[Federal Register: September 20, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 182)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Page 53881-53906]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr20se07-14]
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Part VI
Department of the Interior
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Fish and Wildlife Service
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50 CFR Part 20
Migratory Bird Hunting; Final Frameworks for Late[dash]Season Migratory
Bird Hunting Regulations; Final Rule
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 20
RIN 1018-AV12
Migratory Bird Hunting; Final Frameworks for Late-Season
Migratory Bird Hunting Regulations
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Fish and Wildlife Service (Service or we) prescribes final
late-season frameworks from which States may select season dates,
limits, and other options for the 2007-08 migratory bird hunting
seasons. These late seasons include most waterfowl seasons, the
earliest of which commences on September 22, 2007. The effect of this
final rule is to facilitate the States'( selection of hunting seasons
and to further the annual establishment of the late-season migratory
bird hunting regulations.
DATES: This rule takes effect on September 20, 2007.
ADDRESSES: States should send their season selections to: Chief,
Division of Migratory Bird Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Department of the Interior, ms MBSP-4107-ARLSQ, 1849 C Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20240. You may inspect comments during normal business
hours at our office in room 4107, 4501 N. Fairfax Drive, Arlington,
Virginia.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Blohm, Chief, or Ron W. Kokel,
Division of Migratory Bird Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
(703) 358-1714.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Regulations Schedule for 2007
On April 11, 2007, we published in the Federal Register (72 FR
18328) a proposal to amend 50 CFR part 20. The proposal provided a
background and overview of the migratory bird hunting regulations
process, and dealt with the establishment of seasons, limits, proposed
regulatory alternatives for the 2007-08 duck hunting season, and other
regulations for hunting migratory game birds under Sec. Sec. 20.101
through 20.107, 20.109, and 20.110 of subpart K. Major steps in the
2007-08 regulatory cycle relating to open public meetings and Federal
Register notifications were also identified in the April 11 proposed
rule.
On June 8, 2007, we published in the Federal Register (72 FR 31789)
a second document providing supplemental proposals for early- and late-
season migratory bird hunting regulations and the regulatory
alternatives for the 2007-08 duck hunting season. The June 8 supplement
also provided detailed information on the 2007-08 regulatory schedule
and announced the Service Migratory Bird Regulations Committee (SRC)
and Flyway Council meetings.
On June 20 and 21, we held open meetings with the Flyway Council
Consultants, at which the participants reviewed information on the
current status of migratory shore and upland game birds and developed
recommendations for the 2007-08 regulations for these species plus
regulations for migratory game birds in Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the
Virgin Islands; special September waterfowl seasons in designated
States; special sea duck seasons in the Atlantic Flyway; and extended
falconry seasons. In addition, we reviewed and discussed preliminary
information on the status of waterfowl as it relates to the development
and selection of the regulatory packages for the 2007-08 regular
waterfowl seasons. On July 23, 2007, we published in the Federal
Register (72 FR 40194) a third document specifically dealing with the
proposed frameworks for early-season regulations. In the August 28,
2007, Federal Register (72 FR 49622), we published final frameworks for
early migratory bird hunting seasons from which wildlife conservation
agency officials from the States, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands
selected 2007-08 early-season hunting dates, hours, areas, and limits.
On August 30, 2007, we published a final rule in the Federal Register
(72 FR 50164) amending subpart K of title 50 CFR part 20 to set hunting
seasons, hours, areas, and limits for early seasons.
On August 1-2, 2007, we held open meetings with the Flyway Council
Consultants, at which the participants reviewed the status of waterfowl
and developed recommendations for the 2007-08 regulations for these
species. On August 31, 2007, we published in the Federal Register (72
FR 50613) the proposed frameworks for the 2007-08 late-season migratory
bird hunting regulations. This document establishes final frameworks
for late-season migratory bird hunting regulations for the 2007-08
season. We will publish State selections in the Federal Register as
amendments to Sec. Sec. 20.101 through 20.107, and 20.109 of title 50
CFR part 20.
Population Status and Harvest
A brief summary of information on the status and harvest of
waterfowl excerpted from various reports was included in the August 31
supplemental proposed rule. For more detailed information on
methodologies and results, complete copies of the various reports are
available at the address indicated under ADDRESSES or from our Web site
at http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/reports/reports.html.
Review of Public Comments and Flyway Council Recommendations
The preliminary proposed rulemaking, which appeared in the April
11, 2007, Federal Register, opened the public comment period for
migratory game bird hunting regulations. The supplemental proposed
rule, which appeared in the June 8, 2007, Federal Register, discussed
the regulatory alternatives for the 2007-08 duck hunting season. Late-
season comments are summarized below and numbered in the order used in
the April 11 Federal Register. We have included only the numbered items
pertaining to late-season issues for which we received written
comments. Consequently, the issues do not follow in direct numerical or
alphabetical order.
We received recommendations from all four Flyway Councils. Some
recommendations supported continuation of last year's frameworks. Due
to the comprehensive nature of the annual review of the frameworks
performed by the Councils, support for continuation of last year's
frameworks is assumed for items for which no recommendations were
received. Council recommendations for changes in the frameworks are
summarized below.
General
Written Comments: An individual commenter protested the entire
migratory bird hunting regulations process, the killing of all
migratory birds, and the Flyway Council process.
Service Response: Our long-term objectives continue to include
providing opportunities to harvest portions of certain migratory game
bird populations and to limit harvests to levels compatible with each
population's ability to maintain healthy, viable numbers. Having taken
into account the zones of temperature and the distribution, abundance,
economic value, breeding habits, and times and lines of flight of
migratory birds, we believe that the hunting seasons provided herein
are compatible with the current status of migratory bird populations
and long-term population goals. Additionally, we are obligated to, and
do, give serious consideration to all information received as public
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comment. While there are problems inherent with any type of
representative management of public-trust resources, we believe that
the Flyway-Council system of migratory bird management has been a
longstanding example of State-Federal cooperative management since its
establishment in 1952. However, as always, we continue to seek new ways
to streamline and improve the process.
1. Ducks
Categories used to discuss issues related to duck harvest
management are: (A) Harvest Strategy Considerations, (B) Regulatory
Alternatives, (C) Zones and Split Seasons, and (D) Special Seasons/
Species Management. The categories correspond to previously published
issues/discussion, and only those containing recommendations are
discussed below.
A. Harvest Strategy Considerations
Council Recommendations: The Atlantic and Pacific Flyway Councils
and the Upper- and Lower-Regulations Committees of the Mississippi
Flyway Council recommended the adoption of the ``liberal'' regulatory
alternative.
The Central Flyway Council also recommended the ``liberal''
alternative. However, as part of their Hunter's Choice experiment, they
recommended continuation of the following bag limits:
In Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, and Oklahoma, the
daily bag limit would be six ducks, with species and sex
restrictions as follows: Five mallards (no more than two of which
may be females), two redheads, two scaup, two wood ducks, one
pintail, one mottled duck, and one canvasback. For pintails and
canvasbacks, the season length would be 39 days, which may be split
according to applicable zones/split duck hunting configurations
approved for each State.
In Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming, the
daily bag limit would be five ducks, with species and sex
restrictions as follows: Two scaup, two redheads, and two wood
ducks, and only one from the following group--hen mallards, mottled
ducks, pintails, canvasbacks.
Service Response: As we stated in the July 23 and August 31
proposed rules, we are continuing development of an Adaptive Harvest
Management (AHM) protocol that would allow hunting regulations to vary
among Flyways in a manner that recognizes each Flyway's unique
breeding-ground derivation of mallards. Until such time, however, for
the 2007 hunting season, we believe that the prescribed regulatory
choice for the Mississippi, Central, and Pacific Flyways should
continue to depend on the status of midcontinent mallards and that the
regulatory choice for the Atlantic Flyway should continue to depend on
the status of eastern mallards. Investigations of the dynamics of
western mallards (and their potential effect on regulations in the
West) are continuing; therefore we are not yet prepared to recommend an
AHM protocol for this mallard stock.
For the 2007 hunting season, we considered the same regulatory
alternatives as those used last year. The nature of the restrictive,
moderate, and liberal alternatives has remained essentially unchanged
since 1997, except that extended framework dates have been offered in
the moderate and liberal regulatory alternatives since 2002. Also, we
agreed in 2003 to place a constraint on closed seasons in the western
three Flyways whenever the midcontinent mallard breeding-population
size (traditional survey area plus Minnesota, Michigan, and Wisconsin)
is [gteqt]5.5 million.
Optimal AHM strategies for the 2007 hunting season were calculated
using: (1) Harvest-management objectives specific to each mallard
stock; (2) the 2007 regulatory alternatives; and (3) current population
models and associated weights for midcontinent and eastern mallards.
Based on this year's survey results of 9.05 million midcontinent
mallards (traditional survey area plus MN, WI, and MI), 5.04 million
ponds in Prairie Canada, and 906,900 eastern mallards, we believe the
appropriate regulatory choice for all four Flyways is the ``liberal''
alternative.
Therefore, we concur with the recommendations of the Atlantic,
Mississippi, Central, and Pacific Flyway Councils regarding selection
of the ``liberal'' regulatory alternative and will adopt the
``liberal'' regulatory alternative, as described in the June 8 Federal
Register.
Regarding Hunter's Choice, we support the Central Flyway's
continuation of a 3-year evaluation of the Hunter's Choice duck bag
limit. The Central Flyway's Hunter's Choice regulations are intended to
limit harvest on pintails and canvasbacks in a manner similar to the
season-within-a-season regulations. Hunter's Choice regulations should
also reduce harvests of mottled ducks and hen mallards, while
maintaining full hunting opportunity on abundant species such as drake
mallards. For the species included in the aggregate bag limit, the
harvest of one species is intended to ``buffer'' the harvest of the
others, thus reducing the harvest of all species included in the one-
bird category. The Central Flyway has accumulated 4 years of baseline
information on harvests resulting from ``season-within-a-season''
regulations in the Central Flyway; the season length for pintails and
canvasbacks in season-within-a-season States under the ``liberal''
alternative will be 39 days.
Five States (Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, and
Wyoming) were randomly assigned to Hunter's Choice regulations and the
remaining five States (Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, and
Oklahoma) serve as controls (season-within-a-season regulations) as the
evaluation proceeds. The overall duck daily bag limit is reduced from
six to five for the Hunter's Choice States.
While we continue to support the Central Flyway's Hunter's Choice
experiment, we reiterate that we believe implementation of this
experiment should not preclude any future changes in hunting
regulations that may be deemed necessary on an annual basis for any
other duck species in the Central Flyway, if such changes are deemed
necessary.
D. Special Seasons/Species Management
iii. Black Ducks
Council Recommendations: The Atlantic Flyway Council and the Upper-
and Lower-Regulations Committees of the Mississippi Flyway Council
recommended that black duck harvest regulations remain unchanged for
the 2007-08 season.
Service Response: For the 2007-08 hunting season, we support the
Flyway Councils' recommendations for no change in hunting regulations
for black ducks. However, we are disappointed that progress towards
development of an international harvest strategy stalled during recent
discussions with the Atlantic and Mississippi Flyways. It is our
understanding that a number of key points were debated, but consensus
could not be reached on two major issues: A suitable harvest rate
objective and equitable allocation of the harvest between Canada and
the United States. It remains our objective to reach final agreement on
the international harvest strategy in time to inform decisions for the
2008-09 regulatory cycle. To do so, we will provide a facilitated
forum, involving representatives from the Service, the Canadian
Wildlife Service, and the Atlantic and Mississippi Flyways, to reach
consensus on the parity issue and any other remaining issues that
currently stand in the way of completing and implementing this revised
approach to black duck harvest management. Failure to reach agreement
in time for next year's regulations development cycle will result in
our use of the best available information to recommend regulations
necessary to
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bring harvests in line with the black duck harvest potential.
iv. Canvasbacks
Council Recommendations: The Atlantic and Pacific Flyway Councils
and the Lower-Region Regulations Committees of the Mississippi Flyway
Council recommended a full season for canvasbacks consisting of a 2-
bird daily bag limit and a 60-day season in the Atlantic and
Mississippi Flyways, and 107-day season in the Pacific Flyway.
The Central Flyway Council, as part of their Hunter's Choice
experiment, recommended a full season (74 days) for canvasbacks with a
1-bird daily bag limit in Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas,
and Wyoming and a 39-day season with a 1-bird daily bag limit in
Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, and Oklahoma.
Service Response: Since 1994, we have followed a canvasback harvest
strategy that if canvasback population status and production are
sufficient to permit a harvest of one canvasback per day nationwide for
the entire length of the regular duck season, while still attaining a
projected spring population objective of 500,000 birds, the season on
canvasbacks should be opened. A partial season would be permitted if
the estimated allowable harvest was within the projected harvest for a
shortened season. If neither of these conditions can be met, the
harvest strategy calls for a closed season on canvasbacks nationwide.
This year's spring survey resulted in a record high estimate of
865,000 canvasbacks. This was 25 percent above the 2006 estimate of
691,000 canvasbacks and 53 percent above the 1955-2006 average. The
estimate of ponds in Prairie Canada was 5.04 million, which was 13
percent above last year and 49 percent above the long-term average. The
size of the spring population, together with above-average expected
production due to the good habitat conditions, results in an allowable
harvest in the United States of 467,900 birds for the 2007-08 season.
