Audubon Mississippi Overview

About Us



© Bruce Reid | Click image to enlarge
Davis House, Strawberry Plains Audubon Center

Audubon Mississippi celebrated a decade of service in Mississippi in 2008. Begining with a generous gift of land and endowments from two sisters, Ruth Finley and Margaret Finley Shackelford of Holly Springs, Mississippi, a state office and the state’s first Audubon Center were established in 1998. The Strawberry Plains Audubon Center operates from a 2500-acre site in Holly Springs and focuses much of its mission on landscape scale conservation with public and private landowners in the upper Coldwater River Watershed.

Audubon Mississippi expanded its efforts to Vicksburg in 2000 when it launched the state’s Important Bird Areas program and began work on other conservation outreach projects across the state, including in south Mississippi. The Vicksburg office will soon become an Audubon Center that promotes Audubon's regional conservation goals throughout the Mississippi River Watershed.

Inspired by a city’s vision of making nature a focus of economic growth and based on goals for promoting conservation in the southern portion of the state, Audubon Mississippi established the Pascagoula River Audubon Center in Moss Point in 2006. The Center serves as a gateway to the Pascagoula River, one of the last free-flowing river systems in the contiguous United States. The Pascagoula River Audubon Center focuses on promoting watershed conservation and nature tourism.

These facilities are operated by a total of 13 staff members with the help of numerous volunteers. For more information on all of the Audubon Mississippi centers or offices, visit the Web sites below.

Strawberry Plains Audubon Center

Pascagoula River Audubon Center

Audubon's Mississippi River Initiative