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Cocodrie LDWF SS LDWF ‐108 LS 28˚50.781' 91˚ 07.690' Located 35 nm southwest of Cocodrie, Louisiana, off the coast of Terrebonne Parish. [14] Ship Shoal 94 Cocodrie LDWF SS LDWF ‐94 RM 28˚52.072' 90˚ 51.190' Located 25 nm southwest of Cocodrie, Louisiana, off the coast of Terrebonne Parish. [15] South Marsh Island 233 East Intracoastal City
Cocodrie is an unincorporated fishing, shrimping and crabbing village in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana, United States, 10 miles south of Chauvin and due south of the city of Houma. [1] It is part of the Houma – Bayou Cane – Thibodaux Metropolitan Statistical Area .
Bayou Cocodrie National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1992 to protect some of the last remaining, least-disturbed bottomland hardwood forest tracts in the Lower Mississippi Valley. These wooded wetlands, oxbow lakes, brakes, sloughs, and bayous, are inhabited seasonally by over 150 species of migratory birds, including forest-breeding ...
The area in southeast-central Louisiana from Simmesport, bounded by LA 1 and LA 114 to Alexandria, LA 28/US 84 to Ferriday and south along the Mississippi River contains the Pomme de Terre WMA (6,434 acres), Spring Bayou Wildlife Management Area (12,506 acres), Grand Cote National Wildlife Refuge (6,077 acres), Dewey W. Wills Wildlife Management Area (63,901 acres), Bayou Cocodrie National ...
Mandalay National Wildlife Refuge established in 1996, is located in Terrebonne Parish, 5 miles (8.0 km) southwest of Houma, Louisiana.It is one of eight refuges of the Southeast Louisiana National Wildlife Refuge Complex (SELA).
Atchafalaya Basin. The wetlands of Louisiana are water-saturated coastal and swamp regions of southern Louisiana, often called "Bayou".. The Louisiana coastal zone stretches from the border of Texas to the Mississippi line [1] and comprises two wetland-dominated ecosystems, the Deltaic Plain of the Mississippi River (unit 1, 2, and 3) and the closely linked Chenier Plain (unit 4). [2]
The USACE stated that if the community could find an appropriate property to relocate to, they would grant them funding and reconsider including the community in the hurricane protection system. However, the Louisiana government did not consider the social, psychological, and financial costs associated with moving fishing families inland.
The Paul J. Rainey Wildlife Sanctuary is a 26,000-acre (110 km 2) refuge owned by the National Audubon Society in Vermilion Parish, Louisiana. Established in 1924, [1] this private Louisiana sanctuary is home to alligator, deer, muskrat, otter, geese and many other species.