The expected canvasback harvest with a 1-bird daily bag limit for the
entire season is expected to be about 120,000 birds. Available data
indicates that adding a second canvasback to the daily bag limit is
expected to increase harvest about 25 percent, or to approximately
150,000 birds in the United States. The current harvest strategy has no
provisions for daily bag limits greater than one bird. However, with
the record high breeding population recorded this spring and the
expected good recruitment, the strategy would project population growth
even with a 2-bird daily bag limit. Therefore, we are in support of the
Atlantic, Mississippi, and Pacific Flyway Councils' recommendations to
increase the daily bag limit for canvasbacks to two birds for the 2007-
08 season. We also support the Central Flyway Council's recommendation
to leave canvasback limits unchanged in the Central Flyway to allow
continuation of the Hunter's Choice experiment in that Flyway.
We continue to support the canvasback harvest strategy and the
model adopted in 1994. However, this strategy was developed primarily
due to concerns about low population levels, and as such, did not
address circumstances encountered this year of record high abundance
and the potential for increased daily bag limits. We believe there is
reasonable opportunity to allow a limited increase in the daily bag
limit this year without compromising the population(s ability to
sustain a breeding population in excess of 500,000 canvasbacks next
spring.
We note, however, that departures from existing harvest strategies
are not actions that we generally condone, nor will we make an
exception to the canvasback strategy next year, even if similar
circumstances exist, without an explicit modification to the existing
strategy allowing for daily bag limits greater than one bird. Over the
next year, we are willing to discuss the possibility of revising the
strategy with the Flyway Councils and other interested parties. Because
the population model has performed relatively well to date, we believe
that the most productive area for discussion involves examination of
the harvest management objectives of this strategy, with an emphasis on
allowing bag limits greater than one bird. We believe that such a
revision should carefully consider the potential ramifications of such
changes on the expected frequency of closed and partial seasons for
this species in the future.
Due to the relative lateness of this development, the generally
earlier opening of duck seasons in Alaska (September 1), and the
anticipated level of harvest in Alaska, we will exclude Alaska from the
increase in the daily bag limit this year, as was recommended by the
Pacific Flyway Council, with the State of Alaska's concurrence.
However, we believe that Alaska should fully engage in review of
population objectives and remain a part of the overall harvest strategy
for this species. Additionally, explicit provisions for Alaska should
be considered in any proposed modifications to the strategy that might
be forthcoming from the Flyways for the next regulatory cycle.
v. Pintails
Council Recommendations: The Atlantic and Pacific Flyway Councils
and the Upper- and Lower-Region Regulations Committees of the
Mississippi Flyway Council recommended a full season for pintails
consisting of a 1-bird daily bag limit and a 60-day season in the
Atlantic and Mississippi Flyways, and a 107-day season in the Pacific
Flyway.
The Central Flyway Council, as part of their Hunter's Choice
experiment, recommended a full season (74 days) for pintails with a 1-
bird daily bag limit in Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, and
Wyoming and a 39-day season with a 1-bird daily bag limit in Colorado,
Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, and Oklahoma.
Service Response: In the July 23 Federal Register, we approved the
incorporation of a compensatory harvest mortality model into the
decision-making framework used in the pintail harvest strategy. Within
that framework, the compensatory model serves as an alternative
hypothesis regarding the effect of harvest mortality on population
growth. The two alternative models have been assigned weights based on
their respective abilities to predict historic pintail breeding
populations. These weights, representing the current strength of
evidence favoring each model, determine the influence each model has on
the annual regulatory choice for pintails. A document describing the
current pintail harvest strategy with these technical improvements is
posted on the Service's webpage (http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/reports/reports.html
).
Based on this revised strategy, along with an observed spring
breeding population of 3.34 million, an overflight-bias-corrected
breeding population of 4.34 million and a projected fall flight of 5.29
million pintails, the Pintail Harvest Strategy prescribes a full season
and a 1-bird daily bag limit in all Flyways. Under the ``liberal''
season length, this regulation is expected to result in a harvest of
569,000 pintails and an observed breeding population estimate of 3.24
million in 2008, not considering any potential effect from continuation
of the Hunter's Choice evaluation in the Central Flyway.
Furthermore, we agree with the Central Flyway Council's
recommendation to adopt a 39-day ``season-within-a-season'' for
pintails in Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, and Oklahoma. We
understand
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that this departure from the pintail strategy is a necessary part of
the experimental Hunter's Choice season.
vi. Scaup
Council Recommendations: The Atlantic, Central, and Pacific Flyway
Councils and the Upper- and Lower-Region Regulations Committees of the
Mississippi Flyway Council recommended no changes in scaup harvest
regulations for 2007. All the Flyway Councils reiterated their support
for the cooperative development of a comprehensive scaup harvest
management strategy.
Service Response: The continental scaup (greater Aythya marila and
lesser Aythya affinis combined) population has experienced a long-term
decline over the past 20 years. Over the past several years in
particular, we have continued to express our growing concern about the
status of scaup. The 2007 breeding population estimate for scaup is
3.45 million, essentially unchanged from the 2006 estimate, and the
third lowest estimate on record.
Last year, we stated that we did not change scaup harvest
regulations with the firm understanding that a draft harvest strategy
would be available for Flyway Council review prior to the winter
meetings (71 FR 55654, September 22, 2006) and be in place to guide
development of scaup hunting regulations in 2007. As part of this
effort, we developed an assessment framework that uses available data
to help predict the effects of harvest and other uncontrollable
environmental factors on the scaup population. After extensive review
that we believe resulted in substantial improvements, the final
technical assessment was presented during the Winter Flyway Technical
Section meetings and made available for public review in the April 11
Federal Register. We stated then, and continue to believe, that this
technical assessment represents an objective and comprehensive
synthesis of data relevant to scaup harvest management and can help
frame a scientifically-sound scaup harvest strategy. We note that
results of the assessment suggest that a reduction in scaup harvest is
commensurate with the current population status of scaup. Based on this
technical assessment, a proposed scaup harvest strategy was made
available for public review in the June 8 Federal Register. The
proposed harvest strategy included initial Service recommendations on a
harvest management objective and proposed Flyway-specific harvest
allocations, as well as an additional analysis that predicted scaup
harvest from various combinations of Flyway-specific season lengths and
bag limits (http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/reports/reports.html). A
number of concerns about the proposed strategy were raised by the
Flyway Councils and States.
In the July 23 Federal Register, we addressed these concerns and
stated that while we continue to support the technical assessment of
scaup harvest potential, we were sensitive to the concerns expressed by
the Flyway Councils about the policy and social aspects of
implementation of the proposed strategy at this time. More
specifically, we agreed that more dialogue about the nature of harvest
management objectives and regulatory alternatives was necessary for
successful implementation of the strategy. Failure to agree on crucial
policy aspects of the proposed strategy in a timely fashion increases
the risk that more drastic regulatory measures may be necessary in the
future, and having considered all of these concerns, we agreed that
another year is needed to develop consensus on a harvest strategy for
scaup. We believe that one year is sufficient time to resolve all
outstanding issues and it is our intent to implement a strategy in
2008. However, we further stated that our decision did not preclude the
possibility that we would consider possible changes to scaup harvest
regulations for the 2007-08 hunting season, based on population status.
We remain disappointed that collectively we have not made the
progress anticipated in the development of a viable strategy to manage
harvest that acknowledges the uncertainty about what factors are really
influencing scaup numbers, but at the same time provides guidance on
what changes in regulations are still appropriate. Although we remain
very concerned about the continued decline in scaup numbers and other
evidence that this species is not doing well, we are not changing scaup
regulations for the 2007-08 hunting season. Our decision is based on
several important factors. First, we believe that the hunting seasons
provided herein are compatible with the current status of scaup.
Second, we have a firm understanding that a harvest strategy will be
available for 2008-09 and that outstanding policy issues will be
resolved and incorporated into a final strategy in time for adoption in
June 2008. And lastly, we believe that this additional year of harvest
strategy development will not compromise our long term goals for scaup.
We will work with the Flyway Councils to resolve outstanding issues and
to continue ongoing cooperative efforts to improve the monitoring
programs and databases upon which scaup regulatory decisions are based.
These include: Evaluation of potential biases in population estimates,
expansion and improvement of population surveys, and a feasibility
assessment of a broad-scale scaup banding program. Additionally, we
will continue retrospective analyses of existing databases to assist in
the identification of causal factors which might explain the continued
scaup decline.
In preparation for that dialogue, we reiterate our longstanding
objections to State-specific regulations and encourage the Flyway
Councils to focus efforts on achieving consensus around Flyway-wide
regulatory alternatives. Secondly, we recognize that additional effort
is necessary over the coming year to communicate the rationale for a
scaup strategy and possible regulatory changes to the Flyways and the
public. We intend to review progress on policy issues at the winter
2008 SRC meeting and anticipate significant progress by that time.
vii. Mottled Ducks
While we are not implementing any changes in mottled duck hunting
regulations at this time, we remain concerned about mottled duck
status, especially those in the Western Gulf Coast region of Louisiana
and Texas. However, we commend the progress made on the management of
mottled ducks over the past year-and-a-half, including the
identification of two management populations and work on range-wide
breeding surveys in Florida and the Western Gulf Coast. We are
committed to managing the Western Gulf Coast as a single stock of
birds, and acknowledge the challenges that are associated with a
population boundary that includes more than one Flyway. We request that
both the Central and Mississippi Flyways work together to consider how
a reduction in harvest, by as much as 30 percent if necessary, can be
achieved with regulatory changes. We are confident that the Flyways
will be able to adequately address harvest management of mottled ducks
as a single Western Gulf Coast population unit, and we look forward to
considering a coordinated proposal during the 2008-09 regulatory cycle.
During the coming year, we will continue to explore methods to assess
mottled duck population status and refine our understanding of
population and harvest dynamics.
Further, we recognize that the mottled duck is an integral part of
the Central Flyway's Hunter's Choice bag-limit experiment, and we
support continued
[[Page 53886]]
inclusion of the mottled duck among those species with a bag-limit
restriction in the experiment as requested by the Central Flyway
Council. However, we reiterate that if it is determined that further
reductions in harvest, or a different approach to harvest reduction,
are warranted at any time over the course of the Hunter's Choice
experiment, we will make those necessary changes. Thus, the continued
implementation of this experiment will not preclude any future changes
in hunting regulations that may be deemed necessary on an annual basis
for mottled ducks.
viii. Youth Hunt
Council Recommendations: The Atlantic Flyway Council recommended
that tundra swans be added to the list of eligible species legal to
hunt during special youth waterfowl hunts and that we allow the take of
tundra swans during the special youth waterfowl hunt day(s) to those
individuals holding a valid permit/tag. Further, the Council
recommended that this proposed take occur regardless of whether the
youth hunt day(s) are inside or outside the current tundra swan hunting
framework.
Service Response: Currently, tundra swans may be taken by
individuals holding a valid permit/tag at any time during the open
season without any additional provisions. Since tundra swan harvests
are tightly controlled in each State where a limited number of permits
are issued, we see no reason not to allow youth to harvest a tundra
swan, as they will still have to possess a valid tag that is issued by
random draw prior to the hunting season. Further, we note that the
revised (2007) Eastern Population Tundra Swan Management plan advocates
the issuance of tundra swan hunt permits during youth waterfowl days,
regardless of whether these youth waterfowl hunting days are inside or
outside the current framework. Thus, we approve the addition of tundra
swans to the list of eligible species for youth swan hunts and allowing
the take of tundra swans inside or outside the tundra swan hunting
frameworks.
4. Canada Geese
B. Regular Seasons
Council Recommendations: The Atlantic Flyway Council forwarded a
number of recommendations concerning Canada geese. First, the Council
recommended the approval of a minor change in the delineation of High
and Low North Atlantic Population (NAP) harvest zones in New York. They
further recommended that Connecticut's NAP zones be adjusted to account
for the current harvest distribution of NAP and resident Canada geese
and to simplify zone boundaries. In Resident Population (RP) areas, the
Council recommended the allowance of an 80-day Canada goose hunting
season, with a 5-bird daily bag limit, and a 3-way split. In the RP
harvest area of New York, they further recommend that the framework
closing date be extended to March 10, beginning this fall. They
recommended reclassifying a small portion of the Northeast Goose Hunt
Zone in Northampton County, North Carolina, to a Southern James Bay
Population (SJBP) Hunt Zone designation. Lastly, they recommended that
the SJBP Canada goose harvest strategy be revised in the SJBP
Management Plan before changes to the SJBP harvest areas or season
liberalization are considered in both Flyways.
The Upper- and Lower-Region Regulations Committees of the
Mississippi Flyway Council recommended a number of changes in Canada
goose zones, seasons lengths, and bag limits for several States in the
Flyway. These changes are an outgrowth of the evolution of Canada goose
harvest management philosophy in the Flyway. The change in philosophy
in the Flyway is driven by the increasing numbers of giant Canada geese
and the diminishing importance of interior Canada geese to goose
harvest opportunities in the Flyway. The large numbers of giant Canada
geese in most States appear to be buffering, to some extent, hunting
pressure on interior Canada geese. These changes will allow States to
evaluate the potential of this buffering effect as well as the impacts
of stable regulations on interior Canada goose populations.
