Statewide hunting and fishing proclamation proposal preamble



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STATEWIDE HUNTING AND FISHING PROCLAMATION

PROPOSAL PREAMBLE
1. Introduction.

The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department proposes amendments to §§65.3, 65.11, 65.24-65.26, 65.34, 65.42, 65.54, 65.56, 65.60, 65.62, 65.64, 65.66, 65.72, and 65.82, and new §65.49, concerning the Statewide Hunting and Fishing Proclamation.

The proposed amendment to §65.3, concerning Definitions, would alter the current definition of ‘wildlife resources;’ add definitions for ‘alligator gig’ and ‘alligator hide tag;’ and add a species of fish to the list of fishes designated as game fish.

Parks and Wildlife Code, §61.005, defines wildlife resources as, “all wild animals, wild birds, and aquatic animal life.” The current definition of ‘wildlife resources’ in this subchapter restricts the applicability of the subchapter to game animals and game birds only. The amendment is necessary to expand the applicability of the subchapter to include alligators, because provisions governing the recreational take of alligator are being relocated from another subchapter to this subchapter.

The definition of ‘alligator gig’ would be added as a result of the relocation of recreational hunting rules for alligators to the Statewide Hunting and Fishing Proclamation. The proposed amendment is necessary because there are other types of gigs used in angling that are not lawful for the take of alligators; therefore, the regulations must stipulate the nature of a lawful alligator gig.

The definition of ‘alligator hide tag’ also would be added as a result of the relocation of the recreational hunting rules for alligators. The hide tag is a federal requirement pursuant to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) intended to provide a means for identifying lawfully harvested alligators for purposes of international trade. The proposed amendment is necessary to distinguish the alligator hide tag from other types of tags referenced in the rules.

The proposed amendment also adds tripletail to the list of game fishes. The tripletail is becoming increasingly popular with recreational anglers and to offer greater protection to the species, the department proposes to designate tripletail as a game fish, which lawfully can be taken only by pole and line. The amendment is necessary to add further protection to an increasingly popular sport fish.

The proposed amendment to §65.11, concerning Lawful Means, would establish the means of take that are lawful for use on alligators, and would extend the prohibition on the use of rimfire ammunition, fully automatic firearms, and silencers to include alligators. As addressed in the discussion of proposed new §65.49 elsewhere in this rulemaking, all provisions relating to the hunting of alligators are being relocated from 31 TAC Chapter 65, Subchapter P to the Statewide Hunting and Fishing Proclamation. In general, the provisions are being transferred without change; however, there are several exceptions, as follows.

The proposed amendment to §65.11 is taken verbatim from current §65.356, which the department proposes to repeal in a rulemaking published elsewhere in this issue, except for the provisions in proposed §65.11(1)(E) and (5)(A)(v), which provide for the limited use of firearms to take alligators on private lands and waters. Under current rules, firearms are a prohibited means for taking alligators, although an alligator may be dispatched with a firearm once the alligator has been caught on a lawful taking device. Proposed new paragraph (1)(E) would allow the take of alligator by means of firearms on private lands except in Angelina, Brazoria, Calhoun, Chambers, Galveston, Hardin, Jackson, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Matagorda, Nacogdoches, Newton, Orange, Polk, Refugio, Sabine, San Augustine, San Jacinto, Trinity, Tyler and Victoria counties (hereafter referred to as ‘core counties’) and on properties in other counties where the department has conducted biological surveys and issued CITES tags to the landowner. The area represented by the core counties is the prime historical habitat for the American alligator in Texas, consisting primarily of freshwater swamps and marshes, but also nearby rivers, lakes and smaller bodies of water, in areas where freezing conditions are rare or of short duration. In this area of the state, alligator hunting is commercially viable and must be regulated, both to equitably distribute the harvest and to manage the species for sustainable harvest and prevention of depletion, since alligators in this area of the state are a key species in certain wetland ecosystems. Means of take otherwise remain limited to ‘capture’-type devices such as hook-and-line, snares, gigs, and archery equipment, with the requirement that all taking devices be connected to a line of at least 300-lb. test to ensure recovery of all alligators. When free-swimming alligators are shot with a firearm, they typically sink very quickly and become difficult or impossible to locate and recover. Therefore, the use of firearms to take alligators has been prohibited in core counties to minimize wounding loss and subsequent waste of meat and hides.

