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Mississippi Tide Tables Request Form

If you would like to receive a printed version of the 2026 Mississippi Tide Tables by mail, please fill out and submit the form below.

The deadline for submissions for this form is September 1, 2025

Please note that you will need to re-submit each year to receive a printed version of the current Mississippi Tide Tables.

If you miss the submission deadline for a printed version of the Tide Tables, we will have a very limited number of copies available to mail. Please contact Eric Sparks at eric.sparks@msstate.edu or 228-388-4710 for more information.

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News

Four people in a small group talk.
Filed Under: Agriculture, Commercial Horticulture, Livestock, Beekeeping, Apiculture: Honey Bee Health, Poultry, Forestry, Marine Resources January 22, 2025

BILOXI, Miss. -- A large group of agricultural producers gathered at the 2025 Producer Advisory Council meeting Jan. 14 at the Coastal Research and Extension Center in Biloxi. The annual meeting serves as a forum for agricultural producers to discuss their needs with Mississippi State University personnel, including administrators, researchers, specialists and Extension agents with the MSU Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station and MSU Extension Service.

Two people use a ruler to measure plant height.
Filed Under: Other Aquaculture Species, Specialty Crop Production, Marine Resources December 19, 2024

Coastal wetland conservation and restoration projects along the Mississippi Gulf Coast and beyond are running into a distinct challenge: there often aren’t enough locally sourced native plants readily available to complete these efforts.
The Mississippi State University Extension Service is meeting this problem head-on by enlisting plant enthusiasts to grow and sell these marsh plants. The effort is organized as the Native Plant Producer Network, or NPPN, and it was started in 2023.

Full trash can sitting at the curb awaiting collection
Filed Under: Marine Resources, Waste Management, Water August 1, 2024

RAYMOND, Miss. -- By 2050, the world’s oceans will contain more plastic pollution by weight than fish. It's an alarming statistic. Implementing small lifestyle changes associated with zero waste can help reduce all waste, including plastics, that enter waterways and landfills.