Post by Deleted on Feb 8, 2015 5:49:55 GMT -5
NONE OF THESE PROPOSED CHANGES HAVE BEEN APPROVED. IF APPROVED BY THE NATURAL RESOURCES COMMISSION, THEY WILL TAKE EFFECT IN LATE SUMMER OR FALL OF 2015.
Below is a summary of the proposed changes:
312 IAC 9-1-5.3: Removes the word “traverse” to allow additional types of crossbows to be used.
312 IAC 9-1-12: Makes a technical correction to 312 IAC 9-1-12 to clarify the definition of “possession”
312 IAC 9-2-4: Combines language from 312 IAC 9-2-4 and 312 IAC 9-2-5 governing the restrictions on the placement of traps to clarify requirements
312 IAC 9-3-2: Changes the urban deer zone license to a deer reduction zone license to be consistent with proposed language changes in 312 IAC 9-3-4 and requires check station operators to check-in deer using the DNR’s electronic harvest reporting system. Changes to the licensing system are in the process, and retailers will be able to check-in deer and turkey for hunters through a system similar to the current licensing system
312 IAC 9-3-3: Makes the following changes governing deer hunting equipment:
•Allows the 28-gauge shotgun to be used during the firearms seasons and the special antlerless season. Twenty-eight (28) gauge deer slug ammunition is now available and allowing these firearms will provide deer hunters another choice of firearm with which to hunt deer.
•Clarifies that handguns currently legal to use during the firearms season are legal even if originally designed and registered as a rifle. This would clarify that a rifle that can be changed to be used as a handgun can be used during deer firearms season as long as it meets requirements for legal handguns.
•Allows additional rifles to be used by reducing the bullet size required to .243 and eliminating the maximum rifle cartridge case length. This will allow high-powered rifles such as the .30-30 and .45-70 during the deer firearms seasons. Full metal jacketed bullets would be unlawful because since they do not expand when fired, and therefore, do not kill as humanely. The DNR believes this change can be made at this time for the following reasons: ◦There are currently no limits on rifles that are legal to use for species other than migratory birds, deer and wild turkey.
◦Muzzleloaders have evolved to the point that with smokeless powder (which is legal to use), they are essentially a high-powered rifle (accurate 500-yard gun).
◦They are legal in several nearby states, including Kentucky, Michigan (the northern part of the state) and Pennsylvania.
There has been no increase in hunting-related accidents as the result of the use of rifles, neither in Indiana nor in several other states where they are allowed.
◦There isn’t a need to limit the equipment that can be used to take deer in order to manage the deer herd. The deer harvest was a record in 2012, and the DNR is managing the deer herd through other means.
◦Rifle cartridges that fire a bullet at least .243 in diameter and have a minimum case length of 1.16 inches long can safely and humanely kill white-tailed deer.
•Allows firearms to be used during the deer reduction (formerly urban deer zone) season, where legal to discharge a firearm, from the first Saturday after November 11 through January 31 of the following year. Use of firearms in deer reduction zones would give communities greater flexibility to manage deer-related problems and should improve deer-harvest success rates.
•Changes the dates for placing tree or ground blinds on state and federal properties to noon on September 15 through January 10
•Allows those who place on tree stands or ground blinds on state and federal properties to identify it with their Indiana DNR-issued Customer ID number or name and address, instead of requiring only their name and address. This ID number is pretty short and would add a degree of privacy to hunters without interfering with law enforcement validation of the users.
312 IAC 9-3-4: Makes the following changes to the deer season dates and bag limits:
•Allows a youth hunter to take one antlerless deer in an “A” county (such as Tipton County) during the special youth deer season. This would allow youth hunters additional opportunities in those counties and should have little effect on an “A” county’s deer population.
•Allow the adult who accompanies a youth hunter to carry a handgun in accordance with state law. This would comply with state law (Indiana Code 35-47-2), which allows an individual to carry a handgun while hunting lawfully.
•Renames Urban Deer Zones to Reduction Zones.
•Modifies boundaries for these zones by allowing them to be established annually by the DNR Director in a temporary rule. Adding or removing deer-reduction zones on an annual basis would give the DNR more flexibility to address deer density conflicts and to respond to disease threats.
•Increases bag limit of antlerless deer in these areas.
