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  • Anyone up for a shrimp boil with these babies?

    Giant shrimp raises big concern as it invades the Gulf
    Asian tiger prawn has scientists worried
    By MATTHEW TRESAUGUE, HOUSTON CHRONICLE
    Updated 09:32 p.m., Saturday, December 24, 2011



    A tiger prawn is displayed by shrimp trawler Capt. Tony Perez. The foot-long female was caught about 60 miles south of the Louisiana coast near Morgan City in October. / HC

    A truly jumbo shrimp is causing big worries about the future of the Gulf of Mexico's ecosystem.

    The Asian tiger prawn, a foot-long crustacean with a voracious appetite and a proclivity for disease, has invaded the northern Gulf, threatening prized native species, from crabs and oysters to smaller brown and white shrimp.

    Though no one is sure what the ecological impact will be, scientists fear a tiger prawn takeover could knock nature's balance out of whack and turn a healthy, diverse marine habitat into one dominated by a single invasive species.

    "It has the potential to be real ugly," said Leslie Hartman, Matagorda Bay ecoystem leader for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. "But we just do not know."

    The tiger prawns from the western Pacific - which can grow up to 13 inches long - have been spreading along the Gulf Coast since 2006, but their numbers took off this year. Shrimpers pulled one from Texas waters for the first time in June.

    In all, shrimpers have found three tiger prawns in Aransas Bay, one in Sabine Lake near the Louisiana border and one in Gulf waters about 70 miles from Freeport, according to the Texas Sea Grant program at Texas A&M University.

    Marine scientists will conduct genetic studies on the shrimp to determine their origin. Hartman said they will need at least 60 prawns for an accurate analysis.

    Several theories

    Some speculate that the Gulf invasion began with an accidental release of farmed prawns in South Carolina in 1988. Another theory: The prawns may have escaped from flooded industrial shrimp ponds in the Caribbean Sea during recent hurricanes.

    The threat underscores concerns about large-scale fish farming, also known as aquaculture, in the Gulf. The federal government opened the waters to fish farms in 2009 despite fears from environmental and fishing interests over how to protect wild stocks.

    Disease normally would exist in relatively low levels in fish around the Gulf but can run rampant in densely packed fish farms. Tiger prawns are a known carrier of at least 16 viruses, such as white spot, which can be lethal to shrimp.

    The Gulf policy calls for only native species to be farmed, but it does not have the force of law, said George Leonard, who leads the Ocean Conservancy's aquaculture program.

    "We need to be really, really cautious," Leonard said. "There has to be rules and regulations."

    No farming of species

    Texas allows industrial-scale shrimp ponds, but requires permits for the cultivation of non-native species. No one in the state is farming tiger prawns, said Tony Reisinger, a marine and coastal resources expert for the Texas Sea Grant program.

    Marine scientists have yet to find any juvenile tiger prawns in Texas waters, a sign that the species is breeding. It is a difficult assignment because they look similar to native white shrimp at a young age.

    Tiger prawns weigh more than a half-pound and have distinctive black and white stripes on the tail. They eat the same types of food as native shrimp species, but also prey on their smaller cousins, as well as crabs and young oysters.

    "It's a large, competitive species," Reisinger said.

    It's also tasty, fetching a higher market price than native brown shrimp on the New York market this month.

    Some shrimpers have wondered if the large prawns could become the fourth harvestable shrimp species off the Texas coast.

    Hartman, of Texas Parks and Wildlife, is skeptical.

    "It could be another crop, but at the expense of our native crop," she said.

  • #2
    Wonder if that is as tasty as a normal shrimp?

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    • #3
      Govt should fine Asia for not controlling their prawns

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by talisman View Post
        Wonder if that is as tasty as a normal shrimp?
        It's also tasty, fetching a higher market price than native brown shrimp on the New York market this month.
        All the disease talk is kinda turning me off though.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Jimbo View Post
          All the disease talk is kinda turning me off though.
          It'll help boost your immune system!
          .

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          • #6
            Tiger prawns are quite tasty. Most shrimp we eat is farm raised, anyway.

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            • #7
              Had them before at the Four Seasons. Theyre awesome.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by SMKR View Post
                Govt should fine Asia for not controlling their prawns
                Joke?

                Originally posted by Jimbo View Post
                All the disease talk is kinda turning me off though.
                We're not susceptible to the diseases in question.
                ZOMBIE REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT 2016!!! heh

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by tex View Post
                  Tiger prawns are quite tasty. Most shrimp we eat is farm raised, anyway.
                  Except "gulf shrimp"

                  Growing up in corpus, there's nothing like going down to the t heads and buying shrimp right off the boats.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Yale View Post
                    We're not susceptible to the diseases in question.
                    Oh, I get that. It's still a bit of an appetite shrinker, though.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by tex View Post
                      Tiger prawns are quite tasty. Most shrimp we eat is farm raised, anyway.
                      I don't eat farm raised shrimp, unless I eat them at a restaurant, which is rare.

                      It isn't hard if you live in a southern state to get gulf shrimp.

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                      • #12
                        Looks like a cockaroach, ya'll knock yourselves out.

                        <---hates seafood

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                        • #13
                          So big it would only take one shrimp to make a shrimp po-boy.

                          I'm in like Flynn.

                          Stevo
                          Originally posted by SSMAN
                          ...Welcome to the land of "Fuck it". No body cares, and if they do, no body cares.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Yale View Post
                            Joke?


                            We're not susceptible to the diseases in question.
                            Yea its ajoke since govt likes to stick nose in everything

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