Outside of the core counties, where alligator populations exist they are ephemeral or the result of population expansion into marginal or less-than-desirable habitats (with the notable exception of the greater Houston metropolitan area, which is geographically within the historic range of the American alligator, but heavily urbanized). In these areas of the state, alligators must move frequently as landscape water conditions change, and are often seen traveling across land in search of new waters. Alligators near human habitation are often found crossing roads, entering suburbs and finding shelter in artificial ponds and even an occasional swimming pool during the drier months. Proposed new paragraph (1)(E) would maintain the prohibition on the use of firearms in the core counties, would allow the use of firearms to take alligators on private property elsewhere in the state (provided that CITES tags have not been issued for the property), and would prohibit the take of alligators by means of firearms from, on, in, or over public water. The department reasons that the risk of wounding loss is negligible for the take of alligators on dry land and in private waters, but increases substantially on public waters. The proposed amendment is necessary to provide additional hunting opportunity in areas of the state where alligator populations are expanding but where long-term viability of populations is unlikely because of erratic fluctuations in habitat conditions.

Additionally, the proposed amendment would modify the provisions governing the use of line sets. Under current rules, a hunter must possess at least one valid hide tag per line set in use. The provisions of proposed new §65.49 would allow hunters outside of the core counties to take one alligator per year (unless they are on a property for which the department has issued hide tags) and to tag the alligator after harvest. Obviously, a hunter under these circumstances will not be able to possess a hide tag while they are hunting; therefore, the current rule language must be altered. The proposed provision is necessary to prevent enforcement conflicts.

Under current rules, it is unlawful to hunt game animals or game birds with a fully automatic firearm or any firearm equipped with a silencer or sound-suppressing device, or to use rimfire ammunition to hunt deer, antelope, or desert bighorn sheep. The proposed amendment would extend the applicability of those provisions to include alligators.



The proposed amendment to §65.24, concerning Permits, would clarify that the section does not apply to deer harvested under MLD permits. Under current rules, persons harvesting deer under an MLD permit are not required to possess an MLD tag on their person. The current rule acknowledges that landowners face logistical problems related to permit allotment and use. Hunters are not always successful, and to require each hunter to have a permit on their person while they are in the field means that unused permits would have to be returned to the landowner and reissued to subsequent hunters, which is inefficient, particularly on larger properties that might entertain dozens of hunters in a season. The department thus allows hunters to harvest a deer and then immediately take it by the most direct route to a location on the property where the MLD tag can then be attached to the carcass. The amendment is necessary to eliminate a conflict between the provisions of §65.24 and the provisions of §65.26 and §65.34.

The proposed amendment to §65.25, concerning Wildlife Management Plan, would allow for the establishment of special seasons and bag limits for upland game birds (turkey, quail, pheasant, lesser prairie chicken, and chachalaca), by species, on properties managed by the landowner under a department-approved wildlife management plan (WMP). The WMP would be required to include, at a minimum: population estimates, harvest data, a biological evaluation of the quality of existing habitat and the potential for maintaining or enhancing existing habitat or creating additional habitat, and department-approved habitat management practices deemed necessary by the department to maintain, increase, enhance, or connect habitat. Based on the information in the WMP and consistent with the tenets of sound biological management, the department would calculate a harvest quota and specify a time period during which harvest would be authorized for the property. The proposed amendment would impose identical criteria for WMPs irrespective of species, with one exception: a WMP for turkey would have to specify a harvest quota for both gobblers and hens. The sex-specific quotas are necessary because the department does not intend to authorize spring hen harvest. The proposed amendment would require a landowner to remain in the program for a minimum of three years, and would stipulate that a landowner who fails to perform the activities stipulated in the WMP is ineligible to participate in the program for three years. The three-year participation requirement is necessary both to ensure a minimum timeframe of continuous management necessary to improve or stabilize habitat, and at the same time, to discourage selective participation by persons seeking only an enhanced bag limit during years when populations are plentiful. The mandatory three-year prohibition on participation for persons who fail to abide by the conditions of a WMP is also necessary to discourage selective participation. The proposed amendment also would require a participating landowner to maintain a daily record of hunters and harvest, and would stipulate documentation requirements for hunters who possess birds harvested on properties subject to the provisions of the subsection. This portion of the proposed amendment is necessary for the department to ascertain compliance with harvest quotas and to provide enforcement personnel with a method of distinguishing birds lawfully taken on a managed lands property from those taken on other properties and which otherwise would be in excess of county or statewide bag or possession limits. The proposed amendment also would provide for the department to waive management requirements in cases where unforeseen events make compliance impossible. For instance, a landowner’s WMP may require prescribed burning, but if a drought occurs and burn bans are imposed, it would make it impossible to comply. The department would then defer compliance until such time as it is practicable. The amendment is necessary to avoid placing landowners in situations in which compliance with the WMP obviously and for good reason cannot be accomplished.