312 IAC 9-3-9: Allows additional species of wild animals to be kept for personal use if found dead or die following a collision with a motor vehicle. A permit is required by the DNR, but these species would be allowed to be kept for personal use (such as for their meat) if found dead, as long as they have a permit issued by the DNR.
312 IAC 9-3-12: Allow coyotes to be taken year-round without written permission of the landowner. Coyotes can be taken during the hunting and trapping season (October 15-March 15) or year-round on private land with written permission of the landowner. Removing the requirement for written permission would make it easier for individuals to remove nuisance coyotes at anytime. Permission of the landowner or tenant would still be required, but it would not have to be in writing.
312 IAC 9-3-15: Makes several changes governing the following species of wild animals that are causing damage or causing a health or safety threat: raccoons, skunks, opossums, beavers, muskrats, red foxes, gray foxes, mink, long-tailed weasels, gray squirrels and fox squirrels:
•Allows resident landowners and tenants to designate another person (such as a relative, friend, neighbor, or employee) in writing to take these animals for them outside the season and without a permit as long as there is no compensation of any kind. This would allow landowners and tenants to have others (i.e., friends, neighbors, relatives) assist in the removal of the animal and not require the person to have a permit when doing so without compensation. Thousands of wild animals are a nuisance each year. They need to be dealt with as quickly as possible without delays from having to get a permit.
•Allows these animals to be taken without a permit if the animal is causing or threatening to cause damage to property or posing health or safety threat to persons or domestic animals. Taking the wild animal while it is damaging property is difficult, and some animals need to be removed for health or safety reasons. This language is also consistent with the administrative code in 312 IAC 9-10-4 that allows wild animals to be taken under a nuisance wild animal control permit.
•Requires individuals who take a wild animal under this section to use legal methods (including legal foothold traps and snares) when taking these animals.
312 IAC 9-3-16: Establishes hunting hours for rabbits on DNR fish & wildlife areas, Salamonie Lake, Mississinewa Lake, and Patoka Lake during the month of February (only) from ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour before sunset. The Division of Fish & Wildlife manages approximately 156,000 acres for wildlife habitat and provides 36,000 upland game hunting efforts annually. Assume that the average upland game hunter can cover 30 acres in one day. That translates to 1.1 million acres of upland game hunting efforts on those 156,000 acres. Given this intense pressure on a limited land area, this would reduce pressures on rabbit populations and their habitat on fish & wildlife areas during late winter, a time that presents the greatest survival challenges for many species.
312 IAC 9-3-18.6: Makes the following changes governing wild pigs:
•Prohibits the use of dogs to chase or take wild pigs; allow only state and federal wildlife management agencies to use dogs. The prohibition on using dogs to take wild pigs would prevent wild pigs from being pushed into new areas when being chased by dogs.
•Prohibits assisting in the release of a wild pig.
•Clarifies that Heritage or Heirloom breed pigs that are possessed, bred, and sold strictly for farming or medicinal purposes are exempt from restrictions on the possession, importation, and sale of wild pigs. Heritage or heirloom breed pigs that are of Eurasian origin and used only for food, exhibition, or medicinal purposes meet the Indiana Administrative Code’s definition of wild pig, which was not the rule’s intent.
312 IAC 9-4-8: Makes the following changes governing the hunting of Ring-necked Pheasants:
•Prohibits pheasant hunters in designated pheasant put-and-take areas from harvesting game animals except pheasants on days when pheasants are released and hunted; this restrictions will be only for these pheasants hunters and only in their designated units. Restricting Put/Take pheasant hunters from harvesting other animals will protect upland game during a week-long period of intense hunting pressure.
•Limits birds to thingys only in put-and-take areas on Pigeon River, Willow Slough, and Winamac fish & wildlife areas. Willow Slough, Winamac, and Pigeon River fish & wildlife areas have resident wild pheasants. The harvesting of only thingy pheasants would protect hen pheasants and promote a better condition for natural reproduction on these areas. Beginning in 2015, only thingy pheasants will be released on these FWAs during the put-and-take hunts.
•Removes Crosley Fish & Wildlife Area from properties that offer put-and-take pheasant hunts. Crosley FWA no longer participates in Put/Take pheasant hunting.
