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FWC sets new rules at Tallahassee
meeting
April 10, 2008
Contacts: Inland Issues – Henry Cabbage, 850-528-1755
Marine issues – Lee Schlesinger, 850-487-0554
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission (FWC) sorted through a list of rule proposals during
its two-day meeting in Tallahassee.
During Wednesday’s session, Commissioners
approved a new management plan for bald eagles; deletion of the
bald eagle from the list of threatened species; and new rules
prohibiting taking, feeding, disturbing, possessing, selling,
purchasing or bartering of any bald eagle or its nest or eggs,
except as authorized by permit. The new rules also prohibit any
person from entering an area on nest sites that has been posted
as closed for protection of the bald eagle.
Also during Wednesday’s session, Commissioners
approved permitting guidelines for activities that affect gopher
tortoises. Commissioners heard reports on Pet Amnesty Day, held
in February, and the risk assessment for barramundi.
The Commission voted not to continue a
reciprocal agreement with Georgia that allowed senior citizens
from the two states to hunt and freshwater fish in either state
without buying a license. Georgia Department of Natural
Resources officials notified the FWC last year that Georgia
wanted to rescind the hunting provision of the agreement, but
FWC Commissioners voted to rescind the freshwater fishing
provision as well. The agreement never has applied to saltwater
fishing.
Florida resident senior citizens still are
entitled to hunt and fish in Florida without purchasing a
Florida license, although the FWC encourages seniors to purchase
licenses to support conservation.
The FWC also approved new rules to continue the
moratorium on reducing the number of traps in the lobster
fishery for one year and allow two spiny lobster endorsement
numbers to be displayed from one vessel to enable both
endorsement holders to fish from the vessel. Also, the new rule
prohibits harvest and possession of egg-bearing lobsters of any
species.
Commissioners also proposed new rules to allow
commercial harvest of mullet on weekends, extend the Stone Crab
Advisory Board to July 1, 2011 and allow the use of galvanized,
16-guage or thinner, degradable staples to construct the
degradable panel on wire stone crab traps. Final hearings on
these proposed rules will be held in June.
In other marine fisheries action, the FWC
considered South Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management
councils’ grouper and vermilion snapper management alternatives
and other federal marine fisheries management issues. In
addition, they received a report on FWC marine fishery stock
assessments and reviewed and discussed special activity license
rule modifications, marine life (aquarium fish) issues and a
stock assessment of the pompano fishery.
The agenda also included final review of the
vision document on the future of Florida’s freshwater fisheries.
The complete agenda is available at
MyFWC.com/Commission/2008/Apr08/index.htm.
The next FWC meeting will be in Dania Beach,
June 11-12.
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