Virginia Diary, Virginia Tourism
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Virginia : Flora & Fauna

12 varieties of oak, 5 of pine, and 2 each of walnut, locust, gum, and popular are native to Virginia. Pines predominate in the coastal areas, with numerous hardwoods on slopes and ridges inland. Characteristic wild flowers include trailing arbutus, mountain laurel, and diverse azaleas and rhododendrons. 15 plant species were listed as threatened or endangered in Virginia in 2003. They included the Virginia round-leaf birch, harperella, Northeastern bulrush, and small whorled pogonia.

Among indigenous mammalian species are white-tailed (Virginia) deer, elk, black bear, bobcat, woodchuck, raccoon, opossum, nutria, red and gray foxes, and spotted and striped skunks, along with several species each of moles, shrews, bats, squirrels, deermice, rats, and rabbits; the beaver, mink, and river otter, once thought to be endangered, have returned in recent decades. The ruffed grouse (commonly called pheasant in Virginia), wild turkey, bobwhite quail, mourning dove, woodcock, and Wilson's snipe are the main game birds.,

In 2003, 56 animal species were listed as threatened or endangered in Virginia. They included the Delmarva Peninsula fox and Virginia northern flying squirrels; Indiana, gray, and Virginia big-eared bats; bald eagle; red-cockaded woodpecker; Virginia fringed mountain snail; Lee County cave isopod; eight species of pearlymussel; three species of pigtoe; tan riffleshell; and three species of whale. At last one-fourth of the rare or endangered species in the state are found in the Dismal Swamp.
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