312 IAC 9-4-9: Changes the daily bag limit for bobwhite quail on fish & wildlife areas, Salamonie Lake, Mississinewa Lake, and Patoka Lake to two (2) in the North Zone and four (4) in the South Zone. The Division of Fish & Wildlife manages approximately 156,000 acres for wildlife habitat and provides 36,000 upland game hunting efforts annually. Assume that the average upland game hunter can cover 30 acres in one day. That translates to 1.1 million acres of upland game hunting efforts on those 156,000 acres. By reducing the daily bag limit on these managed lands, protection would be provided to a wildlife population under extreme hunting pressure on a fixed land area as described above. This also would distribute the harvest among fish & wildlife area hunters so that many hunters harvest a few birds instead of a few hunters harvesting many birds.
312 IAC 9-4-10: Suspend the ruffed grouse season statewide.
Ruffed grouse is projected to drop below “viable population levels” within the next couple of years in portions of its existing range in south central Indiana. Annual roadside surveys continue to find little or no presence of ruffed grouse in many stops along control routes. No drumming male ruffed grouse were heard on the 14 roadside survey routes (15 stops/routes) during the 2013 survey period and only one grouse has been heard on these routes in four years. The five-year (2009-2013) mean drumming index for the control routes was less than 0.01 drummers per stop (about 1 drummer heard every 190 stops), which is less than 1 percent of levels recorded during the peak years of 1979-81. For the eighth consecutive year, no drumming activity centers were located on the Maumee Grouse Study Area where population monitoring began in the early 1960s. Advancement of forest succession (maturity) is a major reason for decline of the ruffed grouse. Prospects for a population recovery are dismal and extirpation seems possible.
312 IAC 9-4-11: Makes the following changes governing the hunting of wild turkeys:
•Makes the firearm portion of fall turkey season up North (Dekalb, LaGrange, LaPorte, Marshall, St. Joseph, Starke, and Steuben counties) the same length as Southern counties. The fall archery/firearms season currently is seven days shorter in northern counties than southern counties. This would make the two consistent. Participation in fall turkey season is relatively low. The number of additional birds taken during the seven extra days (which adds one weekend) would allow additional hunter opportunity without negatively impacting the turkey population.
•Requires hunter orange for fall turkey hunting when it coincides with the locations and dates of the special deer antlerless season (Dec. 26 through the first Sunday in January). This would be consistent with current rules that currently require fall turkey hunters to wear hunter orange during times that coincide with deer hunters being able to hunt with a firearm.
312 IAC 9-5-6: Makes the following changes governing the taking of game turtles and game frogs:
•Game Turtles (Eastern snapping turtle, spiny softshell turtle, and smooth softshell turtle): Establishes a season (July-March), changes the daily bag limit to four (4) per species (possession limit of 8 per species), and restricts the size that can be taken to only those with a carapace length over 12 inches. Turtle populations are under pressure worldwide, with 41 percent of recognized species currently threatened with extinction and at least eight species extirpated, according to the International Union of Conservation Nature and Natural Resources Red List. Habitat destruction and capture for the pet and food trades remain the top reasons for this continuing decline. Mounting evidence indicates long-lived organisms like turtles cannot sustain continuous harvest of reproductive females without population declines. Given these factors, the current season, bag limit and possession limit for Eastern snapping turtles and softshell turtles in Indiana are believed to be unsustainable.
•Game Frogs (Bullfrogs and Green frogs): Allows the use of an air rifle to take game frogs, with a definition of legal air rifles that could be used. Air rifles are becoming more common and can be an efficient means of taking game frogs. A .22 loaded with bird shot is already legal to use to take these species.
312 IAC 9-5-7: Clarifies that the first generation hybrids of native reptiles and amphibians are included in the prohibition governing the sale of native species.
312 IAC 9-6-1: Adds the following definitions governing fishing: artificial lure, bait, fly, hook, minnow, pole and line, stone moroko, sunfish, wels catfish, and zander. Most of these definitions are needed to clarify terms. The definition of “Minnow” is required since the state law changed in 2013 to require a definition in administrative rule; a temporary rule is currently in place, but a permanent rule is needed. The species of fish included in the definition of “minnow” are common species captured and used as bait.
312 IAC 9-6-7: Makes the following changes governing exotic fish:
•Adds the following to the list of species that are illegal to possess: stone moroko, zander, and Wels catfish. These three species have undergone rigorous screening by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. All show a history of invasiveness throughout the world and a climate match with Indiana. This means they would likely survive in Indiana if allowed to be introduced.
