Mitzi Reed, invasive species coordinator for the Native American Fish and Wildlife Society, in one of her favorite places, a swamp area surrounding Beaver Creek Road, adjacent to the Pearl River on Choctaw land, Friday, Nov. 17, 2023. Reed is also a biologist, conservationist, and a member of the Mississippi Band of Choctaws, helping to preserve Choctaw culture and customs, and inspiring the youngsters to get outside. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

A hint of fall touched the leaves in trees surrounding the swampy area traversed by Beaver Creek Road on Choctaw land in Neshoba County. 

Mitzi Reed cruised along in her Jeep, keeping an eye out for invasive plants and wildlife. Reed is also on the lookout for her favorite critters, snakes, although she admits the weather is a bit cool for them to be out. Nevertheless, her eyes scan the swamp land adjacent to the Pearl River, just in case.

Reed is an invasive species coordinator for the Native American Fish and Wildlife Society. Biologist, conservationist and lover of the land describes her as well. Her goal is to preserve native species and resources on the land. 

“My love for the land, for being outdoors … a lot of it had to do with my dad. He loved being outdoors. Hunting, fishing, just being in the woods, and I’d tag right along. I was like his “righthand man,” Reed says with a shrug of her shoulders and a big smile at the memory. “I got to where I loved it as well. I love animals, especially snakes,” said Reed, as she stepped off the road, scanning the ground covered in leaves. “It’s probably too cool out for them anyway, but you never know.”

“I was going to be a vet. My degree is in biology. Getting a job in Animal Control got my foot in the door. There was a Choctaw environmental program and (late) Chief (Phillip) Martin created a biologist position within the program. It opened the door for conservation-based research.”

“This area of the South is so diverse. Everything grows here. Everything thrives, and that includes invasive animals and plants. Take wild hogs for example. They eat anything and everything, and can destroy an area before moving on. What is left in their wake leaves nothing for native animals. So, they move on, too,” said Reed, holding a rabbit stick she carved. 

The rabbit stick is a primitive hunting weapon made of hickory. Once a rabbit is chased from its hiding place, the rabbit stick is hurled at it. A powerful, stealthy and effective weapon.

“People are surprised to learn there are even feral horses about. And think about kudzu. Wherever you see it, it’s taking over, choking out native plants. My work encompasses all the tribes, sharing my knowledge to combat the invasion from all of it.”

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Vickie King has experience as a professional photographer spanning 35 years- from childhood purchasing her first camera by selling flower seeds to neighbors, as a stringer for Associated Press in Des Moines, Iowa, a freelancer shooting an album cover to your loved one’s wedding, and your kids and pets at a J.C. Penney portrait studio. She joins the Mississippi Today team as a photojournalist.

A native Mississippian and resident of Jackson, Vickie was born in Laurel.
You know her work from years as a staff photographer for the Clarion-Ledger. Her award-winning photography has appeared in such publications as the New York Times, Editor & Publisher Magazine, People Magazine, in national news broadcasts, and books depicting the devastation of Hurricane Katrina to the glory of Ole Miss football.

Most recently, she is the former photographer, Special Projects Officer IV, Staff Officer I, videographer, and online content producer for the Mississippi Department of Corrections. She is also a Pulitzer Prize nominee for Spot News.

Vickie is a graduate of Simpson College, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Media Relations.