Service Allows Aquaculturists To Take Cormorants Preying On Commercial Fish Stocks

You are viewing ARCHIVED content published online before January 20, 2025. Please note that this content is NOT UPDATED, and links may not work. Additionally, any previously issued diversity, equity, inclusion or gender-related guidance on this webpage should be considered rescinded. For current information, visit our newsroom.
Press Release
Service Allows Aquaculturists To Take Cormorants Preying On Commercial Fish Stocks
In today's Federal Register, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a depredation order allowing catfish farmers and other commercial aquaculturalists in 13 states to take cormorants that are preying on their fish stocks after nonlethal means to protect their fish have been shown not to work.

The order will be one component of an integrated program to reduce cormorant depredation losses at aquaculture facilities. Lethal take will supplement and increase the effectiveness of the nonlethal alternatives available to aquaculturists.
The order is not intended to control the cormorant population, estimated to be increasing annually at a rate of six to seven percent; rather, it is directed at site-specific problems in which cormorants are eating catfish and other commercially important fish species.

"Populations of double-crested cormorants have exploded in recent years, causing significant economic loss to fish farmers," said Service Director Jamie Rappaport Clark. "With this depredation order, the Service is letting aquaculturalists take action to protect their livelihood when nonlethal methods are ineffective. This action will have no significant effect on the cormorant population but will provide needed relief on a site-specific basis."

The Service estimates the depredation order will save as much as $20 million in fish taken each year in the $714 million aquaculture industry. The greatest impact will be in the Mississippi Delta region where catfish farmers lose an average of 3 to 7 percent of their inventory each year to double-crested cormorants. Some farmers are being hit particularly hard by the birds while others are not affected at all.

The order applies to Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas.
Aquaculturalists may shoot birds only at facilities with an established nonlethal harassment program as certified by officials of state wildlife agencies and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

To take cormorants under this depredation order, aquaculturalists must first obtain certification from their state wildlife agency that a cormorant depredation problem exists, that they have employed nonlethal techniques to control cormorant depredation, that nonlethal controls have not been effective, and that lethal control is warranted. 

Double-crested cormorants are long-necked, large-bodied diving birds. Their webbed feet and hooked beaks are adapted for chasing and capturing fish under water. Cormorant populations are now believed to be at an all-time high of between one and two million birds.
Aquaculturalists have had to rely on either harassing the birds, which is often ineffective, or putting net covers over their facilities to keep the birds out, which is often unfeasible or prohibitively expensive. 

Original Release PDF version