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  2. Mossy Oak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mossy_Oak

    Mossy Oak is brand of an outdoor clothing and equipment overseen by Haas Outdoors, Inc. founded by Toxey Haas in 1986 in West Point, Mississippi. History

  3. Henderson Sloughs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henderson_Sloughs

    Henderson Sloughs is a 3,949-acre wetland segment of the Sloughs Wildlife Management Area, a state-owned and protected area of the U.S. state of Kentucky.Located in Henderson County, Kentucky and Union County, Kentucky, the overall protected area comprises 11,175 acres in the bottomland of the Ohio River. [1]

  4. Toxey Haas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxey_Haas

    In 1986, Haas founded Haas Outdoors, Inc and introduced the Mossy Oak brand of outdoor clothing using the "Bottomland" pattern he designed. [4] The first Mossy Oak clothing was sewn by Haas' mother in his childhood home. [5] Haas and his friend Chris Hawley co-founded Mossy Oak's real estate company Mossy Oak Properties in 1999. [6]

  5. Mississippi Alluvial Plain (ecoregion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_Alluvial_Plain...

    The ecoregion contains minor species such as live oak, laurel oak, and Spanish moss that are generally not found in the more northerly regions. The bottomland forests have been cleared and the region has been extensively modified for agriculture, flood control, and navigation. The levee system is extensive throughout the region.

  6. Green tree reservoir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_tree_reservoir

    Bottomland hardwood forest is an important wetland habitat for many species of waterfowl, as well as other animals. In order to support migrating waterfowl, both private land managers and public agencies implement green tree reservoirs. In a GTR, a forest stand is flooded to create a seasonal wetland.

  7. Hammock (ecology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammock_(ecology)

    Hydric hammocks, also known as low hammocks, wetland hardwood hammocks, or lowland oak hammocks, grow on soils that are poorly drained or that have high water tables, subject to occasional flooding. They are usually found on gentle slopes just above swamps, marshes or wet prairies.

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