A vast number of birds rely on Alabama’s waterways. The Mobile-Tensaw River system ends in Mobile Bay, on the Gulf, where small islands provide nesting and roosting habitat for birds like the brown pelican.
© Mac Stone
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A vast number of birds rely on Alabama’s waterways. The Mobile-Tensaw River system ends in Mobile Bay, on the Gulf, where small islands provide nesting and roosting habitat for birds like the brown pelican.
© Mac Stone
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The 62,000-acre Pee Dee River Basin houses an diverse population of wildlife. Photo by Mac Stone.
A ground-nesting great egret chick in its nest amidst prickly pear cactus fields. Photo by Mac Stone.
Old bald cypress trees—so disfigured by storms that they survived logging—line Lake Russell at the headwaters of the Everglades. Photo by Mac Stone.
Deep in Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary, this endangered Florida panther—one of just two hundred that still roam the sloughs and uplands of the Everglades—walks along a game trail at night, the shadows of Virginia chain ferns dappling its coat. Photo by Mac Stone.
Lake Russell, which sits at the headwaters of the Everglades. Photo by Mac Stone.
American crocodiles (pictured, a juvenile in Everglades National Park) are more shy than their alligator kin, so they're not a threat to people.
PHOTOGRAPH BY MAC STONE/ MYN/NATURE PICTURE LIBRARY