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GCRL
harvests 500 pounds of shrimp
Patrice Clark, WLOX-TV
Biloxi-Gulfport-Pascagoula
It was a great start to
harvest season for Gulf Coast Research workers
as they stood in amazement to see the fruits
of their labor. "
We harvested 500 pounds of shrimp
out of the tank," says Dr. Tom Mcllwain.
Hundreds
of shrimp are raised at the indoor facility
every year through the lab's marine
shrimp farming program. Mcllwain says
the process is also environmentally friendly. "
Our
goal was to be able to produce shrimp in
a closed system with zero discharge
of water."
But when Katrina hit, production
came to a halt. "
We lost the top off the greenhouse.
We lost the shrimp we had in house," McIlwain
said. "We were not able to
harvest them, we did not have the infrastructure
last year."
Now that the equipment has
been repaired and employees have returned,
the goal is
to market these American grown saltwater
shrimp in America. " That is $4 billion that can stay in
the United States if we had a domestic industry.
In order to develop a domestic industry,
we have to do it in an environmentally friendly
way - that is low water use, a low discharge,
and it has be competitive price wise," Dr.
Jeff Lotz said. " Our ultimate goal is to produce a
crop that we would sell right now. We want
to experiment with them and get them out
in the public," Mcllwain said.
The Cedar
Point facility is the largest research development
center for farm raised
shrimp in the United States.
Source:
ABC Network Affiliate WLOX-TV
Watch the video
news clip.
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