•Requires exotic fish that are possessed to either have their head removed, be eviscerated, or have gill arches removed from one side to ensure they are not capable of living (since live possession is not allowed). The current rule says exotic fish cannot be possessed alive; however, there is no clear enforceable definition that declares a fish dead. Some species, particularly Asian carp, are caught live and moved around while on ice. Iced Asian carp have been known to “come back to life” after being put in the water. The rule lists a choice of options that could be taken to assure fish like these are not able to survive.
312 IAC 9-6-9: Changes the name of the northern cavefish to the Hoosier cavefish. New genetic research has differentiated the species that lives in Indiana from the Northern cavefish and it has been given a new scientific name.
312 IAC 9-7-1: Clarifies the bodies of water where a fishing license is required to be consistent with state law in IC 14-22-11-8. These are not new requirements.
312 IAC 9-7-2: Makes the following changes governing sport fishing methods, except on the Ohio River:
•Allows three hooks to be used on a sport fishing line instead of two. Clarifies that umbrella (Alabama) rigs and other similar devices can be used with no more than three hooks that have live bait or three artificial lures, or a combination of both. This is currently authorized by temporary rule and a permanent rule is needed. These changes clearly allow the use of umbrella rigs and similar devices and limit the number of hooks or artificial lures allowed on each device, while also increasing the number of hooks from 2 to 3 on all sport fishing lines.
•Allows anglers to place their Indiana DNR-issued Customer ID number or the name and address of the user on trot lines, limb lines, freefloat lines, and tip-ups, as well as ice fishing shelters. This ID number is pretty short and would add a degree of privacy to anglers without interfering with law enforcement validation of the users.
•Establishes a restriction on hooks used when fishing near Williams Dam (from the dam to the Huron and Williams Road bridge in Lawrence County) from March 15 through April 20. This would protect spawning, endangered lake sturgeon from angler pressure by restricting the hook size to one that lake sturgeon can break free from if hooked. This regulation would only be required for a five-week period in early spring, which is when spawning lake sturgeon are present below Williams Dam.
312 IAC 9-7-4: Changes the minimum size limit from 36 inches to 44 inches for muskellunge and tiger muskellunge on Lake Webster, Backwater Lake, and Kiser Lake (all in Kosciusko County).
Lake Webster, along with its interconnected waters (known as Backwater Lake and Kiser Lake), is Indiana’s broodstock source for capturing adult muskellunge and procuring eggs to support the DNR’s statewide muskie stocking program. Although the catch rate of adult muskies captured each spring during egg-taking has not declined, some evidence suggests fewer young muskies are surviving due to a variety of possible factors. Muskie fishing in Indiana depends entirely on stocking. Increasing the minimum size limit to 44 inches could help alleviate the effects of a potential decline in muskie recruitment.
312 IAC 9-7-6: Makes the following changes governing black bass:
•Changes the size limit to the statewide 14-inch minimum size limit Dogwood Lake in Daviess County. (It is 15 now at this lake) This would align Dogwood Lake with statewide bass regulations. Dogwood is one of only two lakes where the bass population is managed with a 15-inch minimum size limit. This was originally done to protect 14- to 15-inch bass when the 12- to 15-inch slot limit was successfully lifted in 1998. There is no longer a management need to protect bass in the 14- to 15-inch size range.
•Allows only two largemouth bass to be taken per day on Kunkel Lake in Wells County. They must be at least 18 inches long. Kunkel Lake is a 25-acre impoundment in Ouabache State Park near Bluffton (Wells County). It was drained in 2013 to remove an undesirable population of small bluegill, black and white crappie, and carp. The fishery had deteriorated in part due to insufficient numbers and sizes of largemouth bass, the lake’s primary predator. Failure to maintain predatory control over carp, an abundant population of rusty crayfish, and excessive bluegill and crappie recruitment led to declines in habitat quality (turbid water) and low angler use. The lake is scheduled to be restocked in early 2014 with bluegills, largemouth bass, redear sunfish and channel catfish to restore balance. Unless action is taken to provide a strong measure of long-term protection of largemouth bass from harvest, predatory control will again be lost and the lake likely would revert to its previous condition.
312 IAC 9-7-9: Adds a 9-inch minimum size requirement to harvest crappie at Dogwood Lake in Daviess County and Hardy Lake in Scott County. Research indicates that a 9-inch minimum length limit on crappie at Hardy and Dogwood lakes should improve crappie fishing and make these standout lakes in Indiana.
