By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Living in the water doesn't spare Mississippi's
catfish from the effects of summer heat as recent daytime
pond temperatures have reached the high 90s. Jim
Steeby, area Extension aquaculture agent with Mississippi
State University's National Warmwater Aquaculture Center,
said water temperatures in the Delta where he is located
have stayed at 95 degrees in the afternoon since the last
week of July. While catfish thrive in warm weather, this
level is too hot. "Aeration
concerns are critical as fish go into stress in 5 to 10
minutes in this heat without oxygen. You can lose a whole
pond," Steeby said. "Our biggest problem is if we have any
kind of glitch with our aeration equipment, there's almost
no time to get the equipment running again before the fish
are stressed." Plants
in the water produce oxygen during the day through
photosynthesis. While this supplies the catfish's oxygen
needs during the day, the excess oxygen in the water is used
up rapidly at night. Catfish breathe faster in the heat,
requiring more oxygen than usual. They suffocate if oxygen
levels drop too low. "Growers
typically start aerating about 10 p.m. or midnight and shut
the equipment off at daybreak during the summer," Steeby
said. "Lately, they've had to run the aerators from sundown
to sunup. If the sky is clear when the sun comes up, they
can turn them off around 8 a.m., but if it's cloudy, they
have to leave the aerators running until about 10 a.m. to
supply enough oxygen." Jon
Cooper is general manager of the nation's largest catfish
farm, Tackett Fish Farm in Schlater. He said he's had more
oxygen trouble than usual this summer and feeding is
slow. "The
heat has cut our feed back some," Cooper said. "Three weeks
ago we were feeding more than we are this week, which is
below where it should be." Cooper
said demand for catfish is outstripping supply mainly
because growers harvested smaller fish than usual last
spring. Processors responding to the high consumer demand
increased production all year, driving supplies
down. "It's
looking like there's going to be a shorter supply of fish
next spring than there was this spring," Cooper said.
"That's good for prices, but doesn't help if you don't have
any fish." Steeby
said pond bank prices at 75 cents are slightly down from the
80 cents paid by most processors since spring, and likely
will stay there for the rest of summer. Mississippi
processing is ahead of last year, with almost 11 million
pounds processed the last week of July, about 400,000 pounds
ahead of the same week in July 1998. Food
size catfish supplies are up 9 percent from last year, but
the increase is in the smallest size category. The numbers
and weight of fish 1.5 pounds or larger is actually lower
than a year ago, Steeby said. Released:
Aug. 6, 1999
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Heat Leaves No
Room For Low Catfish Pond Oxygen
Contact: Jim Steeby, (662) 247-2915
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:38
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop99/cr990806.htm
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