The Central Flyway Council recommended several changes for dark
goose regulations. In the West Tier, they recommended an increase in
season length (from 95 to 107 days) in Colorado and an increase in bag
limit (from 3 to 4) in Colorado and Texas. In the East Tier, they
recommended removing the Big Stone Power Plant area restriction in
South Dakota.
The Pacific Flyway Council recommended the following area, bag, and
season length changes described below:
1. Increase the bag limit to 6 geese per day in the California
Northeastern and Balance-of-State Zones;
2. Increase the daily bag limit for small Canada geese in the
California Balance-of-State Zone to 6 geese per day;
3. Eliminate the closed zone of Tillamook County, Oregon, include
the county in the NW Oregon Permit Goose Zone, and establish a daily
bag limit of dark geese of 3 including not more than 2 cackling or
Aleutian geese; and
4. Revise Idaho zone designations for 4 counties, to move all parts
of Power County from Zone 3 to Zone 5 and move Blaine and Camas
Counties and Cassia County within Minidoka National Wildlife Refuge
from Zone 3 to Zone 4.
Service Response: We concur with the Atlantic Flyway Council's
recommendations to adjust delineation of High and Low NAP harvest zones
in New York and Connecticut to account for the current harvest
distribution of NAP. The Atlantic Flyway Management Plan for NAP Canada
geese allows for a two-tiered approach to harvest management for this
population. ``High Harvest'' zones are defined as those areas within
each State containing 70% or more of all NAP leg band recoveries,
whereas ``Low Harvest'' areas are all other areas of each State within
existing NAP zones. Use of High and Low harvest zones allows States to
increase and direct harvest opportunity towards RP geese in areas where
relatively few NAP geese will be affected.
Under this revised delineation, New York's High and Low harvest
zones would contain approximately 83% and 17%, respectively, of all NAP
band returns, still well within the management plan criteria. In
Connecticut, only 11% of all NAP recoveries have occurred in the NAP-L
zone since delineation (2002) of these harvest zones, and no NAP
recoveries have occurred in the proposed area of change. Both of these
changes would not only allow for more harvest of RP geese, but would
have minimal impact to NAP geese.
We also concur with the Atlantic Flyway Council's recommendations
regarding frameworks for RP harvest areas. Resident Canada geese are
overabundant in many areas of the Atlantic Flyway and currently number
approximately 1.2 million birds, or nearly double the goal in the
Atlantic Flyway Resident Canada Goose Management Plan of 650,000 geese.
Allowance of an 80-day season, combined with the 25-day special Canada
goose season in September, and the 2-day Youth Waterfowl Hunting Days,
would potentially allow 107 days of harvest opportunity for RP geese,
the maximum allowed under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Further,
allowing 3-way splits within the regular season would provide States
with greater flexibility for setting their seasons. All of these
objectives are consistent with those identified in the Service's 2005
Final Environmental Impact Statement
[[Page 53887]]
on Resident Canada Goose Management (70 FR 69985, November 18, 2005).
Since RP areas were first established in 2002 (with 70-day seasons and
a 5-bird daily limit), available band recovery data from the first 3
seasons (2002-2004) indicate that harvest of migrant geese (AP, NAP,
and SJBP) has been negligible. Further, the March 10 closing date in
New York will not adversely impact AP geese migrating north in early
spring as data indicate that AP geese make only minimal use of the RP
area in New York. Lastly, delays in opening framework dates will be
maintained to avoid any harvest of migrant geese during peak fall
movements (e.g., early to mid October in New York) to southern regions
of the Flyway.
We also agree with the Atlantic Flyway Council's recommendation to
reclassify a small portion of the Northeast Goose Hunt Zone in
Northampton County, North Carolina, to an SJBP Hunt Zone designation.
Northampton County currently includes portions of two Canada goose hunt
zones--an AP zone designation and an SJBP zone designation. Over the
last 15 years, the AP zone in North Carolina has decreased in size due
to contemporary information regarding locations of migrant Canada goose
flocks and population affiliation. While Northampton County does hold
migrant geese from both the AP and SJBP, the Flyway's original intent
in including this small portion of Northampton County in the AP zone
occurred at a time when the AP population was reduced throughout the
entire Flyway, and when the Service's and Flyway's goal was to provide
maximum protection to AP geese in North Carolina. Since then, AP geese
have rebounded from low numbers in the late 1990s, and the hunting of
AP geese in North Carolina has been relaxed to some extent.
We do not agree with the framework changes and season
liberalizations proposed by the Mississippi Flyway Council to the SJBP
harvest areas. SJBP Canada geese are managed through a management plan
developed cooperatively by the Atlantic and Mississippi Flyways. In
recent years, the Mississippi Flyway has undergone major changes in
their philosophical approach to Canada goose management. As a result,
the Mississippi Flyway Council has instituted changes in their
regulatory approach to MVP, SJBP, and RP Canada goose management. While
the Mississippi Flyway Council believes that their 2007-08 proposals
for SJBP regulations are consistent with the current management plan,
the Atlantic Flyway Council believes that more dialogue is needed on
these proposals before they can support them. Given the lack of
consensus between the two Flyways, we do not support changes to SJBP
regulations at this time. We encourage the two Flyways to revise the
SJBP management plan to reflect evolving philosophies of Canada goose
management in general.
We concur with the Central Flyway's recommendation to increase the
season length from 95 to 107 days for dark geese in Colorado and
increase the daily bag limit in Colorado and Texas. The 2005-07 average
(211,627) of mid-winter counts for the Hi-Line Population of Canada
geese remains well above the established objective level (>85,000).
Further, the 2005-07 average (200,821) of mid-winter counts for the
Shortgrass Prairie Population of Canada geese also remains above the
established population objective (150,000-200,000). Given the status of
these populations and the established population objective levels, we
agree that the proposed increase in season length in Colorado and the
daily bag limit increases in Colorado and Texas are commensurate with
the status of the populations.
Regarding the Central Flyway Council's recommendation to remove the
Big Stone Power Plant area restriction in South Dakota, we agree. The
restriction was put in place in 1997 due to potential concerns related
to the status of Eastern Prairie Population (EPP) Canada geese. These
geese nest in the Hudson Bay Lowlands of Manitoba and concentrate
primarily in Manitoba, Minnesota, and Missouri during winter. The 2007
spring estimate of EPP geese was 217,500, 17 percent higher than the
2006 estimate. Spring estimates have increased an average of 3 percent
per year over the last 10 years. Furthermore, the estimated number of
productive geese in 2007 increased from 2006 and reached a record-high
level. We see no reason to continue this restriction.
We also concur with all of the recommendations forwarded by the
Pacific Flyway Council. We support the changes proposed and recognize
that the changes in California and Oregon are intended to address
increasing depredation problems associated with Aleutian Canada geese.
Aleutian Canada geese continue to increase rapidly and currently are
above the population objective levels identified in the Flyway
management plan. We further note that Pacific Flyway white-fronted
geese and Aleutian Canada geese are at the highest population levels
that have been observed in the last 15 years. The proposed increased
harvest opportunity will help address depredation concerns in northwest
California and southwest Oregon associated with both of these
populations. The other changes proposed for Canada geese in Washington,
Utah, and Nevada, are relatively minor boundary changes in harvest
zones or bag limit increases that will help address depredation
concerns in these States and will not impact the harvest of other
Canada goose populations of management concern in the Flyway. The
proposed zone boundary change in Idaho is an administrative change and
is not expected to have any measurable impact on the goose harvest from
these areas.
C. Special Late Seasons
Council Recommendations: The Upper- and Lower-Region Regulations
Committees of the Mississippi Flyway Council recommended a 3-year
experimental late Canada goose season for a 30-county area in Indiana
during February 1-15. The 15-day season would be designed to increase
harvests of local giant Canada geese.
Service Response: We concur with the Council on the creation of an
experimental late Canada goose season in Indiana. The 2007 population
estimate for Mississippi Flyway Giant Population Canada geese (MFGP)
breeding in Indiana is 125,000, and the established population goal is
80,000. While Indiana has used special September Canada goose seasons
to control locally-breeding MFGP, complaints regarding breeding MFGP in
Indiana continue to increase. We agree that a special late goose season
could help control Indiana's breeding Canada goose population.
Available collar and harvest data indicate that the proposed
experimental area is comprised of well above 80 percent non-migrant
geese, as required by the current criteria.
6. Brant
Council Recommendations: The Atlantic Flyway Council recommends a
50-day season with a 2-bird daily bag limit for Atlantic brant.
Service Response: We concur with the Atlantic Flyway Council
recommendation. The 2007 Mid-Winter Index (MWI) for Atlantic brant was
150,559. While the Brant Management Plan prescribes a 50-day season
with a 2-bird daily bag limit when the MWI estimate falls within
125,000-150,000, and consideration of a 60-day season with a 3-bird
daily bag limit when the MWI estimate is above 150,000, the outlook for
productivity is below average due to highly variable conditions on the
main breeding grounds. Thus, we agree with the
[[Page 53888]]
Council that an increase of 20 days (from last year's 30-day season)
without the associated daily bag limit increase is a conservative
approach to harvest management for the upcoming season.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Consideration
NEPA considerations are covered by the programmatic document
``Final Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement: Issuance of Annual
Regulations Permitting the Sport Hunting of Migratory Birds (FSES 88-
14),'' filed with the Environmental Protection Agency on June 9, 1988.
We published a Notice of Availability in the Federal Register on June
16, 1988 (53 FR 22582). We published our Record of Decision on August
18, 1988 (53 FR 31341). Annual NEPA considerations are covered under a
separate Environmental Assessment (EA), ``Duck Hunting Regulations for
2007-08,'' and an August 27, 2007, Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI). Copies of the EA and FONSI are available upon request from the
address indicated under ADDRESSES.
In a notice published in the September 8, 2005, Federal Register
(70 FR 53376), we announced our intent to develop a new Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for the migratory bird hunting program.
Public scoping meetings were held in the spring of 2006, as we
announced in a March 9, 2006, Federal Register notice (71 FR 12216). A
scoping report summarizing the scoping comments and scoping meetings is
available either at the address indicated under ADDRESSES or on our Web
site at http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds.
Endangered Species Act Consideration
Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act, as amended (16 U.S.C.
1531-1543; 87 Stat. 884), provides that, ``The Secretary shall review
other programs administered by him and utilize such programs in
furtherance of the purposes of this Act'' (and) shall ``insure that any
action authorized, funded, or carried out * * * is not likely to
jeopardize the continued existence of any endangered species or
threatened species or result in the destruction or adverse modification
of [critical] habitat * * *.'' Consequently, we conducted formal
consultations to ensure that actions resulting from these regulations
would not likely jeopardize the continued existence of endangered or
threatened species or result in the destruction or adverse modification
of their critical habitat. Findings from these consultations are
included in a biological opinion, which concluded that the regulations
are not likely to adversely affect any endangered or threatened
species. Additionally, these findings may have caused modification of
some regulatory measures previously proposed, and the final frameworks
reflect any such modifications. Our biological opinions resulting from
this section 7 consultation are public documents available for public
inspection at the address indicated under ADDRESSES.
Executive Order 12866
The migratory bird hunting regulations are economically significant
and were reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under
Executive Order 12866. As such, a cost/benefit analysis was initially
prepared in 1981. This analysis was subsequently revised annually from
1990-96, updated in 1998, and updated again in 2004. It is further
discussed below under the heading Regulatory Flexibility Act. Results
from the 2004 analysis indicate that the expected welfare benefit of
the annual migratory bird hunting frameworks is on the order of $734
million to $1.064 billion, with a mid-point estimate of $899 million.
Copies of the cost/benefit analysis are available upon request from the
address indicated under ADDRESSES or from our Web site at http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/reports/SpecialTopics/EconomicAnalysis-Final-2004.pdf
.
This year, due to limited data availability, we partially updated
the 2004 analysis, but restricted our analysis to duck hunting. Results
indicate that the total consumer surplus of the annual duck hunting
frameworks is on the order of $222 to $360 million, with a mid-point
estimate of $291 million. We plan to perform a full update of the
analysis in 2008. Copies of the updated analysis are available upon
request from the address indicated under ADDRESSES or from our Web site
at http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/reports/SpecialTopics/EconomicAnalysis-2007Update.pdf
.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
These regulations have a significant economic impact on substantial
numbers of small entities under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.). We analyzed the economic impacts of the annual
hunting regulations on small business entities in detail as part of the
1981 cost-benefit analysis discussed under Executive Order 12866. This
analysis was revised annually from 1990-95. In 1995, the Service issued
a Small Entity Flexibility Analysis (Analysis), which was subsequently
updated in 1996, 1998, and 2004. The primary source of information
about hunter expenditures for migratory game bird hunting is the
National Hunting and Fishing Survey, which is conducted at 5-year
intervals. The 2004 Analysis was based on the 2001 National Hunting and
Fishing Survey and the U.S. Department of Commerce's County Business
Patterns, from which it was estimated that migratory bird hunters would
spend between $481 million and $1.2 billion at small businesses in
2004. Copies of the Analysis are available upon request from the
address indicated under ADDRESSES or from our Web site at http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/reports/SpecialTopics/EconomicAnalysis-Final-2004.pdf
.
This year, due to limited data availability, we partially updated
the 2004 analysis, but restricted our analysis to duck hunting. Results
indicate that the duck hunters would spend between $291 million and
$473.5 million at small businesses in 2007. We plan to perform a full
update of the analysis in 2008 when the full results from the 2006
National Hunting and Fishing Survey is available. Copies of the updated
analysis are available upon request from the address indicated under
ADDRESSES or from our Web site at http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/reports/SpecialTopics/EconomicAnalysis-2007Update.pdf
.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
This rule is a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. For the reasons outlined above,
this rule has an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more.
