By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Crawfish are showing up in restaurants and stores
in large numbers and at falling prices as crawfish season is
in full swing. Crawfish
season extends from November through May, but peaks in
April. Prices currently in South Mississippi range from
about $1.19 to $1.49 a pound live, and $2.09 to $2.19 a
pound boiled. Prices are expected to drop at least 20 cents
a pound next week as more crawfish flood the
markets. Dr. Ben
Posadas, marine economist at the Coastal Research and
Extension Center in Biloxi, said Mississippi has no
commercial crawfish producers, but some people catch for
themselves and sell privately. "Most of
the nation's crawfish production occurs in Louisiana,"
Posadas said. "But since 1992, a lot of crawfish has been
imported into the United States, mainly from
China." In 1997,
Louisiana produced most of the nation's 70 million pounds of
crawfish valued at nearly $40 million. Most were cultured,
but nearly 23 million pounds were caught live. Louisiana's
Atchafalaya Basin between Baton Rouge and Lafayette produces
most of the wild crawfish. In Mississippi, hobbyist harvest
many crawfish from the Pearl River Basin. Tom
Rexroad, owner of Claw Daddy's Crawfish in Gulfport, said he
hopes to sell between 750,000 and 800,000 pounds of crawfish
this year. Rexroad has been buying all his crawfish from
Louisiana for the last 12 years. "I do
think this will be one of our better years," Rexroad said.
"So far, we are getting more crawfish than we did last
year." Rexroad's
prices are down 10 cents from last week. He expects his
prices to drop another 30 cents by the last full week of
March as more crawfish are caught in Louisiana. "When
there's plenty of crawfish, the price has to go down,"
Rexroad said. "Supply and demand will always make a
difference in what we're going to sell crawfish for and what
we can buy them for." The
river crawfish in the Achafalaya Basin have yet to be caught
in large numbers, and when that happens, Rexroad said he
expects prices to drop significantly. Not only are these
crawfish abundant, they command higher prices. "Basin
crawfish are bigger and some people say they taste better,"
Rexroad said. "They're a consistent size, unlike pond
crawfish where you get some large ones, but there is a lot
of size difference." Rexroad
is selling live basin crawfish for $1.59 a pound, but
expects the price to drop to 79 to 89 cents a pound once the
supply increases. He said cultured crawfish will likely fall
to about $1.39 a pound boiled, and live to not less than 49
cents a pound. Released:
March 19, 1999
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Louisiana Mud
Bugs Head To Mississippi
Contact: Dr. Ben Posadas, (228) 388-4710
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:30
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop99/cr990319.htm
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