In general, the proposed amendment is necessary to advance the commission’s policy of emphasizing quality habitat management on private lands as the keystone of healthy ecosystems. The department believes that habitat enhancement performed by private landowners encouraged by incentives such as enhanced bag limits and extended season lengths, when they are biologically feasible and do not result in either depletion or waste of the resource, is scientifically proven to maintain healthy ecosystems. Research indicates that hunting mortality is not a major factor in the expansion or contraction of upland game bird populations at the regional or statewide scale. Therefore, a harvest quota based on the concept of the sustainable yield for a specific property is unlikely to result in population reductions below the annual recuperative potential, provided the required habitat management practices are conducted.

The proposed amendment to §65.26, concerning Managed Lands Deer Permits (MLDP)—White-tailed Deer, would reword subsection (d) to remove unintended potential for misunderstanding. The current rule provides that a ‘deer killed under the authority of an MLDP’ must immediately be tagged or taken to a tagging station on the property. The department has become aware that this provision has been interpreted by some to mean that when landowners or hunters are harvesting deer they have the option of using an MLDP or a tag from a hunting license, or that if all MLDPs have been used, additional harvest is acceptable. A core element of the biological effectiveness of the MLDP program is the harvest quota established in the wildlife management plan. At the point that MLDPs have been issued to a landowner, the harvest quota is not a suggestion or a recommendation; it is the total number of deer that may be lawfully harvested from the property for which the permits were issued. Under the provisions of §65.25, concerning Wildlife Management Plan (WMP), an approved WMP, specifying a harvest quota for antlerless deer or both buck and antlerless deer, is required for the issuance of Managed Lands Deer Permits. Additionally, under the provisions of §65.26(g), exceeding the harvest quota is sufficient reason for the department to deny further issuance of permits. Therefore, in order to eliminate potential confusion, the proposed amendment would make clear that all deer taken on a property for which MLDPs (buck, antlerless, or both) have been issued must be tagged with an applicable MLDP, and that when the harvest quota for the property has been achieved, no additional deer may be taken on the property. The amendment is necessary to prevent confusion and possible inadvertent misunderstandings.

The proposed amendment to §65.34, concerning Managed Lands Deer Permits (MLDP)—Mule Deer, effects changes to address the same situation discussed in the proposed amendment to §65.26, and is necessary for the same reason.

The proposed amendment to §65.42, concerning Deer, would implement special antler restrictions in Bell, Bosque, Bowie, Burleson, Camp, Cass, Cherokee, Comal (east of IH 35), Comanche, Coryell, Delta, Eastland, Erath, Fannin, Franklin, Gregg, Hamilton, Harrison, Hays (east of IH 35), Hopkins, Houston, Lamar, Lampasas, Leon, Marion, Morris, Nacogdoches, Panola, Rains, Red River, Rusk, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, Somervell, Titus, Travis (east of IH 35), Upshur, Williamson, and Wood counties. Hunting pressure on buck deer in these counties has been excessive for many years. In 1971, the bag limit in most counties in the eastern third of the state was reduced from two bucks to one in an effort to mitigate excessive hunting pressure. Despite the reduction, the data continues to indicate excessive harvest of bucks, which results in very poor age structure. Although the one-buck bag limit redistributed the harvest among hunters, it did not produce a significant amount of older age bucks in the herd. Under the one-buck bag limit, very few bucks survive into the older age classes (older than three years). Research results indicate that poor age structure within a buck herd creates a longer breeding season, which in turn leads to a longer fawning season and a reduction in fawn production. Poor age structure also contributes to adverse hunter satisfaction.

In April of 2002, the commission adopted a three-year experimental antler restriction regulation in six counties in the Oak Prairie ecoregion, with the following goals: improve the age structure of the buck herd, increase hunter opportunity, and encourage landowners and hunters to become more actively involved in better habitat management. The antler restriction regulation was designed to protect the majority of younger bucks until those deer could reach a level of advanced physical maturity.

