American Alligator - Wakodahatchee Wetlands, Delray Beach, FL

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Alligator.jpg
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American Alligator - Wakodahatchee Wetlands, Delray Beach, FL

$3,800.00

American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis), Adult

On a crisp winter morning in the Wetlands the light was just right to get a nice reflection of the trees above this gator. This photo was taken 2/1/23 at 8:15 am.

WeForest Donation: $380 (What is this?)

Print Number: 1/3

Print Size: 18 × 18 in.

Total Dimensions: 26.5 × 26.5 in.

Total Weight: 10 lbs

Hanging equipment and certificate of authenticity included.

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PHOTOGRAPH

American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis)

The American Alligator is another conservation success story. Once on the brink of extinction, it now thrives again. It has avoided extinction more than once, as the species is around 150 million years old, thwarting nature’s attempts to extinguish it 65 million years ago when the dinosaurs died.

Adapted for life in the water, North American Alligators reside in freshwater primarily in Florida and Louisiana. Excellent swimmers, they spin their prey in the water, disorienting and drowning them. Alligators are opportunists and although they typically eat fish, turtles, snakes, and small mammals, they will also eat birds, pets such as dogs and cats and occasionally even humans in rare instances.

Often confused with Crocodiles, the easiest way to differ between the two is to look at their mouth and teeth. Both rows of a Crocodile’s teeth are visible when its mouth is closed. While the Alligator’s top row of teeth are the only ones that are visible.

 

 

LOCATION

The Wakodahatchee Wetlands

The Wakodahatchee Wetlands park is located in Delray Beach, FL. It spans across a fifty acre lot, with a three-quarter mile boardwalk that includes multiple gazebos, benches, and informational signage. There are open ponds, marshy areas, mangrove islands for roosting, as well as a wooded area. Formerly utility land, the wetlands were developed as a natural means of managing wastewater. Palm Beach County’s Water Reclamation Facility pumps around two million gallons of water into the park daily. This water is treated, yet still contains excess mineral content. Here in the wetlands the water is naturally purified by the flora of the park and released back into the surface water supply.

Every visit, I see so much life and have yet to be disappointed. Over 150 species of birds have been spotted here as well as turtles, rabbits, and alligators. In the spring you can see large numbers of roosting Wood Storks with their young as well as many young Snowy and Reddish Egrets and Tricolored Herons, stumbling about in the tops of Red Mangroves. Anhingas are ever present, diving for fish or sunbathing atop a perch, wings outstretched. Red-winged Blackbirds chase each other through the tops of tall grasses while Swamp Hens and Gallinules weave through their stems, probing for their next meal.

 

 

FRAME

Pecky Cypress (Taxodium distichum)

Known as Bald Cypress, this giant of the swamp is native to the southeastern United States. It can adapt to thrive in a wide range of soils, including very briny, salty, and water soaked areas. The pecky nature of the wood is created by a fungus that attacks the tree and eats away at its truck from the inside out. When the tree is cut down the fungus dies and leaves behind the beautiful architecture of its destruction. All of the Bald Cypress I have used in my frames has come from different parts of Louisiana.

 

 

THE ELEMENTS

Fire, Water, Earth, and Air

In the display case in the bottom of the frame, four items are in preserved glass vials. The items represent the elements: fire (wood charcoal), water (mineral oil), earth (soil), and air (a milkweed seed). I include these items in my work as a symbol of the interconnectedness of all life on Earth, and as a reminder that humans must do better.

 

 

THE PLAQUE

Magnetic Information Plaque

I engrave a wooden information plaque for each work. The plaque includes what the photograph is of, the location of the photograph, what type of wood the frame is made of, and where I sourced the wood. The plaques also explain why the vials are included in each work. The back of each plaque states the meaning of my logo: “The circle represents our home, Planet Earth. The hourglass represents time. The five horizontal lines in the bottom of the hourglass represent the five mass extinction periods that have occurred in the past. The single line falling through the hourglass represents our current mass extinction period, caused by us.” The plaques are attached magnetically and can be removed to read or to store on the back of each frame if you prefer not to have it displayed on the front.