland communities are good birding spots.
Check out other species recorded from Apalachicola River WEA, or add observations of your own, by visiting the Apalachicola River WEA Nature Trackers project.
Add your own bird sightings to the Apalachicola River WEA eBird Hotspot.
Wildlife Spotlight: Apalachicola Kingsnake
The population of kingsnakes inhabiting the eastern Apalachicola lowlands has fewer and wider light body crossbands than neighboring populations. In an article in Contemporary Herpetology, D. Bruce Means and Kenneth L. Krysko propose that the population “evolved in isolation on a barrier island or the coastal strand of a peninsula during one of the many higher stands of the sea during the Pleistocene.” They argue that light-colored patterns would have conveyed adaptive advantages on sandy coasts. The snakes would be seen less easily by predators and would be less likely to overheat on the bright white sands.