By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Waterfowl hunters should pack their hunting
regulations along with their gear as new changes mean some
old practices can put them on the wrong side of the
law. The
major change is that hunters can flood and manipulate
natural vegetation, and then hunt over it. They can also
flood harvested or unharvested agricultural fields and hunt
over them, but they cannot scatter seeds, bush hog the field
or do some other non-agricultural practice. Dean
Stewart, wildlife specialist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the changes mostly
clarify existing regulations. "Hunting
over land that has been managed for normal agricultural
practices continues to be allowed," Stewart said. "You can
plant and harvest a crop and hunt over that land as long as
what you do is under the context of normal agriculture. But
if someone goes out and hunts on agricultural areas where
seed or grain has been scattered or manipulated not as part
of normal agriculture, that is baiting and that is
illegal." Recent
year's waterfowl populations have been increasing, having
declined from the late 1970s through the '80s. This year a
projected 105 million ducks will participate in the
continental migration. Many of these will pass through the
state in the Mississippi Flyway. Stewart
attributed these numbers to conservation efforts and rain in
critical nesting areas. The Prairie Pothole region of the
extreme northern United States and southern Canada has
gotten increased rainfall, providing much nesting habitat
for the waterfowl. "Waterfowl
nest around the edges of these ponds, and generally the more
water you have, the more edges and nesting habitat," Stewart
said. With
waterfowl in abundance, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
set regulations and provided specifics on what is legal and
illegal hunting practices. "You
cannot hunt waterfowl or any other migratory game bird by
the aid of baiting or on or over any baited area where you
know or reasonably should know that the area is or has been
baited," their website states. Additionally,
baited areas remain off-limits for hunting for 10 days after
the bait has been removed. This regulation recognizes that
removing the bait does not remove the lure to the area
created by the earlier baiting. Those
who hunt over baited areas can be fined up to $15,000 and
spend six months in jail. Those who create the baited area
can be fined up to $100,000 individually or $200,000 for an
organization and could spend up to one year in
prison. "Agricultural
lands offer prime waterfowl hunting opportunities," the
website states. "You can hunt waterfowl in fields of
unharvested standing crops. You can also hunt over standing
crops that have been flooded. You can flood fields after
crops are harvested and use these areas for waterfowl
hunting." Land
with seed or grain present cannot be hunted, unless it is
scattered for normal agricultural planting, harvest,
post-harvest manipulation or soil stabilization. Hunters
also can use blinds of natural vegetation or of agricultural
crops, as long as building the blind does not scatter the
agricultural grain. Extension
Service agronomy specialists have been named as the
authority on what are normal agricultural practices. That
means Dr. Erick Larson, Dr. Alan Blaine and Dr. Joe Street
may be called upon to clarify normal production practices
for corn, wheat, soybeans and rice. The
Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks has
not determined the duck hunting season dates, but will
announce these when they are set. For
complete details on the baiting regulations for migratory
waterfowl, visit the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's
wildlife laws section at http://www.le.fws.gov. Released:
Sept. 6, 1999
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
Migratory
Waterfowl Hunters Face Changes
Contact: Dean Stewart, (662) 325-3177
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:32
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw99/990906ds.htm
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