FISH
WITH TANS
The first channel catfish crop coming
out of a mine pit lake in Elkville, Ill., are "fat as footballs and black
as coal," says Daniel Selock, a researcher and aquaculture specialist at
SIUC.
"I see their appearance as a marketing
tool, a way of differentiating our Illinois fish from those down south,"
he says.
These catfish come from Clearwater Fish
Farm, a private endeavor hatched in 2000 with some help from Selock and
the Illinois Fish Farmers Co-op.
The cats get their fat and sassy look from their environment: They live
in netpens in 30- to 50-acre lakes made from reclaimed strip mines.
"Water clarity is 8 to 10 feet in many
mine lakes, so the sunlight penetrates the water," Selock says. "Because
the cages are no deeper than 4 to 6 feet, the fish are basically basking
in the sun all summer and getting a nice tan. Instead of the gray, washed-out
look you see in cats from Arkansas and Mississippi, you get this beautiful
black color with indigo highlights."
Selock has been advising southern Illinois
fish farmers on techniques for growing fish in reclaimed strip mine lakes.
This isn't a new idea; back in the 1950s and 1960s, SIUC fisheries scientists
raised trout in a mine lake near De Soto. Cage culture was necessary because
the lake was too deep to seine. "They did work with cages before anyone
else in the country even thought of it," says Selock.
He has been promoting the use of both netpens
and mine lakes as a way to boost the region's economy. Catfish are a competitive
choice: those raised in netpens don't grub around on the pond bottom for
worms; they eat grain, which gives them a better flavor.
And there are plenty of mine lakes at hand.
SIUC's resident land-reclamation expert, Jack Nawrot, estimates that southern
Illinois boasts 15,000 surface acres of coal mine lakes with water quality
suitable for fish farming.
"We're trying to convert this resource
from a liability to something that can support a business for rural economic
development," explains Selock. (See also the Spring 2001 Perspectives cover
story.)
If a nice tan can make catfish look good,
it ought to do wonders for hybrid striped bass, a fish whose attractive
appearance makes it a popular choice for upscale eateries that serve fish
whole. Over the past decade SIUC’s Fisheries
and Illinois Aquaculture Center has developed techniques for Midwestern
farming of this species, and Clearwater Fish Farm recently added bass to
its operation.
"These bass ought to be just dazzling,
brilliant bass, and that added brilliance and color ought to sway the chef,"
Selock says.
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