Protects health, natural heritage
Every living creature, including humans, depend on shelter and the availability of adequate and safe food and water to survive.
Protecting natural resources like soil and water is critical for human health and sustaining populations.
When we conserve water and protect water quality, we protect our own health by ensuring safe and adequate supplies of water for drinking, domestic uses, recreation and economic development. Practicing land management that conserves soil and maintains its quality secures the resources that produce ample food, fiber and fuel products.
Protecting our natural resources ensures a legacy for future generations of animals and humans alike. Our natural heritage – water, air, environments, geological features, and the biodiversity of plant and animal life – is inherited from past generations, maintained by present generations and bestowed to future ones.
Much of Mississippi’s unique natural heritage is found underwater. In fact, the Southeast boasts the greatest freshwater fish diversity in the country, and Mississippi ranks fifth in fish diversity among all other states in the nation.
Several fish species are endemic to the state, meaning they are only found here. Endemic species include the Bayou darter, Yazoo shiner and Yazoo darter. A fourth species, the Pearl darter, occurred only in Mississippi and Louisiana. Because the Pearl darter is thought to be extinct in Louisiana, it may be found only in Mississippi now.
The Mississippi Department
and habitat. (File photo by MSU Extension Service)
of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks has a program that tracks and maps Mississippi’s rarest animals, plants, exemplary natural communities and special geological features. Many of the animals in this program are aquatic, including mussels, crayfish, fish, amphibians and reptiles.
Aquatic creatures are impacted by pollutants and water quality degradation, as well as changes in water flow patterns. Water flows are influenced by precipitation and land use changes, such as urban development, as well as removing natural habitats like forests, grasslands and wetlands.
An endangered species is one where populations are threatened to a point that extinction might be possible if action is not taken. Endangered species represent a potential loss to Mississippi’s natural heritage, identity and legacy.
In this holiday season of giving, consider ways to protect nature and give the gift of health and natural heritage.