312 IAC 9-7-10: Establishes a statewide daily bag limit of 25 (in aggregate) for all species of sunfish (Lepomis spp. – which includes bluegill, redear, warmouth, pumpkinseed, green sunfish, and others). In recent years, technology has greatly increased fish-catching efficiency. Having a sunfish bag limit in place at times when fish are highly vulnerable would help maintain long-term fishing quality.
312 IAC 9-7-12: Makes the following changes governing Walleye/Sauger/Saugeye:
•Establishes a 16-inch minimum size limit for walleye north of State Road 26 on all public waters (lakes, impoundments, rivers, and Lake Michigan) with the exception of these lakes: Lake George (Steuben County), Bass Lake (Starke County), Simonton Lake (Elkhart County), Wolf Lake (Lake County), and Wall Lake (Steuben County). Indiana’s walleye fishing depends on hatchery stockings. Walleye abundance in northern Indiana has increased over the years with the help of larger (and more expensive) hatchery fingerlings. Anglers stand to get more out of these stockings if the fish are allowed to grow larger before they are taken home. The region of Indiana north of State Road 26 contains all the sites where the larger fingerling walleye are currently being stocked. SR 26 runs in a relatively straight line from Illinois to Ohio, which offers a reasonable dividing line. Exceptions to a 16-inch minimum size limit would include lakes with documented slow growth of walleye or other special regulatory needs. The rest of Indiana’s public waters (except the Ohio River) would remain regulated by a 14-inch walleye size limit.
•Eliminates the minimum size limit for saugeye on all waters statewide, except for Huntingburg Lake (Dubois County) and Sullivan Lake (Sullivan County). Hybrid walleye (saugeye) are a walleye-sauger cross. They are hatchery produced and stocked at two southern Indiana lakes where they perform better than either parent. Like walleye, saugeye are regulated with a 14-inch size limit. While walleye and saugeye are easily distinguished from one another, saugeye (14-inch limit) and sauger (no size limit) look much alike, especially when small. Further, saugeye can be produced in the wild when walleye and sauger naturally crossbreed. Therefore, it is suggested to regulate saugeye like sauger – with no size limit – except at the two lakes where they are being stocked and managed (Sullivan and Huntingburg lakes).
•Adds sauger to the aggregate bag limit for walleye and saugeye (does not include the Ohio River). This would simplify regulations to combine walleye, sauger and saugeye in a six-fish aggregate daily bag limit instead of the current separate bag limits for walleye/saugeye (six) and for sauger (six). No walleye/sauger/saugeye changes are being suggested for the Ohio River.
312 IAC 9-7-14: Removes bluegill from the list of species with no bag limit, possession limit, or size limit. The limit on sunfish at J.C. Murphey Lake at Willow Slough Fish & Wildlife Area is also being eliminated since a new bag limit for all sunfish is being proposed in 312 IAC 9-7-10.
312 IAC 9-8-4 and 312 IAC 9-8-5: Prohibits the use of wings or leads on a commercial fishing device within the Wabash River and other inland waters (does not include the Ohio River).
Roe-harvesting commercial fishermen who target shovelnose sturgeon are the only fishermen using wings/leads. Some are not using them for the intended purpose. Wings/leads are typically used on trap-nets in areas with little to no current in order to guide fish into the “trap” portion of the net. Some commercial fishermen on the Wabash are using wings/leads as gill nets to entangle fish. Gill nets are not permitted. Shovelnose sturgeon are extremely susceptible to becoming entangled in these devices. A recent operation by Indiana Conservation Officers found that nearly all shovelnose sturgeon captured by hoop nets with wings/leads were entangled in the wing/lead and not caught in the trap portion of the net. Entanglement gear causes significantly more stress and mortality of captured fish.
312 IAC 9-12-4: Removes the requirement that a license retailer note the date the hunter education program was successfully completed (just note the certification number). The DNR’s automated licensing system does not require a license agent to note the date the program was taken. The date is not important in determining whether the person met the requirements for hunter education before obtaining a hunting license.
Repeals 312 IAC 9-1-9 and 312 IAC 9-2-1 because these provisions are already in statute.
Repeals 312 IAC 9-2-5 since the provisions are being incorporated into one rule in 312 IAC 9-2-4 governing trapping and netting of birds.
Repeals 312 IAC 9-5-10 since it is no longer applicable (deadline was November 1, 1999).