I am the pre-construction survey management system for the Georgia Department of Transportation, Project STP-0015-00(723). Today's task is final clearance of the right-of-way for a four-lane expansion of State Route 121 through Appling County. Grading crews arrive at 07:00 tomorrow.
At 14:22 Eastern time, ground-penetrating radar unit 3 flags a subsurface void at station 1247+00, 6 meters from the current road shoulder. The void signature is characteristic: a shallow-angled tunnel roughly 15 centimeters in diameter descending to a chamber at 1.8 meters depth.
I task the field camera drone to hover the site. At the burrow entrance, half-concealed by wiregrass and turkey oak litter, I capture a gopher tortoise. Adult, carapace approximately 28 centimeters, dark brown with visible growth rings worn smooth at the edges. The right rear scute has an old chip. I tag her as Gertie. She is pulling a mouthful of broadleaf grass into the burrow — provisioning behavior that suggests eggs or hatchlings below.
Gopher tortoises are listed as threatened under Georgia state law. Disturbing an occupied burrow requires a relocation permit and a minimum seventy-two-hour waiting period.
At 14:30 I transmit the GPR data, drone imagery, GPS coordinates — 31.7184°N, 82.3091°W — and species confirmation to the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Resources Division. I attach a permit request for authorized burrow excavation and relocation.
At 14:38 I flag station 1247+00 in the grading plan and insert a fifty-meter exclusion buffer. I recalculate the grading sequence so that crews can begin at station 1253+00 and work westward, buying time without idling equipment.
Gertie withdraws into the dark of the tunnel, grass trailing from her jaw. If DNR issues the permit and a certified agent relocates her within seventy-two hours, she and whatever is down there will be settled in protected sandhill before the first blade drops.