Join the Celebration!

   

Celebrating 100 Years of Science! | 1925-2025

  • UMCES HOME
  • DONATE

Search form

  • Work with Us
    • Science communication services
    • Environmental report card production
    • Training and capacity building
    • Stakeholder Engagement
    • Careers
  • Media Library
    • Symbols
    • Graphics
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • Report cards
  • Education
    • Professional Certificate
    • MEES Graduate Program
    • Short Courses
    • Initiatives
  • Blog
  • Enewsletter
  • Publications
    • Books
    • Report Cards
    • Newsletters
    • Reports
    • Brochures
    • Posters
    • Papers
  • Projects
  • About
    • Who we are
    • What we do
    • Our Mission
    • History
    • Partnerships
    • Contact
    • Land Acknowledgment Statement
    • Project Videos
  • Home
  • Media Library
Clear Filters

Lightbox (0)

Symbol Package
One of the oldest handcrafts of African origin in the United States is the hand-woven winnowing sieve, a shallow basket that was used during the Colonia Era to separate the rice seed from its chaff. Made from indigenous bulrush, sweetgrass is a strong yet supple marsh grass that thrives in the sandy soil of the coastal regions of the US South Atlantic.
Gullah sweetgrass basket
Hymenachne was introduced into northern Queensland, Australia in the 1970s to use in ponded pastures. It escaped cultivation a few years after its release in 1988. It is spreading throughout the tropical wetlands of northern Australia and is most common in the coastal wetlands of northern Queensland and the Northern Territory.
Hymenachne amplexicaulis (Olive hymenachne)
Goose and duck hunters build these blinds on the calm waterways of Chesapeake Bay tributaries.
Duck blind
Tree roots are underminded by wave action and eventually succumb while the shoreline is eroded.
Eroded shoreline with tree snags
Stone rip-rap installed by the property owners in an attempt to prevent shoreline erosion. Hardened edges along the Chesapeake Bay and its rivers reduces natural shoreline habitat that fish and other marine animals depend on for food and shelter.
Hardened shoreline prevents erosion
Found on golf courses or vacant gravell parking lots, this noisy plover is best known for its
Killdeer (Charadrius vociferus) nest in busy…
This emergent aquatic, with its leaves and flowers above water and portions of the stem under water, is found typically in shallow, quiet water. The seeds can be eaten like nuts and the young leaf-stalks cooked as greens. Deer also feed on these plants. The common name suggests that this plant, as well as the fish known as pickerel, occupy the same habitat.
Pickeral rush (Pontederia cordata)
This emergent aquatic, with its leaves and flowers above water and portions of the stem under water, is found typically in shallow, quiet water. The seeds can be eaten like nuts and the young leaf-stalks cooked as greens. Deer also feed on these plants. The common name suggests that this plant, as well as the fish known as pickerel, occupy the same habitat.
Pickeral rush (Pontederia cordata) occupies…
A baby terrapin makes its way to the water.
Baby diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin
A blue heron scans the water for its fish dinner. On a Tred Avon River dockside at Easton Point, Easton, MD.
Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias)
A blue heron waits on a Tred Avon River dockside at Easton Point, Easton, MD.
Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias)
A Maryland native shrub, the surrounding winter foliage of this Northern bayberry (Myrica pensylvanica) shrub provided a male Northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) with a protected perch.
Northern cardinal
A Maryland native shrub, the surrounding winter foliage of this Northern bayberry (Myrica pensylvanica) shrub provided a male Northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) with a protected perch.
Northern cardinal
Manchac Swamp in Louisiana.
Manchac Swamp, Louisiana
Marsh rush (Scirpus spp.) plant, in Maryland.
Marsh rush (Scirpus spp.)
Sunset over Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge
Blackwater sunset
Adult black-necked stilt
Himantopus mexicanus (Black-necked Stilt)
Side view of adult American Avocet with summer plumage
Recurvirostra Americana (American Avocet) :
Side view of adult American Avocet with winter plumage
Recurvirostra Americana (American Avocet) :
Found in and around aquatic or wetland habitats, this grass is avoided by grazing feral horses on Assateague Island, Maryland, in favor of Spartina alterniflora.
Distichlis spicata (Coastal Salt Grass)
Shoreline on Duck Pond, Neavitt Maryland
Shoreline
Grassed waterways (best management practice) near Rock Hall
Grassed waterways (best management practice)
Grassed waterways (best management practice) near Rock Hall
Grassed waterways (best management practice)
Conceptual diagram illustrating natural resources found on Assateague Island. Assateague Island provides critical habitat for many unique plants and animals.
Assateague Island and Natural Resources, USA
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • …
  • 24
  • Next

UMCES Links

  • Home
  • About
  • Campuses
  • News & Events
  • Directory
  • Employment
  • Research
  • Press Room

Contact Info

2020 Horns Point Rd
Cambridge, MD 21613

410-221-2048

Contact

Enewsletter

Subscribe to our enewsletter

Copyright 2025 UMCES | Privacy/Terms of Use | An Institution of the University System of Maryland