Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 40 | Page 51

Loggerhead Sea Turtle (Caretta caretta). Vol II. Plate 40. Blue-winged Teal (Anas discors). Vol I. Plate 100. America Oystercatcher (Haematopus palliatus). Vol I. Plate 85. Osprey or “Fishing Hawk” (Pandion haliaetus). Vol I. Plate 2. naturalist John James Audubon and was consulted by Charles Darwin. Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus relied on his work for his famous system for classifying species. Catesby was also among the first to comment on bird migration and the impact of habitat destruction. Thomas Jefferson is quoted as saying Catesby’s book was “The only complete, reliable, illustrated natural history of America.” Catesby dedicated most of his life to exploring and documenting the wilderness in North America. His images of birds in their natural environment look much as they do today around the waterways on Kiawah. As an example, his Green Heron, “Green Bittern,” (Butorides virescens) perched on a Carolina ash tree branch (Fraxinus caroliniana) looks remarkably similar to barrier island topography. Vol I. Plate 80. Mark Catesby’s The Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, Vol I and II shows many paintings of wildlife which would have been sketched when he was exploring Kiawah Island. Others from his book include the bald eagle, osprey, American oystercatcher, blue-winged teal, loggerhead turtle, green tree frog, belted kingfisher, white ibis, black skimmer, laughing gull, and Eastern cottonmouth snake, to name a few. Catesby’s images accurately portray much of the waterfowl around Kiawah; it is his attention to detail and beautifully painted illustrations of wildlife in its natural habitat that have made his original work so valuable. It is also interesting to note that Volumes I and II of The Natural History were published 100 years before James John Audubon published his well known book Birds of America. Thanks go to David J. Elliott, Director of the Catesby Centre at Clemson University in S.C., for sharing his extensive knowledge about Mark Catesby and granting permission for the use of these images. These Catesby prints are from the Royal Society’s copy of The Natural History Collection and courtesy of the Catesby Centre, Clemson University, Sylvia W. Bacon, Artistic Director. NK SUMMER/FALL 2018 • VOLUME 40 49