By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's catfish industry already leads the
world in production, and in 1997 increased 22 percent to
record a $380 million farm gate value in the
state. The
latest figures show that Mississippi had 102,000 acres of
catfish ponds as of Jan. 1, 1997. The United States had a
total of 177,300. Twenty years ago, Mississippi had just
17,000 acres of catfish ponds. Jim
Steeby, area extension aquaculture agent in the Delta, said
no other place in the nation is so uniquely equipped for
catfish production. "The
Delta has the right climate, proper soils and a plentiful
water table for catfish production," Steeby said. "Eighty
percent of the state's catfish pond acreage is located in
the Delta." In the
past few years, Mississippi growers have become extremely
involved in every aspect of the catfish industry. Twenty
years ago, catfish producers did not own the feed mills and
processing plants and profits were spread to outside
interests. "In the
last five to 10 years, all the processing has been taken
over and owned by producer cooperatives," Steeby said.
"Today, farmers own the entire production from the creation
of feed, the processing and wholesaling up to the restaurant
level." With
this local grower involvement in the catfish industry,
income stays in the state. In 1997, about 7,300 jobs in
Mississippi were tied to this industry, including those at
farms, feed mills and processing plants. Catfish
production in Mississippi is centered in the Delta in
Humphreys and Sunflower counties, but East Mississippi has
made inroads into catfish production. Jeff
Terhune, area extension aquaculture agent, works in Noxubee
County where last year catfish made the single largest
economic impact on this county. East Mississippi experienced
a $25 million economic impact from catfish production, and
most of that impact was in this one county. "Noxubee
County has about 75 percent of the total water acres in the
six county East Mississippi area and has two catfish
processing plants," Terhune said. The
catfish industry in East Mississippi increased 10 percent in
1997, and Terhune predicted another 5 percent increase in
1998. "The
price farmers are netting from the sale of their fish has
decreased some and slowed down new pond construction,"
Terhune said. "But we should still see an increase in the
number of new ponds." East
Mississippi is ideal for catfish production because it has
flat land with clay soil ideal for ponds. These ponds rely
in large part on the plentiful rainfall to fill them, rather
than groundwater and wells, as occurs in the
Delta. Released:
Jan. 26, 1998
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Catfish
Production Still Makes Waves
Contact: Jim Steeby, (601) 247-2915
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:27:50
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