However, because this rule establishes hunting seasons, we do not plan
to defer the effective date under the exemption contained in 5 U.S.C.
808(1).
Paperwork Reduction Act
We examined these regulations under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (PRA). There are no new information collections in this rule that
would require OMB approval under the PRA. The existing various
recordkeeping and reporting requirements imposed under regulations
established in 50 CFR part 20, Subpart K, are utilized in the
formulation of migratory game bird hunting regulations. Specifically,
OMB has approved the information collection requirements of the surveys
associated with the Migratory Bird Harvest Information Program and
assigned clearance number 1018-0015 (expires 2/29/2008). This
information is used to provide a sampling frame for voluntary
[[Page 53889]]
national surveys to improve our harvest estimates for all migratory
game birds in order to better manage these populations.
A Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
We have determined and certify, in compliance with the requirements
of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502 et seq., that this
rulemaking will not impose a cost of $100 million or more in any given
year on local or State government or private entities. Therefore, this
rule is not a ``significant regulatory action'' under the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act.
Civil Justice Reform--Executive Order 12988
The Department, in promulgating this rule, has determined that this
rule will not unduly burden the judicial system and that it meets the
requirements of sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988.
Takings Implication Assessment
In accordance with Executive Order 12630, this rule, authorized by
the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, does not have significant takings
implications and does not affect any constitutionally protected
property rights. This rule will not result in the physical occupancy of
property, the physical invasion of property, or the regulatory taking
of any property. In fact, these rules allow hunters to exercise
otherwise unavailable privileges and, therefore, reduce restrictions on
the use of private and public property.
Energy Effects--Executive Order 13211
On May 18, 2001, the President issued Executive Order 13211 on
regulations that significantly affect energy supply, distribution, and
use. Executive Order 13211 requires agencies to prepare Statements of
Energy Effects when undertaking certain actions. While this rule is a
significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866, it is not
expected to adversely affect energy supplies, distribution, or use.
Therefore, this action is not a significant energy action and no
Statement of Energy Effects is required.
Government-to-Government Relationship With Tribes
Due to the migratory nature of certain species of birds, the
Federal Government has been given responsibility over these species by
the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Thus, in accordance with the President's
memorandum of April 29, 1994, ``Government-to-Government Relations with
Native American Tribal Governments'' (59 FR 22951), Executive Order
13175, and 512 DM 2, we have evaluated possible effects on Federally
recognized Indian tribes and have determined that there are no effects
on Indian trust resources. However, in the April 11 proposed rule we
solicited proposals for special migratory bird hunting regulations for
certain Tribes on Federal Indian reservations, off-reservation trust
lands, and ceded lands for the 2007-08 migratory bird hunting season.
The resulting proposals were contained in a separate rulemaking. By
virtue of these actions, we have consulted with all the Tribes affected
by this rule.
Federalism Effects
Due to the migratory nature of certain species of birds, the
Federal Government has been given responsibility over these species by
the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. We annually prescribe frameworks from
which the States make selections regarding the hunting of migratory
birds, and we employ guidelines to establish special regulations on
Federal Indian reservations and ceded lands. This process preserves the
ability of the States and tribes to determine which seasons meet their
individual needs. Any State or Indian tribe may be more restrictive
than the Federal frameworks at any time. The frameworks are developed
in a cooperative process with the States and the Flyway Councils. This
process allows States to participate in the development of frameworks
from which they will make selections, thereby having an influence on
their own regulations. These rules do not have a substantial direct
effect on fiscal capacity, change the roles or responsibilities of
Federal or State governments, or intrude on State policy or
administration. Therefore, in accordance with Executive Order 13132,
these regulations do not have significant federalism effects and do not
have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
Federalism Assessment.
Regulations Promulgation
The rulemaking process for migratory game bird hunting must, by its
nature, operate under severe time constraints. However, we intend that
the public be given the greatest possible opportunity to comment. Thus,
when the preliminary proposed rulemaking was published, we established
what we believed were the longest periods possible for public comment.
In doing this, we recognized that when the comment period closed, time
would be of the essence. That is, if there were a delay in the
effective date of these regulations after this final rulemaking, States
would have insufficient time to select season dates and limits; to
communicate those selections to us; and to establish and publicize the
necessary regulations and procedures to implement their decisions. We
therefore find that ``good cause'' exists, within the terms of 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3) of the Administrative Procedure Act, and these frameworks
will, therefore, take effect immediately upon publication.
Therefore, under authority of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (July
3, 1918), as amended (16 U.S.C. 703-711), we prescribe final frameworks
setting forth the species to be hunted, the daily bag and possession
limits, the shooting hours, the season lengths, the earliest opening
and latest closing season dates, and hunting areas, from which State
conservation agency officials will select hunting season dates and
other options. Upon receipt of selections, we will publish in the
Federal Register a final rulemaking amending 50 CFR part 20 to reflect
seasons, limits, and shooting hours for the conterminous United States
for the 2007-08 hunting season.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 20
Exports, Hunting, Imports, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Transportation, Wildlife.
The rules that eventually will be promulgated for the 2007-08
hunting season are authorized under 16 U.S.C. 703-712 and 16 U.S.C. 742
a-j.
Dated: September 14, 2007.
David M. Verhey,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
PART 20--[AMENDED]
Final Regulations Frameworks for 2007-08 Late Hunting Seasons on
Certain Migratory Game Birds
Pursuant to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and delegated
authorities, the Department has approved the following frameworks for
season lengths, shooting hours, bag and possession limits, and outside
dates within which States may select seasons for hunting waterfowl and
coots between the dates of September 1, 2007, and March 10, 2008.
General
Dates: All outside dates noted below are inclusive.
Shooting and Hawking (taking by falconry) Hours: Unless otherwise
[[Page 53890]]
specified, from one-half hour before sunrise to sunset daily.
Possession Limits: Unless otherwise specified, possession limits
are twice the daily bag limit.
Flyways and Management Units
Waterfowl Flyways
Atlantic Flyway--includes Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia,
Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont,
Virginia, and West Virginia.
Mississippi Flyway--includes Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri,
Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin.
Central Flyway--includes Colorado (east of the Continental Divide),
Kansas, Montana (Counties of Blaine, Carbon, Fergus, Judith Basin,
Stillwater, Sweetgrass, Wheatland, and all counties east thereof),
Nebraska, New Mexico (east of the Continental Divide except the
Jicarilla Apache Indian Reservation), North Dakota, Oklahoma, South
Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming (east of the Continental Divide).
Pacific Flyway--includes Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho,
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and those portions of Colorado,
Montana, New Mexico, and Wyoming not included in the Central Flyway.
Management Units
High Plains Mallard Management Unit--roughly defined as that
portion of the Central Flyway that lies west of the 100th meridian.
Definitions: For the purpose of hunting regulations listed below,
the collective terms ``dark'' and ``light'' geese include the following
species:
Dark geese: Canada geese, white-fronted geese, brant (except in
California, Oregon, Washington, and the Atlantic Flyway), and all other
goose species except light geese.
Light geese: snow (including blue) geese and Ross' geese.
Area, Zone, and Unit Descriptions: Geographic descriptions related
to late-season regulations are contained in a later portion of this
document.
Area-Specific Provisions: Frameworks for open seasons, season
lengths, bag and possession limits, and other special provisions are
listed below by Flyway.
Waterfowl Seasons in the Atlantic Flyway
In the Atlantic Flyway States of Connecticut, Delaware, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and
Virginia, where Sunday hunting is prohibited statewide by State law,
all Sundays are closed to all take of migratory waterfowl (including
mergansers and coots).
Special Youth Waterfowl Hunting Days
Outside Dates: States may select two consecutive days (hunting days
in Atlantic Flyway States with compensatory days) per duck-hunting
zone, designated as ``Youth Waterfowl Hunting Days,'' in addition to
their regular duck seasons. The days must be held outside any regular
duck season on a weekend, holiday, or other non-school day when youth
hunters would have the maximum opportunity to participate. The days may
be held up to 14 days before or after any regular duck-season
frameworks or within any split of a regular duck season, or within any
other open season on migratory birds.
Daily Bag Limits: The daily bag limits may include ducks, geese,
tundra swans, mergansers, coots, moorhens, and gallinules and would be
the same as those allowed in the regular season. Flyway species and
area restrictions would remain in effect.
Shooting Hours: One-half hour before sunrise to sunset.
Participation Restrictions: Youth hunters must be 15 years of age
or younger. In addition, an adult at least 18 years of age must
accompany the youth hunter into the field. This adult may not duck hunt
but may participate in other seasons that are open on the special youth
day. Tundra swans may only be taken by participants possessing
applicable tundra swan permits.
Atlantic Flyway
Ducks, Mergansers, and Coots
Outside Dates: Between the Saturday nearest September 24 (September
22) and the last Sunday in January (January 27).
Hunting Seasons and Duck Limits: 60 days. The daily bag limit is 6
ducks, including no more than 4 mallards (2 hens), 2 scaup, 1 black
duck, 1 pintail, 2 canvasbacks, 1 mottled duck, 1 fulvous whistling
duck, 2 wood ducks, 2 redheads, and 4 scoters.
Closures: The season on harlequin ducks is closed.
Sea Ducks: Within the special sea duck areas, during the regular
duck season in the Atlantic Flyway, States may choose to allow the
above sea duck limits in addition to the limits applying to other ducks
during the regular duck season. In all other areas, sea ducks may be
taken only during the regular open season for ducks and are part of the
regular duck season daily bag (not to exceed 4 scoters) and possession
limits.
Merganser Limits: The daily bag limit of mergansers is 5, only 2 of
which may be hooded mergansers. In States that include mergansers in
the duck bag limit, the daily limit is the same as the duck bag limit,
only two of which may be hooded mergansers.
Coot Limits: The daily bag limit is 15 coots.
Lake Champlain Zone, New York: The waterfowl seasons, limits, and
shooting hours shall be the same as those selected for the Lake
Champlain Zone of Vermont.
Connecticut River Zone, Vermont: The waterfowl seasons, limits, and
shooting hours shall be the same as those selected for the Inland Zone
of New Hampshire.
Zoning and Split Seasons: Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland,
North Carolina, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Virginia may split
their seasons into three segments; Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and West
Virginia may select hunting seasons by zones and may split their
seasons into two segments in each zone.
Canada Geese
Season Lengths, Outside Dates, and Limits: Specific regulations for
Canada geese are shown below by State. These seasons also include
white-fronted geese. Unless specified otherwise, seasons may be split
into two segments. In areas within States where the framework closing
date for Atlantic Population (AP) goose seasons overlaps with special
late-season frameworks for resident geese, the framework closing date
for AP goose seasons is January 14.
Connecticut
North Atlantic Population (NAP) Zone: Between October 1 and January
31, a 60-day season may be held with a 2-bird daily bag limit in the H
Unit; and between October 1 and February 15, a 70-day season with a 3-
bird daily bag in the L Unit.
Atlantic Population (AP) Zone: A 45-day season may be held between
the fourth Saturday in October (October 27) and January 31, with a 3-
bird daily bag limit.
South Zone: A special season may be held between January 15 and
February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit.
Delaware: A 45-day season may be held between November 15 and
January 31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit.
Florida: An 80-day season may be held between November 15 and
February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag
[[Page 53891]]
limit. The season may be split into 3 segments.
Georgia: In specific areas, an 80-day season may be held between
November 15 and February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit. The season
may be split into 3 segments.
Maine: A 60-day season may be held Statewide between October 1 and
January 31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit.
Maryland
Resident Population (RP) Zone: An 80-day season may be held between
November 15 and February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit. The season
may be split into 3 segments.
AP Zone: A 45-day season may be held between November 15 and
January 31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit.
Massachusetts
NAP Zone: A 60-day season may be held between October 1 and January
31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit. Additionally, a special season may
be held from January 15 to February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit.
AP Zone: A 45-day season may be held between October 20 and January
31, with a 3-bird daily bag limit.
New Hampshire
A 60-day season may be held statewide between October 1 and January
31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit.
New Jersey
Statewide: A 45-day season may be held between the fourth Saturday
in October (October 27) and January 31, with a 3-bird daily bag limit.
Special Late Goose Season Area: An experimental season may be held
in designated areas of North and South New Jersey from January 15 to
February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit.
New York
NAP Zone: Between October 1 and January 31, a 60-day season may be
held, with a 2-bird daily bag limit in the High Harvest areas; and
between October 1 and February 15, a 70-day season may be held, with a
3-bird daily bag limit in the Low Harvest areas.
Special Late Goose Season Area: An experimental season may be held
between January 15 and February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit in
designated areas of Chemung, Delaware, Tioga, Broome, Sullivan,
Westchester, Nassau, Suffolk, Orange, Dutchess, Putnam, and Rockland
Counties.
AP Zone: A 45-day season may be held between the fourth Saturday in
October (October 27), except in the Lake Champlain Area where the
opening date is October 20, and January 31, with a 3-bird daily bag
limit.
RP Zone: An 80-day season may be held between the fourth Saturday
in October (October 27) and March 10, with a 5-bird daily bag limit.
The season may be split into 3 segments.
