DNR Announces SC Shrimp Trawling Season Start

The shrimp season typically opens in mid to late May after the peak spawning period of white shrimp has occurred.

June 10 First Day of SC Shrimp Trawling SeasonThe commercial shrimp trawling season will open in South Carolina state waters within the General Trawl Zone (GTZ) at 8 a.m. Tuesday, June 10, 2014.

The unusually cool spring this year has resulted in slower growth and development than normal, resulting in slightly delayed spawning, but shrimp are maturing and actively spawning all along the coast according to Mel Bell, S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Director of Office of Fisheries Management.

DNR surveys indicate that white shrimp stocks for the year were somewhat below average in 2013, when fall catches by commercial boats were well below average.

The extremely wet weather last summer may have contributed to the poor catches later in the year. Rainfall thus far in 2014 is about average.

Total landings for shrimp during the 2013 season, measured heads-off, was just over 1.3 million pounds, which was well below average for the state. Fall white shrimp landings in 2013 were the lowest on record. The numbers of licensed shrimp trawlers to-date as the season opens is 437.

DNR conducts shrimp resource assessments in a number of ways, including fishery dependent and independent monitoring. This allows for fisheries biologists and managers to analyze the resource from trawls conducted by DNR biologists as well as commercial trawlers.

Three seasons define the state’s commercial shrimp fishery calendar. The first, white roe shrimp season, opens 8 a.m., June 10th in all state waters where trawling is permitted.

The white roe shrimp season generates the most value for fishing effort with early season prices for larger roe shrimp being relatively high.

The brown shrimp season typically occurs during the summer months, and the larger fall white shrimp season, composed of offspring from the spring roe crop, carries out the remainder of the three seasons in the late summer and ends in winter.

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June 4, 2014