By
Bonnie Coblentz BILOXI
-- Mississippi shrimpers are enjoying the benefits of higher
prices and a 1997 harvest coming in two waves. Dave
Burrage, extension marine resources specialist in Biloxi,
said opening shrimp landings should be similar to June 1996
landings of 2.6 million pounds of tails-only shrimp.
Comparable figures for this year are not yet
available. However,
Biloxi, which has 80 percent of the state's processing
capability, landed 749,500 pounds of heads-on shrimp the
first week of the season. In 1996, shrimpers landed 624,100
pounds in Biloxi the first week. Prices
for shrimp sold off the boats are averaging 25 percent
higher than last year. Headless 41- to 50-count shrimp are
selling for $3.80 this year, while 26- to 30-count tails are
bringing in $5.33. "Lower
production in Louisiana earlier this year and disease
problems in overseas aquaculture shrimp farms are lowering
shrimp supplies and raising prices," Burrage
said. The
Mississippi season opened June 17 when the shrimp count
reached 68, which means 68 shrimp make a pound. Burrage said
by the last week of June, shrimp were at 36- to
40-count. Strange
weather patterns, cooler water temperatures, lower food
supplies and low salinity, among other factors, caused a
late shrimp season opening this year. Shrimp
enter the estuaries -- fish nurseries -- in late January and
early February, mature there and move to the Gulf of Mexico
for harvest by early June. This year, tiny shrimp moved into
the estuaries in two waves, and so are maturing and
returning to the Gulf at two different times. Not all
areas of the Gulf have been opened for shrimping because of
the distinctly smaller group of shrimp not yet big enough to
be harvested. Burrage
said this situation should benefit Mississippi shrimpers.
When the season opened, large shrimping boats from Florida
to Texas were in Mississippi waters taking advantage of
season-opening high catches. These large boats have since
moved on, following the shrimp in the Gulf. Smaller
shrimp boats which typically only fish Mississippi waters
will have little outside competition as they harvest this
second crop. "The
shrimp that entered the estuaries later, matured later, and
Mississippi shrimpers will have the benefit of the second
wave," Burrage said. Despite
bad weather and a late opening, 800 boats were in
Mississippi waters when the season opened. Preliminary
reports of nightly catches indicated an average
season. "With
that many boats, everybody's slice of the pie was smaller,
but fishermen will have an average year in terms of how much
shrimp are being caught," Burrage said. Although
a boon to the local economy, the shrimp caught in the Gulf
of Mexico only account for about 20 percent of the total
shrimp consumed in the country. The remainder are imported,
and the majority of these are raised through aquaculature,
Burrage said. Released:
June 27, 1997
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Shrimp Prices
High, Production Average
Contact: Dave Burrage, (601) 388-4710
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:36
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop97/cr970627.htm
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