North Carolina
SJBP Zone: A 70-day season may be held between October 1 and
December 31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit.
RP Zone: An 80-day season may be held between October 1 and
February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit. The season may be split
into 3 segments.
Northeast Hunt Unit: A 30-day experimental season (1,000 permits)
may be held concurrent with the season selected for the Back Bay Area
of Virginia. The seasonal bag limit is 1 bird.
Pennsylvania
SJBP Zone: A 70-day season may be held between the second Saturday
in October (October 13) and February 15, with a 2-bird daily bag limit
until January 14 and a 5-bird daily bag limit between January 15 and
February 15.
Pymatuning Zone: A 50-day season may be held between October 1 and
January 31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit.
RP Zone: An 80-day season may be held between November 15 and
February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit. The season may be split
into 3 segments.
AP Zone: A 45-day season may be held between the fourth Saturday in
October (October 27) and January 31, with a 3-bird daily bag limit.
Special Late Goose Season Area: An experimental season may be held
from January 15 to February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit.
Rhode Island
A 60-day season may be held between October 1 and January 31, with
a 2-bird daily bag limit. An experimental season may be held in
designated areas from January 15 to February 15, with a 5-bird daily
bag limit.
South Carolina
In designated areas, an 80-day season may be held during November
15 to February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit. The season may be
split into 3 segments.
Vermont
A 45-day season may be held between the fourth Saturday in October
(October 27), except in the Lake Champlain Zone and Interior Zone where
the opening date is October 20, and January 31, with a 3-bird daily bag
limit.
Virginia
SJBP Zone: A 40-day season may be held between November 15 and
January 14, with a 2-bird daily bag limit. Additionally, an
experimental season may be held between January 15 and February 15,
with a 5-bird daily bag limit.
AP Zone: A 45-day season may be held between November 15 and
January 31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit.
RP Zone: An 80-day season may be held between November 15 and
February 15, with a 5-bird daily bag limit. The season may be split
into 3 segments.
Back Bay Area: A 30-day experimental season may be held between
December 24 and January 26 in the AP Zone, with a 2-bird daily bag
limit.
West Virginia
An 80-day season may be held between October 1 and January 31, with
a 5-bird daily bag limit. The season may be split into 3 segments.
Light Geese
Season Lengths, Outside Dates, and Limits: States may select a 107-
day season between October 1 and March 10, with a 15-bird daily bag
limit and no possession limit. States may split their seasons into
three segments, except in Delaware and Maryland, where, following the
completion of their duck season, and until March 10, Delaware and
Maryland may split the remaining portion of the season to allow hunting
on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays only.
Brant
Season Lengths, Outside Dates, and Limits: States may select a 50-
day season between the Saturday nearest September 24 (September 22) and
January 31, with a 2-bird daily bag limit. States may split their
seasons into two segments.
Mississippi Flyway
Ducks, Mergansers, and Coots
Outside Dates: Between the Saturday nearest September 24 (September
22) and the last Sunday in January (January 27).
Hunting Seasons and Duck Limits: The season may not exceed 60 days,
with a daily bag limit of 6 ducks, including no more than 4 mallards
(no more than 2 of which may be females), 3 mottled ducks, 2 scaup, 1
black duck, 1 pintail, 2 canvasbacks, 2 wood ducks, and 2 redheads.
Merganser Limits: The daily bag limit is 5, only 2 of which may be
hooded
[[Page 53892]]
mergansers. In States that include mergansers in the duck bag limit,
the daily limit is the same as the duck bag limit, only 2 of which may
be hooded mergansers.
Coot Limits: The daily bag limit is 15 coots.
Zoning and Split Seasons: Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee,
and Wisconsin may select hunting seasons by zones.
In Alabama, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin, the season may be split into
two segments in each zone.
In Arkansas and Mississippi, the season may be split into three
segments.
Geese
Split Seasons: Seasons for geese may be split into three segments.
Season Lengths, Outside Dates, and Limits: States may select
seasons for light geese not to exceed 107 days, with 20 geese daily
between the Saturday nearest September 24 (September 22) and March 10;
for white-fronted geese not to exceed 72 days with 2 geese daily or 86
days with 1 goose daily between the Saturday nearest September 24
(September 22) and the Sunday nearest February 15 (February 17); and
for brant not to exceed 70 days, with 2 brant daily or 107 days with 1
brant daily between the Saturday nearest September 24 (September 22)
and January 31. There is no possession limit for light geese. Specific
regulations for Canada geese and exceptions to the above general
provisions are shown below by State. Except as noted below, the outside
dates for Canada geese are the Saturday nearest September 24 (September
22) and January 31.
Alabama
In the SJBP Goose Zone, the season for Canada geese may not exceed
50 days. Elsewhere, the season for Canada geese may extend for 70 days
in the respective duck-hunting zones. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada
geese.
Arkansas
In the Northwest Zone, the season for Canada geese may extend for
50 days. In the remainder of the State, the season may not exceed 40
days. The season may extend to February 15. The daily bag limit is 2
Canada geese.
Illinois
The season for Canada geese may extend for 85 days in the North and
Central Zones and 66 days in the South Zone. The daily bag limit is 2
Canada geese.
Indiana
The season for Canada geese may extend for 74 days, except in the
SJBP Zone, where the season may not exceed 50 days. The daily bag limit
is 2 Canada geese.
Late Canada Goose Season Zone---n experimental special Canada goose
season of up to 15 days may be held during February 1-15. During this
special season the daily bag limit cannot exceed 5 Canada geese.
Iowa
The season for Canada geese may extend for 90 days. The daily bag
limit is 2 Canada geese.
Kentucky
(a) Western Zone--The season for Canada geese may extend for 70
days (85 days in Fulton County). The season in Fulton County may extend
to February 15. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(b) Pennyroyal/Coalfield Zone--The season may extend for 50 days.
The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(c) Remainder of the State--The season may extend for 50 days. The
daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
Louisiana
The season for Canada geese may extend for 16 days. During the
season, the daily bag limit is 1 Canada goose and 2 white-fronted geese
with a 72-day white-fronted goose season or 1 white-fronted goose with
an 86-day season. Hunters participating in the Canada goose season must
possess a special permit issued by the State.
Michigan
(a) MVP--Upper and Lower Peninsula Zones--The framework opening
date for all geese is September 16 and the season for Canada geese may
extend for 45 days. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(1) Allegan County GMU--The Canada goose season is 45 days. The
daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(2) Muskegon Wastewater GMU--The Canada goose season is 45 days.
The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(b) SJBP Zone--The framework opening date for all geese is
September 16 and the season for Canada geese may extend for 30 days.
The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(1) Saginaw County GMU--The Canada goose season will close after 50
days or when 2,000 birds have been harvested, whichever occurs first.
The daily bag limit is 1 Canada goose.
(2) Tuscola/Huron GMU--The Canada goose season will close after 50
days or when 750 birds have been harvested, whichever occurs first. The
daily bag limit is 1 Canada goose.
(c) Southern Michigan Late Season Canada Goose Zone--A 30-day
special Canada goose season may be held between December 31 and
February 7. The daily bag limit may not exceed 5 Canada geese.
Minnesota
(a) West Zone
(1) West Central Zone--The season for Canada geese may extend for
41 days. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(2) Remainder of West Zone--The season for Canada geese may extend
for 60 days. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(b) Remainder of the State--The season for Canada geese may extend
for 70 days. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(c) Special Late Canada Goose Season--A special Canada goose season
of up to 10 days may be held in December, except in the West Central
Goose zone. During the special season, the daily bag limit is 5 Canada
geese, except in the Southeast Goose Zone, where the daily bag limit is
2.
Mississippi
The season for Canada geese may extend for 70 days. The daily bag
limit is 3 Canada geese.
Missouri
The season for Canada geese may extend for 79 days and may be split
into 3 segments provided that at least 1 segment of at least 9 days
occurs prior to October 16. The daily bag limit is 3 Canada geese
through October 15 and 2 Canada geese thereafter.
Ohio
The season for Canada geese may extend for 60 days in the
respective duck-hunting zones, with a daily bag limit of 2 Canada
geese, except in the Lake Erie SJBP Zone, where the season may not
exceed 40 days and the daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese. A special
Canada goose season of up to 22 days, beginning the first Saturday
after January 10, may be held in the following Counties: Allen (north
of U.S. Highway 30), Fulton, Geauga (north of Route 6), Henry, Huron,
Lucas (Lake Erie Zone closed), Seneca, and Summit (Lake Erie Zone
closed). During the special season, the daily bag limit is 2 Canada
geese.
Tennessee
(a) Northwest Zone--The season for Canada geese may not exceed 72
days,
[[Page 53893]]
and may extend to February 15. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(b) Southwest Zone--The season for Canada geese may extend for 72
days. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(c) Kentucky/Barkley Lakes Zone--The season for Canada geese may
extend for 59 days, at least 9 of which must occur before Oct. 16. The
daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
(d) Remainder of the State--The season for Canada geese may extend
for 72 days. The daily bag limit is 2 Canada geese.
Wisconsin
(a) Horicon Zone--The framework opening date for all geese is
September 16. The season may not exceed 92 days. All Canada geese
harvested must be tagged. The season limit will be 6 Canada geese per
permittee.
(b) Collins Zone--The framework opening date for all geese is
September 16. The season may not exceed 70 days. All Canada geese
harvested must be tagged. The season limit will be 6 Canada geese per
permittee.
(c) Exterior Zone--The framework opening date for all geese is
September 16. The season may not exceed 85 days. The daily bag limit is
2 Canada geese.
Additional Limits: In addition to the harvest limits stated for the
respective zones above, an additional 4,500 Canada geese may be taken
in the Horicon Zone under special agricultural permits.
Central Flyway
Ducks, Mergansers, and Coots
Outside Dates: Between the Saturday nearest September 24 (September
22) and the last Sunday in January (January 27).
Hunting Seasons
(1) High Plains Mallard Management Unit (roughly defined as that
portion of the Central Flyway which lies west of the 100th meridian):
97 days. The last 23 days may start no earlier than the Saturday
nearest December 10 (December 8).
(2) Remainder of the Central Flyway: 74 days.
Bag Limits
(1) Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, and Oklahoma: The
daily bag limit is 6 ducks, with species and sex restrictions as
follows: 5 mallards (no more than 2 of which may be females), 2
redheads, 2 scaup, 2 wood ducks, 1 pintail, 1 mottled duck, and 1
canvasback. For pintails and canvasbacks, the season length would be 39
days, which may be split according to applicable zones/split duck
hunting configurations approved for each State. A single canvasback and
pintail may also be included in the 6-bird daily bag limit for
designated youth-hunt days.
(2) Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming: The
daily bag limit is 5 ducks, with species and sex restrictions as
follows: 2 scaup, 2 redheads, and 2 wood ducks, and only 1 duck from
the following group--hen mallard, mottled duck, pintail, canvasback.
Merganser Limits: The daily bag limit is 5 mergansers, only 2 of
which may be hooded mergansers. In States that include mergansers in
the duck daily bag limit, the daily limit may be the same as the duck
bag limit, only two of which may be hooded mergansers.
Coot Limits: The daily bag limit is 15 coots.
Zoning and Split Seasons: Kansas (Low Plains portion), Montana,
Nebraska (Low Plains portion), New Mexico, Oklahoma (Low Plains
portion), South Dakota (Low Plains portion), Texas (Low Plains
portion), and Wyoming may select hunting seasons by zones.
In Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming, the regular season may be split into
two segments.
In Colorado, the season may be split into three segments.
Geese
Split Seasons: Seasons for geese may be split into three segments.
Three-way split seasons for Canada geese require Central Flyway Council
and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service approval, and a 3-year evaluation by
each participating State.
Outside Dates: For dark geese, seasons may be selected between the
outside dates of the Saturday nearest September 24 (September 22) and
the Sunday nearest February 15 (February 17). For light geese, outside
dates for seasons may be selected between the Saturday nearest
September 24 (September 22) and March 10. In the Rainwater Basin Light
Goose Area (East and West) of Nebraska, temporal and spatial
restrictions that are consistent with the late-winter snow goose
hunting strategy cooperatively developed by the Central Flyway Council
and the Service are required.
Season Lengths and Limits
Light Geese: States may select a light goose season not to exceed
107 days. The daily bag limit for light geese is 20 with no possession
limit.
Dark Geese: In Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South
Dakota, and the Eastern Goose Zone of Texas, States may select a season
for Canada geese (or any other dark goose species except white-fronted
geese) not to exceed 107 days with a daily bag limit of 3.
Additionally, in the Eastern Goose Zone of Texas, an alternative season
of 107 days with a daily bag limit of 1 Canada goose may be selected.
For white-fronted geese, these States may select either a season of 72
days with a bag limit of 2 or a 86-day season with a bag limit of 1.
In Montana, New Mexico and Wyoming, States may select seasons not
to exceed 107 days. The daily bag limit for dark geese is 5 in the
aggregate.
In Colorado, the season may not exceed 107 days. The daily bag
limit is 4 dark geese in the aggregate.
In the Western Goose Zone of Texas, the season may not exceed 95
days. The daily bag limit for Canada geese (or any other dark goose
species except white-fronted geese) is 4. The daily bag limit for
white-fronted geese is 1.
