If you’re invited to a fish fry at the Harry Cope farm, you might get served up some tasty pond-raised prawns.
Raising prawns is the latest in
Cope’s innovative approach to using the resources of University of Missouri
Extension.
Cope raised his fourth consecutive
crop of prawns this year.
Cope’s prawns belong to a species of
large freshwater shrimp native to Malaysia. Prawns have been raised in the
southern U.S. since the 1970s, but new techniques and management practices are
allowing Midwestern farmers to experiment with them.
Each year, Cope and five of his
friends buy 3,000 juvenile prawns from a Dixon, Mo., supplier who purchases
them from a Texas hatchery. Cope said the baby prawns are interesting to look
at because of their translucent quality and dark eyes. “You only see eyes and a
spinal cord at first,” he said.
In early June, the prawns are put in
a quarter-acre pond with steep sides and an 8-inch drain and plug. The water is
3-5 feet deep, in accordance with recommendations from MU Extension.
They grow quickly from thumbnail
size to the length of a man’s fully extended palm and fingers before being
harvested in late September to early October. Cope’s prawns generally are about
18-count, or 18 to a pound. The quarter-acre pond yields about 120 pounds of
shrimp that sell for $10 per pound.
The Copes and friends harvest them
by draining the pond. “All of a sudden, you’ll see shrimp walking out,” Cope
said. And then the old-fashioned fish fry begins. But not always. On the third
year of raising prawn, there were none to be harvested.
Cope said he worked with Montgomery
County Extension agronomy specialist Richard Hoorman on this project and other
innovative farming ideas. “Rich is a very good resource and researcher,” Cope
said. In turn, Hoorman notes, Cope’s research on prawns and other innovative
farming ideas has helped other farmers. Cope has made presentations at meetings
and through webinars.
Cope said he became interested in prawns after he attended a field day at the MU Bradford Research Center in Columbia, where researchers have been raising southeast Asian prawns for the last several years.
The prawn growing season in Missouri is short because of the climate, said Tim Reinbott, superintendent at Bradford. Fish, blue herons, raccoons and bullfrogs also take their toll on the crustaceans. “They have a lot of predators,” Reinbott said. “We put in 4,000 and got back less than half.”
The prawns have been served in some MU campus dining halls and the Bingham Commons. They have a lobster-like sweetness and aren’t as firm as boiled shrimp.
Cope and Reinbott agree that it
would be difficult to raise prawns as a single source of farm income. “You
couldn’t make a living off of it, but it could definitely add income,” Reinbott
said.
For more information, the MU
Extension guide “Freshwater
Prawn Production in Missouri.”
(by Linda Geist, MU Senior Information Specialist)
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