Defining Economic Impacts and Developing Strategies
for Reducing Avian Predation in Aquaculture Systems
Research Project
Much of the catfish served in the United States was
probably grown in an aquaculture facility instead of being caught
from rivers or lakes. Aquaculture, the commercial production of
fish and shellfish for food, is an increasingly important type of
agriculture, especially in the southeastern United States. Unfortunately,
fish-eating birds such as American white pelicans, double-crested
cormorants, great blue herons, and great egrets are attracted to
the open-water facilities found in aquaculture areas. These birds
feed upon fish, shellfish, and crayfish produced in aquaculture
facilities, often causing significant losses. In fact, cormorants
eat more than $5 million worth of catfish each year in Mississippi
alone.
Because of the extensive losses suffered by aquacultural
producers, the National Wildlife Research Center established a field
station in Starkville, Mississippi, in 1988 to research not only
the economic impacts but the hows and whys of bird predation and
how to minimize or prevent it. NWRC scientists with the aquaculture
research project study captive and free-ranging birds to better
understand what conditions or behaviors influence predation rates.
For example scientists are looking at bird foraging patterns, bird
population distributions, preferred prey size, and a host of other
factors that may influence how much product is lost to bird predators.
Additional studies are looking at the role that birds play in transmission
of catfish parasites. Ultimately, all of these studies should provide
data that will promote innovative approaches to reducing bird predation
impacts on aquaculture.
Project Leader: Dr.
Fred L. Cunningham
(Fred.L.Cunningham@aphis.usda.gov)
USDA/APHIS/WS/NWRC
Mississippi Field Station
P.O. Drawer 6099
Mississippi State University, MS 39762-6099
(662) 325-8215
Downloadable
Factsheet on Research Project
350K
Project
Homepage
Project
Goal and Objectives
Accomplishments
Publications
Starkville,
MS, Field Station
Cormorant Initiative
Cormorant
Symposium
Living with Wildlife--Cormorants (Children's Activity Sheet
APHIS services for the aquaculture industry
Assisting
American Aquaculture
Bird Predation
and its Control at Aquaculture Facilities
1,450K
APHIS Aquaculture and Disease Information