Pacific Flyway
Ducks, Mergansers, Coots, Common Moorhens, and Purple Gallinules
Hunting Seasons and Duck Limits: Concurrent 107 days. The daily bag
limit is 7 ducks and mergansers, including no more than 2 female
mallards, 1 pintail, 2 canvasbacks, 3 scaup, and 2 redheads.
The season on coots and common moorhens may be between the outside
dates for the season on ducks, but not to exceed 107 days.
Coot, Common Moorhen, and Purple Gallinule Limits: The daily bag
and possession limits of coots, common moorhens, and purple gallinules
are 25, singly or in the aggregate.
Outside Dates: Between the Saturday nearest September 24 (September
22) and the last Sunday in January (January 27).
Zoning and Split Seasons: Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada,
Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming may select hunting seasons by
zones. Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington,
and Wyoming may split their seasons into two segments.
Colorado, Montana, and New Mexico may split their seasons into
three segments.
Colorado River Zone, California: Seasons and limits shall be the
same as seasons and limits selected in the adjacent portion of Arizona
(South Zone).
[[Page 53894]]
Geese
Season Lengths, Outside Dates, and Limits
California, Oregon, and Washington: Except as subsequently noted,
100-day seasons may be selected, with outside dates between the
Saturday nearest October 1 (September 29), and the last Sunday in
January (January 27). Basic daily bag limits are 4 light geese and 4
dark geese, except in California, Oregon, and Washington, where the
dark goose bag limit does not include brant.
In Oregon's South Coast Zone and California's North Coast Special
Management Area, 107-day seasons may be selected, with outside dates
between the Saturday nearest October 1 (September 29) and March 10.
Hunting days that occur after the last Sunday in January shall be
concurrent in both zones. A 3-way split season may be selected in
Oregon's South Coast Zone.
Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and
Wyoming: Except as subsequently noted, 107-day seasons may be selected,
with outside dates between the Saturday nearest September 24 (September
22), and the last Sunday in January (January 27). Basic daily bag
limits are 4 light geese and 4 dark geese.
Split Seasons: Unless otherwise specified, seasons for geese may be
split into up to 3 segments. Three-way split seasons for Canada geese
and white-fronted geese require Pacific Flyway Council and U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service approval and a 3-year evaluation by each
participating State.
Brant Season
Oregon may select a 16-day season, Washington a 16-day season, and
California a 30-day season. Days must be consecutive. Washington and
California may select hunting seasons by up to two zones. The daily bag
limit is 2 brant and is in addition to dark goose limits. In Oregon and
California, the brant season must end no later than December 15.
Arizona: The daily bag limit for dark geese is 3.
California
Northeastern Zone: The daily bag limit is 6 dark geese and may
include no more than 1 cackling Canada goose or 1 Aleutian Canada
goose.
Southern Zone: In the Imperial County Special Management Area,
light geese only may be taken from the end of the general goose hunting
season through the first Sunday in February (February 3).
Balance-of-the-State Zone: Limits may not include more than 6 dark
geese per day including 6 cackling Canada geese or 6 Aleutian Canada
geese. In the Sacramento Valley Special Management Area (West), the
season on white-fronted geese must begin no earlier than the last
Saturday in October and end on or before December 14, and the daily bag
limit shall contain no more than 2 white-fronted geese.
Oregon: Except as subsequently noted, the dark goose daily bag
limit is 4, including not more than 1 cackling or Aleutian goose.
Harney, Lake, and Malheur County Zone: For Lake County only, the
daily dark goose bag limit may not include more than 2 white-fronted
geese.
Klamath County Zone: A 107-day season may be selected, with outside
dates between the Saturday nearest October 1 (September 29), and March
10. A 3-way split season may be selected. The daily dark goose bag
limit is 4 dark geese and 4 white geese except for hunting days that
occur after the last Sunday in January when only white-fronted geese
may be taken with a daily bag limit of 2.
Northwest Special Permit Zone: Except for designated areas outside
of Tillamook County, the daily bag limit of dark geese is 4 including
not more than 2 cackling or Aleutian geese. In those designated areas
of Tillamook County open to hunting, the daily bag limit of dark geese
is 2.
South Coast Zone: The daily dark goose bag limit is 4 including
cackling and Aleutian geese.
Southwest Zone: The daily dark goose bag limit is 4 including
cackling and Aleutian geese.
Washington: The daily bag limit is 4 geese. A 107-day season may be
selected in Areas 4 and 5 (eastern Washington).
Southwest Quota Zone: In the Southwest Quota Zone, except for
designated areas, there will be no open season on Canada geese. In the
designated areas, individual quotas will be established that
collectively will not exceed 85 dusky geese. See section on quota
zones. In this area, the daily bag limit may include 2 cackling geese.
In Southwest Quota Zone Area 2B (Pacific County), the daily bag limit
may include 1 Aleutian goose.
Colorado: The daily bag limit for dark geese is 3 geese.
Idaho: The daily bag limit is 4 geese.
Nevada: The daily bag limit for dark geese is 3.
New Mexico: The daily bag limit for dark geese is 3.
Utah: The daily bag limit for dark geese is 3.
Quota Zones
Seasons on dark geese must end upon attainment of individual quotas
of dusky geese allotted to the designated areas of Oregon and
Washington. The September Canada goose season, the regular goose
season, any special late dark goose season, and any extended falconry
season, combined, must not exceed 107 days, and the established quota
of dusky geese must not be exceeded. Hunting of dark geese in those
designated areas will only be by hunters possessing a State-issued
permit authorizing them to do so. In a Service-approved investigation,
the State must obtain quantitative information on hunter compliance of
those regulations aimed at reducing the take of dusky geese. If the
monitoring program cannot be conducted, for any reason, the season must
immediately close. In the designated areas of the Washington Southwest
Quota Zone, a special late dark goose season may be held between the
Saturday following the close of the general goose season and March 10.
In the Northwest Special Permit Zone of Oregon, the framework
closing date is extended to the Sunday closest to March 1 (March 2).
Regular dark goose seasons may be split into 3 segments within the
Oregon and Washington quota zones.
Swans
In portions of the Pacific Flyway (Montana, Nevada, and Utah), an
open season for taking a limited number of swans may be selected.
Permits will be issued by the State and will authorize each permittee
to take no more than 1 swan per season with each permit. Nevada may
issue up to 2 permits per hunter. Montana and Utah may only issue 1
permit per hunter. Each State's season may open no earlier than the
Saturday nearest October 1 (September 29). These seasons are also
subject to the following conditions:
Montana: No more than 500 permits may be issued. The season must
end no later than December 1. The State must implement a harvest-
monitoring program to measure the species composition of the swan
harvest and should use appropriate measures to maximize hunter
compliance in reporting bill measurement and color information.
Utah: No more than 2,000 permits may be issued. During the swan
season, no more than 10 trumpeter swans may be taken. The season must
end no later than the second Sunday in December (December 9) or upon
attainment of 10 trumpeter swans in the harvest, whichever occurs
earliest. The Utah season remains subject to the terms of
[[Page 53895]]
the Memorandum of Agreement entered into with the Service in August
2001, regarding harvest monitoring, season closure procedures, and
education requirements to minimize the take of trumpeter swans during
the swan season.
Nevada: No more than 650 permits may be issued. During the swan
season, no more than 5 trumpeter swans may be taken. The season must
end no later than the Sunday following January 1 (January 6) or upon
attainment of 5 trumpeter swans in the harvest, whichever occurs
earliest.
In addition, the States of Utah and Nevada must implement a
harvest-monitoring program to measure the species composition of the
swan harvest. The harvest-monitoring program must require that all
harvested swans or their species-determinant parts be examined by
either State or Federal biologists for the purpose of species
classification. The States should use appropriate measures to maximize
hunter compliance in providing bagged swans for examination. Further,
the States of Montana, Nevada, and Utah must achieve at least an 80-
percent compliance rate, or subsequent permits will be reduced by 10
percent. All three States must provide to the Service by June 30, 2008,
a report detailing harvest, hunter participation, reporting compliance,
and monitoring of swan populations in the designated hunt areas.
Tundra Swans
In portions of the Atlantic Flyway (North Carolina and Virginia)
and the Central Flyway (North Dakota, South Dakota [east of the
Missouri River], and that portion of Montana in the Central Flyway), an
open season for taking a limited number of tundra swans may be
selected. Permits will be issued by the States that authorize the take
of no more than 1 tundra swan per permit. A second permit may be issued
to hunters from unused permits remaining after the first drawing. The
States must obtain harvest and hunter participation data. These seasons
are also subject to the following conditions:
In the Atlantic Flyway
--The season is experimental.
--The season may be 90 days, from October 1 to January 31.
--In North Carolina, no more than 5,000 permits may be issued.
--In Virginia, no more than 600 permits may be issued.
In the Central Flyway:
--The season may be 107 days, from the Saturday nearest October 1
(September 29) to January 31.
--In the Central Flyway portion of Montana, no more than 500 permits
may be issued.
--In North Dakota, no more than 2,200 permits may be issued.
--In South Dakota, no more than 1,300 permits may be issued.
Area, Unit, and Zone Descriptions
Ducks (Including Mergansers) and Coots
Atlantic Flyway
Connecticut
North Zone: That portion of the State north of I-95.
South Zone: Remainder of the State.
Maine
North Zone: That portion north of the line extending east along
Maine State Highway 110 from the New Hampshire and Maine State line to
the intersection of Maine State Highway 11 in Newfield; then north and
east along Route 11 to the intersection of U.S. Route 202 in Auburn;
then north and east on Route 202 to the intersection of Interstate
Highway 95 in Augusta; then north and east along I-95 to Route 15 in
Bangor; then east along Route 15 to Route 9; then east along Route 9 to
Stony Brook in Baileyville; then east along Stony Brook to the United
States border.
South Zone: Remainder of the State.
Massachusetts
Western Zone: That portion of the State west of a line extending
south from the Vermont State line on I-91 to MA 9, west on MA 9 to MA
10, south on MA 10 to U.S. 202, south on U.S. 202 to the Connecticut
State line.
Central Zone: That portion of the State east of the Berkshire Zone
and west of a line extending south from the New Hampshire State line on
I-95 to U.S. 1, south on U.S. 1 to I-93, south on I-93 to MA 3, south
on MA 3 to U.S. 6, west on U.S. 6 to MA 28, west on MA 28 to I-195,
west to the Rhode Island State line; except the waters, and the lands
150 yards inland from the high-water mark, of the Assonet River
upstream to the MA 24 bridge, and the Taunton River upstream to the
Center St.-Elm St. bridge shall be in the Coastal Zone.
Coastal Zone: That portion of Massachusetts east and south of the
Central Zone.
New Hampshire
Coastal Zone: That portion of the State east of a line extending
west from the Maine State line in Rollinsford on NH 4 to the city of
Dover, south to NH 108, south along NH 108 through Madbury, Durham, and
Newmarket to NH 85 in Newfields, south to NH 101 in Exeter, east to NH
51 (Exeter-Hampton Expressway), east to I-95 (New Hampshire Turnpike)
in Hampton, and south along I-95 to the Massachusetts State line.
Inland Zone: That portion of the State north and west of the above
boundary and along the Massachusetts State line crossing the
Connecticut River to Interstate 91 and northward in Vermont to Route 2,
east to 102, northward to the Canadian border.
New Jersey
Coastal Zone: That portion of the State seaward of a line beginning
at the New York State line in Raritan Bay and extending west along the
New York State line to NJ 440 at Perth Amboy; west on NJ 440 to the
Garden State Parkway; south on the Garden State Parkway to the
shoreline at Cape May and continuing to the Delaware State line in
Delaware Bay.
North Zone: That portion of the State west of the Coastal Zone and
north of a line extending west from the Garden State Parkway on NJ 70
to the New Jersey Turnpike, north on the turnpike to U.S. 206, north on
U.S. 206 to U.S. 1 at Trenton, west on U.S. 1 to the Pennsylvania State
line in the Delaware River.
South Zone: That portion of the State not within the North Zone or
the Coastal Zone.
New York
Lake Champlain Zone: The U.S. portion of Lake Champlain and that
area east and north of a line extending along NY 9B from the Canadian
border to U.S. 9, south along U.S. 9 to NY 22 south of Keesville; south
along NY 22 to the west shore of South Bay, along and around the
shoreline of South Bay to NY 22 on the east shore of South Bay;
southeast along NY 22 to U.S. 4, northeast along U.S. 4 to the Vermont
State line.
Long Island Zone: That area consisting of Nassau County, Suffolk
County, that area of Westchester County southeast of I-95, and their
tidal waters.
Western Zone: That area west of a line extending from Lake Ontario
east along the north shore of the Salmon River to I-81, and south along
I-81 to the Pennsylvania State line.
Northeastern Zone: That area north of a line extending from Lake
Ontario east along the north shore of the Salmon River to I-81 to NY
31, east along NY 31 to NY 13, north along NY 13 to NY 49, east along
NY 49 to NY 365, east
[[Page 53896]]
along NY 365 to NY 28, east along NY 28 to NY 29, east along NY 29 to
I-87, north along I-87 to U.S. 9 (at Exit 20), north along U.S. 9 to NY
149, east along NY 149 to U.S. 4, north along U.S. 4 to the Vermont
State line, exclusive of the Lake Champlain Zone.
Southeastern Zone: The remaining portion of New York.
