Feb. 2001 - Vol. 62 No. 2


 
 
 
 

article image2001 WILDLIFE CODE CHANGES

Compiled by John W. Smith

Each year, the Regulations Committee for the Missouri Department of Conservation reviews all the rules in the Wildlife Code of Missouri.


The purpose of the annual review is to determine whether the existing regulations continue to fulfill the mission of conserving the state’s forest, fish and wildlife resources without unnecessarily regimenting or inconveniencing the public. When specific needs are identified, rule changes are recommended to the Missouri Conservation Commission for approval.

Rule changes that appear in the 2001 Wildlife Code, which is now available, become effective March 1, 2001 and are highlighted in this summary. Hunters, anglers and trappers are responsible for understanding the regulations before venturing afield.

FISHING

New Regulations for the Mississippi River

The Missouri Department of Conservation and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources have negotiated expanded reciprocal fishing privileges on their shared portion of the Mississippi River. In addition to being able to fish in the flowing portion of the Mississippi in either state, properly licensed or exempted anglers from Missouri may now fish either state’s adjacent backwaters and shared oxbow lakes, and they may now fish from the bank or attach to the bank of either state.

Anglers must still abide by the regulations of the state in which they are fishing regardless of where they are licensed. They must also abide by the most restrictive of the two states’ regulations when fishing the other state’s waters. To make it easier for anglers to know and follow the regulations on the Mississippi River, the Missouri Department of Conservation and Illinois Department of Natural Resources have made a number of regulation changes that will bring uniformity to most of the sport fishing regulations. Missouri’s new regulations on the Mississippi River are:

In fact, grandad's walking stick, the one that magically sprouted into a tree, was probably cut from a willow branch.

HUNTING

GENERAL

Wild Ginseng Harvest - New regulations specify parameters for the legal harvest of wild ginseng (Panax quinquefolium).