Everglades Flora and Fauna

 

American Alligator
American Bittern American Coot
American Crocodile
American Kestrel
American White Pelican
Anhinga
Atlantic Spotted Dolphin
Bald Cypress
Barred Owl
Black Bear
Black Vulture
Black-necked Stilt
Blue-winged Teal
Boat-Tailed Grackle
Bobcat
Bottle-nosed Dolphin
Brown Anole
Brown Water Snake
Buttonbush
Cattle Egret
Cloudless Sulphur
Common Moorhen Common Raccoon
Cottonmouth
Double-crested Cormorant
Dwarf Salamander
Eastern Coral Snake
Eastern Gray Squirrel
Eastern Spotted Skunk
Feral Pig
Florida Bellflower
Florida Green Water Snake
Florida Groundsel Bush
Florida Panther
Florida Pompano
Florida Red-bellied Turtle
 
Florida Scrub-Jay 
Florida Softshell Turtle 
Giant Swallowtail
Glossy Ibis
Gopher Tortoise
Great Blue Heron
Great Egret
Great Horned Owl
Great Southern White
Green Anole
Green Heron
Green Iguana
Green Treefrog
Gulf Fritillary
Humpback Whale
Julia
Key Deer
Killdeer
Leatherback
Limpkin
Little Blue Heron
Loggerhead
Manatee
Marsh Rabbit
Northern Harrier
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
Osprey
Peninsula Cooter
Peruvian Primrose-willow
Pig Frog
Pileated Woodpecker
Pond Cypress
Purple Gallinule
Pygmy Rattlesnake
Queen
Red Maple
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Red-shouldered Hawk
Red-winged Blackbird
Seaside Sparrow
Six-lined Racerunner
Southeastern Five-lined Skink
Southern Bayberry
Snail Kite
Snapping Turtle
Snowy Egret
Spatterdock
Staghorn Coral
Stone Crab
Tree Swallow
Tricolored Heron
Turkey Vulture
Virginia Opossum
White Ibis
White-tailed Deer
Wood Stork
Zebra Longwing

The Wood Stork is the only stork that presently breeds in North America. In the United States there is a small and endangered breeding population in Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, along with a recently discovered rookery in southeastern North Carolina