Pennsylvania
Lake Erie Zone: The Lake Erie waters of Pennsylvania and a
shoreline margin along Lake Erie from New York on the east to Ohio on
the west extending 150 yards inland, but including all of Presque Isle
Peninsula.
Northwest Zone: The area bounded on the north by the Lake Erie Zone
and including all of Erie and Crawford Counties and those portions of
Mercer and Venango Counties north of I-80.
North Zone: That portion of the State east of the Northwest Zone
and north of a line extending east on I-80 to U.S. 220, Route 220 to I-
180, I-180 to I-80, and I-80 to the Delaware River.
South Zone: The remaining portion of Pennsylvania.
Vermont
Lake Champlain Zone: The U.S. portion of Lake Champlain and that
area north and west of the line extending from the New York State line
along U.S. 4 to VT 22A at Fair Haven; VT 22A to U.S. 7 at Vergennes;
U.S. 7 to the Canadian border.
Interior Zone: That portion of Vermont west of the Lake Champlain
Zone and eastward of a line extending from the Massachusetts State line
at Interstate 91; north along Interstate 91 to U.S. 2; east along U.S.
2 to VT 102; north along VT 102 to VT 253; north along VT 253 to the
Canadian border.
Connecticut River Zone: The remaining portion of Vermont east of
the Interior Zone.
West Virginia
Zone 1: That portion outside the boundaries in Zone 2.
Zone 2 (Allegheny Mountain Upland): That area bounded by a line
extending south along U.S. 220 through Keyser to U.S. 50; U.S. 50 to WV
93; WV 93 south to WV 42; WV 42 south to Petersburg; WV 28 south to
Minnehaha Springs; WV 39 west to U.S. 219; U.S. 219 south to I-64; I-64
west to U.S. 60; U.S. 60 west to U.S. 19; U.S. 19 north to I-79, I-79
north to I-68; I-68 east to the Maryland State line; and along the
State line to the point of beginning.
Mississippi Flyway
Alabama
South Zone: Mobile and Baldwin Counties.
North Zone: The remainder of Alabama.
Illinois
North Zone: That portion of the State north of a line extending
west from the Indiana border along Peotone-Beecher Road to Illinois
Route 50, south along Illinois Route 50 to Wilmington-Peotone Road,
west along Wilmington-Peotone Road to Illinois Route 53, north along
Illinois Route 53 to New River Road, northwest along New River Road to
Interstate Highway 55, south along I-55 to Pine Bluff-Lorenzo Road,
west along Pine Bluff-Lorenzo Road to Illinois Route 47, north along
Illinois Route 47 to I-80, west along I-80 to I-39, south along I-39 to
Illinois Route 18, west along Illinois Route 18 to Illinois Route 29,
south along Illinois Route 29 to Illinois Route 17, west along Illinois
Route 17 to the Mississippi River, and due south across the Mississippi
River to the Iowa border.
Central Zone: That portion of the State south of the North Zone to
a line extending west from the Indiana border along Interstate Highway
70 to Illinois Route 4, south along Illinois Route 4 to Illinois Route
161, west along Illinois Route 161 to Illinois Route 158, south and
west along Illinois Route 158 to Illinois Route 159, south along
Illinois Route 159 to Illinois Route 156, west along Illinois Route 156
to A Road, north and west on A Road to Levee Road, north on Levee Road
to the south shore of New Fountain Creek, west along the south shore of
New Fountain Creek to the Mississippi River, and due west across the
Mississippi River to the Missouri border.
South Zone: The remainder of Illinois.
Indiana
North Zone: That portion of the State north of a line extending
east from the Illinois State line along State Road 18 to U.S. Highway
31, north along U.S. 31 to U.S. 24, east along U.S. 24 to Huntington,
then southeast along U.S. 224 to the Ohio State line.
Ohio River Zone: That portion of the State south of a line
extending east from the Illinois State line along Interstate Highway 64
to New Albany, east along State Road 62 to State Road 56, east along
State Road 56 to Vevay, east and north on State 156 along the Ohio
River to North Landing, north along State 56 to U.S. Highway 50, then
northeast along U.S. 50 to the Ohio State line.
South Zone: That portion of the State between the North and Ohio
River Zone boundaries.
Iowa
North Zone: That portion of the State north of a line extending
east from the Nebraska border along State Highway 175 to State Highway
37, southeast along State Highway 37 to State Highway 183, northeast
along State Highway 183 to State Highway 141, east along State Highway
141 to U.S. Highway 30, then east along U.S. Highway 30 to the Illinois
border.
South Zone: The remainder of Iowa.
Kentucky
West Zone: All counties west of and including Butler, Daviess,
Ohio, Simpson, and Warren Counties.
East Zone: The remainder of Kentucky.
Louisiana
West Zone: That portion of the State west and south of a line
extending south from the Arkansas State line along Louisiana Highway 3
to Bossier City, east along Interstate Highway 20 to Minden, south
along Louisiana 7 to Ringgold, east along Louisiana 4 to Jonesboro,
south along U.S. Highway 167 to Lafayette, southeast along U.S. 90 to
the Mississippi State line.
East Zone: The remainder of Louisiana.
Michigan
North Zone: The Upper Peninsula.
Middle Zone: That portion of the Lower Peninsula north of a line
beginning at the Wisconsin State line in Lake Michigan due west of the
mouth of Stony Creek in Oceana County; then due east to, and easterly
and southerly along the south shore of Stony Creek to Scenic Drive,
easterly and southerly along Scenic Drive to Stony Lake Road, easterly
along Stony Lake and Garfield Roads to Michigan Highway 20, east along
Michigan 20 to U.S. Highway 10 Business Route (BR) in the city of
Midland, easterly along U.S. 10 BR to U.S. 10, easterly along U.S. 10
to Interstate Highway 75/U.S. Highway 23, northerly along I-75/U.S. 23
to the U.S. 23 exit at Standish, easterly along U.S. 23 to the
centerline of the Au Gres River, then southerly along the centerline of
the Au Gres River to Saginaw Bay, then on a line directly east 10 miles
into Saginaw Bay, and from that point on a line directly northeast to
the Canadian border.
South Zone: The remainder of Michigan.
[[Page 53897]]
Minnesota
North Duck Zone: That portion of the State north of a line
extending east from the North Dakota State line along State Highway 210
to State Highway 23, east along State Highway 23 to State Highway 39,
then east along State Highway 39 to the Wisconsin State line at the
Oliver Bridge.
South Duck Zone: The remainder of Minnesota.
Missouri
North Zone: That portion of Missouri north of a line running west
from the Illinois State line (Lock and Dam 25) on Lincoln County
Highway N to Missouri Highway 79; south on Missouri Highway 79 to
Missouri Highway 47; west on Missouri Highway 47 to Interstate 70; west
on Interstate 70 to the Kansas State line.
South Zone: That portion of Missouri south of a line running west
from the Illinois State line on Missouri Highway 34 to Interstate 55;
south on Interstate 55 to U.S. Highway 62; west on U.S. Highway 62 to
Missouri Highway 53; north on Missouri Highway 53 to Missouri Highway
51; north on Missouri Highway 51 to U.S. Highway 60; west on U.S.
Highway 60 to Missouri Highway 21; north on Missouri Highway 21 to
Missouri Highway 72; west on Missouri Highway 72 to Missouri Highway
32; west on Missouri Highway 32 to U.S. Highway 65; north on U.S.
Highway 65 to U.S. Highway 54; west on U.S. Highway 54 to the Kansas
State line.
Middle Zone: The remainder of Missouri.
Ohio
North Zone: That portion of the State north of a line extending
east from the Indiana State line along U.S. Highway 33 to State Route
127, south along SR 127 to SR 703, south along SR 703 to SR 219, east
along SR 219 to SR 364, north along SR 364 to SR 703, east along SR 703
to SR 66, north along SR 66 to U.S. 33, east along U.S. 33 to SR 385,
east along SR 385 to SR 117, south along SR 117 to SR 273, east along
SR 273 to SR 31, south along SR 31 to SR 739, east along SR 739 to SR
4, north along SR 4 to SR 95, east along SR 95 to SR 13, southeast
along SR 13 to SR 3, northeast along SR 3 to SR 60, north along SR 60
to U.S. 30, east along U.S. 30 to SR 3, south along SR 3 to SR 226,
south along SR 226 to SR 514, southwest along SR 514 to SR 754, south
along SR 754 to SR 39/60, east along SR 39/60 to SR 241, north along SR
241 to U.S. 30, east along U.S. 30 to SR 39, east along SR 39 to the
Pennsylvania State line.
South Zone: The remainder of Ohio.
Tennessee
Reelfoot Zone: All or portions of Lake and Obion Counties.
State Zone: The remainder of Tennessee.
Wisconsin
North Zone: That portion of the State north of a line extending
east from the Minnesota State line along U.S. Highway 10 to U.S.
Highway 41, then north on U.S. Highway 41 to the Michigan State line.
South Zone: The remainder of Wisconsin.
Central Flyway
Colorado (Central Flyway Portion)
Eastern Plains Zone: That portion of the State east of Interstate
25, and all of El Paso, Pueblo, Heurfano, and Las Animas Counties.
Mountain/Foothills Zone: That portion of the State west of
Interstate 25 and east of the Continental Divide, except El Paso,
Pueblo, Heurfano, and Las Animas Counties.
Kansas
High Plains Zone: That portion of the State west of U.S. 283.
Low Plains Early Zone: That area of Kansas east of U.S. 283, and
generally west of a line beginning at the Junction of the Nebraska
border and KS 28; south on KS 28 to U.S. 36; east on U.S. 36 to KS 199;
south on KS 199 to Republic Co. Road 563; south on Republic Co. Road
563 to KS 148; east on KS 148 to Republic Co. Road 138; south on
Republic Co. Road 138 to Cloud Co. Road 765; south on Cloud Co. Road
765 to KS 9; west on KS 9 to U.S. 24; west on U.S. 24 to U.S. 281;
north on U.S. 281 to U.S. 36; west on U.S. 36 to U.S. 183; south on
U.S. 183 to U.S. 24; west on U.S. 24 to KS 18; southeast on KS 18 to
U.S. 183; south on U.S. 183 to KS 4; east on KS 4 to I-135; south on I-
135 to KS 61; southwest on KS 61 to KS 96; northwest on KS 96 to U.S.
56; southwest on U.S. 56 to KS 19; east on KS 19 to U.S. 281; south on
U.S. 281 to U.S. 54; west on U.S. 54 to U.S. 183; north on U.S. 183 to
U.S. 56; southwest on U.S. 56 to Ford Co. Road 126; south on Ford Co.
Road 126 to U.S. 400; northwest on U.S. 400 to U.S. 283.
Low Plains Late Zone: The remainder of Kansas.
Montana (Central Flyway Portion)
Zone 1: The Counties of Blaine, Carbon, Carter, Daniels, Dawson,
Fallon, Fergus, Garfield, Golden Valley, Judith Basin, McCone,
Musselshell, Petroleum, Phillips, Powder River, Richland, Roosevelt,
Sheridan, Stillwater, Sweet Grass, Valley, Wheatland, Wibaux, and
Yellowstone.
Zone 2: The remainder of Montana.
Nebraska
High Plains Zone: That portion of Nebraska lying west of a line
beginning at the South Dakota-Nebraska border on U.S. 183, south on
U.S. 183 to U.S. 20, west on U.S. 20 to NE 7, south on NE 7 to NE 91,
southwest on NE 91 to NE 2, southeast on NE 2 to NE 92, west on NE 92
to NE 40, south on NE 40 to NE 47, south on NE 47 to NE 23, east on NE
23 to U.S. 283 and south on U.S. 283 to the Kansas-Nebraska border.
Low Plains Zone 1: That portion of Dixon County west of NE 26E Spur
and north of NE 12; those portions of Cedar County north of NE 12;
those portions of Knox counties north of NE 12 to intersection of
Niobrara River; all of Boyd County; Keya Paha County east of U.S. 183.
Both banks of the Niobrara River in Keya Paha, Boyd, and Knox counties
east of U.S. 183 shall be included in Zone 1.
Low Plains Zone 2: Area bounded by designated Federal and State
highways and political boundaries beginning at the Kansas-Nebraska
border on U.S. 75 to U.S. 136; east to the intersection of U.S. 136 and
the Steamboat Trace (Trace); north along the Trace to the intersection
with Federal Levee R-562; north along Federal Levee R-562 to the
intersection with the Trace; north along the Trace/Burlington Northern
Railroad right-of-way to NE 2; west to U.S. 75; north to NE 2; west to
NE 43; north to U.S. 34; east to NE 63; north and west to U.S. 77;
north to NE 92; west to U.S. 81; south to NE 66; west to NE 14; south
to County Road 22 (Hamilton County); west to County Road M; south to
County Road 21; west to County Road K; south U.S. 34; west to NE 2;
south to U.S. I-80; west to Gunbarrel Road. (Hall/Hamilton county
line); south to Giltner Road; west to U.S. 281; south to U.S. 34; west
to NE 10; north to County Road ``R'' (Kearney County) and County Road
742 (Phelps County); west to County Road 438 (Gosper
County line); south along County Road 438 (Gosper County line)
to County Road 726 (Furnas County line); east to County Road
438 (Harlan County line); south to U.S. 34; south and west to
U.S. 136; east to NE 14; south to the Kansas-Nebraska border; west to
U.S. 283; north to NE 23; west to NE 47; north to U.S. 30; east to NE
14; north to NE 52; west and north to NE 91 to U.S. 281; south to NE
22; west to NE 11; northwest to NE 91; west to Loup County Line; north
to Loup-Brown county line; east along northern boundaries of Loup,
Garfield and
[[Page 53898]]
Wheeler counties; south on the Wheeler-Antelope county line to NE 70;
east to NE 14; south to NE 39; southeast to NE 22; east to U.S. 81;
southeast to U.S. 30; east to U.S. 75; north to the Washington County
line; east to the Iowa-Nebraska border; south along the Iowa-Nebraska
border; to the beginning at U.S. 75 and the Kansas-Nebraska border.
