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LSU Ag Crawfish Report

Posted on 1/25/24 at 9:37 am
Posted by SmokedBrisket2018
Member since Jun 2018
1528 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 9:37 am
I may be late on this but just sharing what I just read on the web from:
Mark Shirley
Crawfish Aquaculture and Coastal Resources Specialist
LSU AgCenter and LA Sea Grant


"Here are a few more thoughts and observations based on what I’ve seen to date (early January).
The drought and heat during the summer and fall caused very high mortality of the carryover crawfish and brood stock. Those are the crawfish that the farmers should be catching in December, January, and February. I don’t see the catch picking anytime soon, especially considering the freezing temperatures expected thru January. Some farmers still have not put out traps mainly because test traps show no sign of crawfish.
I’ve dip netted in quite a few ponds and have found very few juvenile crawfish. The ones I do see were likely released from their mother’s tail since the big rain event the region had on December 1, 2023. Given the cold water temperature in January, their growth will be slow and not reach harvest size until late March or April. But even when these crawfish are big enough to catch, there is not a large population of them. The catch may pick up for a short while in April and May but will not be sustainable for the entire spring. The spring crop will be a fraction of what is normally caught.
In addition to the extremely short supply of crawfish, farmers are also seeing their production costs significantly increase. Pumping costs for flooding and maintaining a flood have tripled and, in some cases, quadrupled. Combined with the rise in labor cost, bait, and supplies, this will be a very expensive crop to produce.
Even with record high prices, I’m afraid many farmers will not cover their production costs of pumping, labor, bait, fuel and indirect costs for this season.
As mentioned in the LSU Drought Impact Report that came out right after Thanksgiving, there were over 45,000 acres that could not flood up due to a lack of water or canal water being too salty. Another 45,000+ acres, though flooded, will not produce any crawfish. The remaining balance will see a significant reduction in total catch. These were the predictions in November. From what I’ve seen since then, the situation is even worse now.
I realize I am painting a pretty dismal picture of the 2024 crawfish crop. But this is what I’m seeing.
Another issue is that farmers will have to stock their fields in May and June to prepare for next year. I am concerned that brood stock will be hard to come by and will be expensive. It will probably result in less acres being harvested in the 2025 season.
Mark Shirley
Crawfish Aquaculture and Coastal Resources Specialist
LSU AgCenter and LA Sea Grant
In summary this will not only affect farmers but also everyone involved in the crawfish industry. If you are able, please support your local farmers, docks, and boiling houses as this will be a really tough year for everyone involved.
Thanks everyone"
Posted by Gaston
Dirty Coast
Member since Aug 2008
39183 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 9:51 am to
I could take a year off. Oh well.
Posted by GeauxTigers0107
South Louisiana
Member since Oct 2009
9826 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 10:27 am to
quote:

If you are able, please support your local farmers, docks, and boiling houses as this will be a really tough year for everyone involved.



I wish them all the best. I really do. But I'm personally not paying over $300 for a sack of crawfish. I mean, you just got done telling us there won't be any crawfish anyway (which sucks btw) so how can I support them when they don't have anything to sell?

Posted by Dire Wolf
bawcomville
Member since Sep 2008
36819 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 10:47 am to
Posted by bnb9433
Member since Jan 2015
13795 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 12:43 pm to
Eat more shrimp
Posted by CalcasieuTiger
Member since Mar 2014
661 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 12:53 pm to
That’s an interesting report, I had a crawfish wholesaler tell me that they were absolutely flooded with crawfish and that the market was over crowded. Seems like that is about to change
Posted by skuter
P'ville
Member since Jan 2005
6144 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 1:12 pm to
quote:

If you are able, please support your local farmers, docks, and boiling houses as this will be a really tough year for everyone involved.


That’s gonna be a NO for me dog
Posted by HeyCap
Member since Nov 2014
628 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 3:52 pm to
Well, I know what I’m giving up for lent now.
Posted by Bestbank Tiger
Premium Member
Member since Jan 2005
71764 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 4:07 pm to
Best part is I slipped the Duke brothers a fake report saying the drought has not affected the crawfish crop.
Posted by Twenty 49
Shreveport
Member since Jun 2014
18889 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 7:04 pm to
quote:

please support your local farmers, docks, and boiling houses


Thoughts and prayers sent.
Posted by KillTheGophers
Member since Jan 2016
6261 posts
Posted on 1/25/24 at 10:42 pm to
No way am I paying to support them. Ribeyes and all the fixins for the foreseeable future.
Posted by Jack Daniel
In the bottle
Member since Feb 2013
25701 posts
Posted on 1/26/24 at 8:25 am to
Fat pigs get slaughtered. Crawfish farmers have been over charging the last few years and blaming different reasons.
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