Press Release
PRESS
RELEASE August 10 , 2009
Kerr Center, PO Box 588, Poteau, OK 74953 918.647.9123 mailbox@kerrcenter.com
Press releases are online at www.kerrcenter.com.
Kerr Center is a non-profit educational foundation.
Contact: Maura McDermott, 918.231.0328 or mauramcdermot.kerrcenter@ecewb.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - USE UNTIL Sept. 3, 2009
ATTENTION: AGRICULTURE, FOOD, OR BUSINESS EDITOR
Pond-Raised Prawn Field Day Set for Sept. 12
Most Oklahomans wouldn’t bring hip waders and seining nets
to a roundup. After they meet Jeremy Eaton, that could change.
On September 12, Eaton will host a field day to demonstrate how
he’s been raising freshwater shrimp, or prawns, for the past
two years in the pond on his farm near Cashion, northwest of Oklahoma
City.
During the two-hour field day, which starts at 9:30, Eaton will
harvest his second crop of prawns in as many years. In the
meantime, he’ll give visitors the lowdown on production methods,
potential problems, and harvesting and marketing.
Eaton received a 2008 Oklahoma Producer Grant from the Kerr Center
for Sustainable Agriculture to demonstrate the feasibility of raising
prawns in farm ponds as an additional income source for Oklahoma
farmers.
Registration for the prawn field day is free, but required by
September 4 to reserve a place. Space is limited. To register,
email jcastillo@kerrcenter.com,
or call 918.647.9123.
Eaton says that the water quality, oxygen levels, and prawn growth
rates during the first season met his expectations. This
year, he’s been working to address challenges from predation,
as well as improving containment of the prawns.
Eaton stocks the prawns, obtained from a Texas hatchery, in May
or June, and harvests in September. The prawns eat readily
available commercials catfish pellets, and the production area
takes up three acres of a farm pond.
The way Eaton figures, raising prawns in farm ponds makes good
sense in several ways. It provides an additional, profitable
use for an asset that most farms already possess.
“Shrimp are a healthy food that customers recognize and
value,” he says. “They can be sold live, maximizing
freshness and quality while avoiding the cost and regulatory hurdles
of processing.”
Moreover, with over $1 billion worth of frozen shrimp currently
imported to the U.S. every year to meet demand, domestic shrimp
production offers a large potential market.
Since marine shrimp production for global markets often damages
fragile coastal ecosystems, Eaton says, domestic pond-based production
of prawns can also form a more ecologically friendly alternative.
For information on other upcoming events related to sustainable
agriculture, visit the Kerr Center's website at www.kerrcenter.com.
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