Low Plains Zone 3: The area east of the High Plains Zone, excluding
Low Plains Zone 1, north of Low Plains Zone 2.
Low Plains Zone 4: The area east of the High Plains Zone and south
of Zone 2.
New Mexico (Central Flyway Portion)
North Zone: That portion of the State north of I-40 and U.S. 54.
South Zone: The remainder of New Mexico.
North Dakota
High Plains Unit: That portion of the State south and west of a
line from the South Dakota State line along U.S. 83 and I-94 to ND 41,
north to U.S. 2, west to the Williams/Divide County line, then north
along the County line to the Canadian border.
Low Plains Unit: The remainder of North Dakota.
Oklahoma
High Plains Zone: The Counties of Beaver, Cimarron, and Texas.
Low Plains Zone 1: That portion of the State east of the High
Plains Zone and north of a line extending east from the Texas State
line along OK 33 to OK 47, east along OK 47 to U.S. 183, south along
U.S. 183 to I-40, east along I-40 to U.S. 177, north along U.S. 177 to
OK 33, east along OK 33 to OK 18, north along OK 18 to OK 51, west
along OK 51 to I-35, north along I-35 to U.S. 412, west along U.S. 412
to OK 132, then north along OK 132 to the Kansas State line.
Low Plains Zone 2: The remainder of Oklahoma.
South Dakota
High Plains Zone: That portion of the State west of a line
beginning at the North Dakota State line and extending south along U.S.
83 to U.S. 14, east on U.S. 14 to Blunt, south on the Blunt-Canning
road to SD 34, east and south on SD 34 to SD 50 at Lee's Corner, south
on SD 50 to I-90, east on I-90 to SD 50, south on SD 50 to SD 44, west
on SD 44 across the Platte-Winner bridge to SD 47, south on SD 47 to
U.S. 18, east on U.S. 18 to SD 47, south on SD 47 to the Nebraska State
line.
North Zone: That portion of northeastern South Dakota east of the
High Plains Unit and north of a line extending east along U.S. 212 to
the Minnesota State line.
South Zone: That portion of Gregory County east of SD 47 and south
of SD 44; Charles Mix County south of SD 44 to the Douglas County line;
south on SD 50 to Geddes; east on the Geddes Highway to U.S. 281; south
on U.S. 281 and U.S. 18 to SD 50; south and east on SD 50 to the Bon
Homme County line; the Counties of Bon Homme, Yankton, and Clay south
of SD 50; and Union County south and west of SD 50 and I-29.
Middle Zone: The remainder of South Dakota.
Texas
High Plains Zone: That portion of the State west of a line
extending south from the Oklahoma State line along U.S. 183 to Vernon,
south along U.S. 283 to Albany, south along TX 6 to TX 351 to Abilene,
south along U.S. 277 to Del Rio, then south along the Del Rio
International Toll Bridge access road to the Mexico border.
Low Plains North Zone: That portion of northeastern Texas east of
the High Plains Zone and north of a line beginning at the International
Toll Bridge south of Del Rio, then extending east on U.S. 90 to San
Antonio, then continuing east on I-10 to the Louisiana State line at
Orange, Texas.
Low Plains South Zone: The remainder of Texas.
Wyoming (Central Flyway portion)
Zone 1: The Counties of Converse, Goshen, Hot Springs, Natrona,
Platte, and Washakie; and the portion of Park County east of the
Shoshone National Forest boundary and south of a line beginning where
the Shoshone National Forest boundary meets Park County Road 8VC, east
along Park County Road 8VC to Park County Road 1AB, continuing east
along Park County Road 1AB to Wyoming Highway 120, north along WY
Highway 120 to WY Highway 294, south along WY Highway 294 to Lane 9,
east along Lane 9 to Powel and WY Highway 14A, and finally east along
WY Highway 14A to the Park County and Big Horn County line.
Zone 2: The remainder of Wyoming.
Pacific Flyway
Arizona
Game Management Units (GMU) as follows:
South Zone: Those portions of GMUs 6 and 8 in Yavapai County, and
GMUs 10 and 12B-45.
North Zone: GMUs 1-5, those portions of GMUs 6 and 8 within
Coconino County, and GMUs 7, 9, 12A.
California
Northeastern Zone: In that portion of California lying east and
north of a line beginning at the intersection of Interstate 5 with the
California-Oregon line; south along Interstate 5 to its junction with
Walters Lane south of the town or Yreka; west along Walters Lane to its
junction with Easy Street; south along Easy Street to the junction with
Old Highway 99: south along Old Highway 99 to the point of intersection
with Interstate 5 north of the town of Weed; south along Interstate 5
to its junction with Highway 89; east and south along Highway 89 to
Main Street Greenville; north and east to its junction with North
Valley Road; south to its junction of Diamond Mountain Road; north and
east to its junction with North Arm Road; south and west to the
junction of North Valley Road; south to the junction with Arlington
Road (A22); west to the junction of Highway 89; south and west to the
junction of Highway 70; east on Highway 70 to Highway 395; south and
east on Highway 395 to the point of intersection with the California-
Nevada State line; north along the California-Nevada State line to the
junction of the California-Nevada-Oregon State lines; west along the
California-Oregon State line to the point of origin.
Colorado River Zone: Those portions of San Bernardino, Riverside,
and Imperial Counties east of a line extending from the Nevada State
line south along U.S. 95 to Vidal Junction; south on a road known as
``Aqueduct Road'' in San Bernardino County through the town of Rice to
the San Bernardino-Riverside County line; south on a road known in
Riverside County as the ``Desert Center to Rice Road'' to the town of
Desert Center; east 31 miles on I-10 to the Wiley Well Road; south on
this road to Wiley Well; southeast along the Army-Milpitas Road to the
Blythe, Brawley, Davis Lake intersections; south on the Blythe-Brawley
paved road to the Ogilby and Tumco Mine Road; south on this road to
U.S. 80; east seven miles on U.S. 80 to the Andrade-Algodones Road;
south on this paved road to the Mexican border at Algodones, Mexico.
Southern Zone: That portion of southern California (but excluding
the Colorado River Zone) south and east of a line extending from the
Pacific Ocean east along the Santa Maria River to CA 166 near the City
of Santa Maria; east on CA 166 to CA 99; south on CA 99 to the crest of
the Tehachapi Mountains at Tejon Pass; east and north along the crest
of the Tehachapi Mountains to CA 178 at Walker Pass; east on CA 178 to
U.S. 395 at the town of Inyokern; south
[[Page 53899]]
on U.S. 395 to CA 58; east on CA 58 to I-15; east on I-15 to CA 127;
north on CA 127 to the Nevada State line.
Southern San Joaquin Valley Temporary Zone: All of Kings and Tulare
Counties and that portion of Kern County north of the Southern Zone.
Balance-of-the-State Zone: The remainder of California not included
in the Northeastern, Southern, and Colorado River Zones, and the
Southern San Joaquin Valley Temporary Zone.
Idaho
Zone 1: Includes all lands and waters within the Fort Hall Indian
Reservation, including private inholdings; Bannock County; Bingham
County, except that portion within the Blackfoot Reservoir drainage;
and Power County east of ID 37 and ID 39.
Zone 2: Includes the following Counties or portions of Counties:
Adams; Bear Lake; Benewah; Bingham within the Blackfoot Reservoir
drainage; Blaine; Bonner; Bonneville; Boundary; Butte; Camas; Caribou
except the Fort Hall Indian Reservation; Cassia within the Minidoka
National Wildlife Refuge; Clark; Clearwater; Custer; Elmore within the
Camas Creek drainage; Franklin; Fremont; Idaho; Jefferson; Kootenai;
Latah; Lemhi; Lewis; Madison; Nez Perce; Oneida; Power within the
Minidoka National Wildlife Refuge; Shoshone; Teton; and Valley
Counties.
Zone 3: Includes the following Counties or portions of Counties:
Ada; Boise; Canyon; Cassia except within the Minidoka National Wildlife
Refuge; Elmore except the Camas Creek drainage; Gem; Gooding; Jerome;
Lincoln; Minidoka; Owyhee; Payette; Power west of ID 37 and ID 39
except that portion within the Minidoka National Wildlife Refuge; Twin
Falls; and Washington Counties.
Nevada
Lincoln and Clark County Zone: All of Clark and Lincoln Counties.
Remainder-of-the-State Zone: The remainder of Nevada.
Oregon
Zone 1: Clatsop, Tillamook, Lincoln, Lane, Douglas, Coos, Curry,
Josephine, Jackson, Linn, Benton, Polk, Marion, Yamhill, Washington,
Columbia, Multnomah, Clackamas, Hood River, Wasco, Sherman, Gilliam,
Morrow and Umatilla Counties.
Columbia Basin Mallard Management Unit: Gilliam, Morrow, and
Umatilla Counties.
Zone 2: The remainder of the State.
Utah
Zone 1: All of Box Elder, Cache, Daggett, Davis, Duchesne, Morgan,
Rich, Salt Lake, Summit, Unitah, Utah, Wasatch, and Weber Counties, and
that part of Toole County north of I-80.
Zone 2: The remainder of Utah.
Washington
East Zone: All areas east of the Pacific Crest Trail and east of
the Big White Salmon River in Klickitat County.
Columbia Basin Mallard Management Unit: Same as East Zone.
West Zone: All areas to the west of the East Zone.
Wyoming
Snake River Zone: Beginning at the south boundary of Yellowstone
National Park and the Continental Divide; south along the Continental
Divide to Union Pass and the Union Pass Road (U.S.F.S. Road 600); west
and south along the Union Pass Road to U.S. F.S. Road 605; south along
U.S.F.S. Road 605 to the Bridger-Teton National Forest boundary; along
the national forest boundary to the Idaho State line; north along the
Idaho State line to the south boundary of Yellowstone National Park;
east along the Yellowstone National Park boundary to the Continental
Divide.
Balance of Flyway Zone: Balance of the Pacific Flyway in Wyoming
outside the Snake River Zone.
Geese
Atlantic Flyway
Connecticut
NAP L-Unit: That portion of Fairfield County north of Interstate 95
and that portion of New Haven County; starting at I-95 bridge on
Housatonic River; north of Interstate 95; west of Route 10 to the
intersection of Interstate 691; west along Interstate 691 to Interstate
84; west and south on Interstate 84 to the Naugatuck River; north on
the Naugatuck River to the Litchfield County line, then extending west
along the Litchfield County line to the intersection of the Litchfield
and Fairfield County lines.
NAP H-Unit: All of the rest of the State not included in the AP or
NAP-L descriptions.
AP Unit: Litchfield County and the portion of Hartford County, west
of a line beginning at the Massachusetts State line in Suffield and
extending south along Route 159 to its intersection with Route 91 in
Hartford, and then extending south along Route 91 to its intersection
with the Hartford/Middlesex County line.
South Zone: Same as for ducks.
North Zone: Same as for ducks.
Maryland
Resident Population (RP) Zone: Garrett, Allegany, Washington,
Frederick, Howard, and Montgomery Counties; that portion of Baltimore
County south of Route 138, Route 137, and Mount Carmel Road; that
portion of Anne Arundel County west of Interstate 895, Interstate 97
and Route 3; that portion of Prince George's County west of Route 3 and
Route 301, that portion of Charles County west of Route 301 to the
Virginia State line; and that portion of Carroll County south of Route
88, west of Route 30 from the intersection of Route 30 and Route 88 to
the intersection of Route 30 and Route 482, south of Route 482, south
of Route 27 from the intersection of Route 27 and Route 482 to the
intersection of Route 27 and Route 97, and west of Route 97 from the
Intersection of Route 27 and Route 97 to the Pennsylvania line.
AP Zone: Remainder of the State.
Massachusetts
NAP Zone: Central Zone (same as for ducks) and that portion of the
Coastal Zone that lies north of route 139 from Green Harbor.
AP Zone: Remainder of the State.
Special Late Season Area: That portion of the Coastal Zone (see
duck zones) that lies north of the Cape Cod Canal and east of Route 3,
north to the New Hampshire line.
New Hampshire
Same zones as for ducks.
New Jersey
North: That portion of the State within a continuous line that runs
east along the New York State boundary line to the Hudson River; then
south along the New York State boundary to its intersection with Route
440 at Perth Amboy; then west on Route 440 to its intersection with
Route 287; then west along Route 287 to its intersection with Route 206
in Bedminster (Exit 18); then north along Route 206 to its intersection
with Route 94: then west along Route 94 to the tollbridge in Columbia;
then north along the Pennsylvania State boundary in the Delaware River
to the beginning point.
South: That portion of the State within a continuous line that runs
west from the Atlantic Ocean at Ship Bottom along Route 72 to Route 70;
then west along Route 70 to Route 206;