The experimental regulation gave the department considerable insight into the impact that it can have on a buck herd. Department data indicate that the experimental regulation has been effective. The proportion of bucks younger than 3.5 years old in the harvest dropped from 79% to 29% during the 2004-2005 hunting season. Prior to the implementation of the regulation, only 20% of the harvested bucks were at least 3.5 years old; however, by the third year of the experiment, 71% of the harvested bucks were at least 3.5 years old. It is important to note that while buck harvest dropped 38% during the first year of the experiment (compared to the average harvest from 1997-2001), the harvest during the second year of the experiment exceeded the five-year average prior to the regulation change. The data also showed a decline in the harvest of spike bucks and an increase in the harvest of bucks with an inside spread of 13 inches or greater, which means that one effect of maintaining a one-buck limit under the antler restrictions is that hunting pressure is deflected from the spike-buck segment of the population, which is undesirable. Therefore, in April 2004 the department implemented a two-buck bag limit in counties with antler restrictions, with the proviso that if a hunter took two lawful bucks at least one of them had to have at least one unbranched antler. By adding the second buck to the bag, the department intended to encourage the harvest of spike bucks, which research has indicated are less likely to develop into lawful bucks (as defined for the counties with the antler-restriction rules in place).

Given the results of the experimental regulations, the department has endeavored to identify additional counties where implementation might yield similar results. The criteria used for candidate counties were: the county currently must be a one-buck county, 60% of the buck harvest in the county must consist of bucks less than 3.5 years of age, and the county must have a contiguous border with another county in which antler restriction regulations have been implemented. On this basis, the department identified the 40 counties affected by the proposed amendment.

The proposed amendment to §65.42 also would implement a four-deer bag limit for the entirety of Upton County and would implement the late muzzleloader-only season countywide. Under current rules, the bag limit in the portions of Upton County that are either north of U.S. Highway 67 or both south of U.S. Highway 67 and west of State Highway 349 is three deer. Data indicate that deer populations in the northern and western parts of the county are increasing and able to withstand additional hunting pressure. Additionally, the counties adjoining Upton County on the east and northeast (Glasscock and Reagan counties) contain deer densities similar to those found in Upton County but are under a more liberal regulation (5 deer; no more than 2 bucks) than that being proposed for Upton County. The regulations have been in effect in Glasscock and Reagan counties for five years, and the deer herds in these counties have experienced no adverse impacts. The department therefore does not anticipate that the proposed amendment will result in either waste or depletion of the resource. The portion of the county that has had a four-deer bag limit has also had a 14-day late muzzleloader-only season. The expansion of the four-deer bag limit to countywide applicability also would entail the expansion of the muzzleloader season. Based on hunter-success data from other counties, the harvest of deer during the muzzleloader in Upton County should be negligible as a component of overall harvest.

Proposed new §65.49, concerning Alligators, would establish the open seasons, rules for tag issuance and use, reporting requirements, and provisions for the sale of alligators taken under a Texas hunting license. Prior to 2005, an alligator hunting license was required to hunt alligators in this state, and all provisions relating to the hunting of alligators were located in 31 TAC Chapter 65, Subchapter P. The passage of House Bill 2026 by the 79th Texas Legislature eliminated the alligator hunting license. As a consequence, the department has determined that it is appropriate to relocate all provisions relating to recreational alligator hunting from Subchapter P to the Statewide Hunting and Fishing Proclamation. In general, the provisions are being transferred without change; however, there are several exceptions, as follows.



The proposed new section would provide for the harvest of alligator by means of firearms under certain conditions, which is addressed in the discussion of the proposed changes to §65.11.

Under federal law, all alligators harvested in the United States must be permanently tagged with a CITES (Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species) tag. Although the American alligator is not endangered, it is similar in appearance to other reptilian species that are endangered. The CITES tag functions to distinguish legally taken reptiles from unlawfully taken reptiles. Under the current system, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service annually issues CITES tags to the department, which then issues the tags to landowners, who then use or distribute the tags as they see fit. In order to determine appropriate levels of tag issuance and subsequent harvest, the department conducts annual surveys of populations, nesting activity, and harvest in counties containing commercially viable alligator populations. From this data the department derives the annual harvest quotas that form the basis for the issuance of CITES tags to landowners. At this time, the majority of tag issuance occurs in those areas of the state considered to be critical alligator habitat. In those counties (Angelina, Brazoria, Calhoun, Chambers, Galveston, Hardin, Jackson, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Matagorda, Nacogdoches, Newton, Orange, Polk, Refugio, Sabine, San Augustine, San Jacinto, Trinity, Tyler and Victoria, hereafter referred to as ‘core’ counties), a licensed hunter may take one alligator per CITES tag in possession under current regulations. Under the proposed new rule, tag issuance and harvest in core counties and on properties outside of core counties for which the department has issued hide tags would continue to be conducted as is currently done. However, in the remainder of the state, a licensed hunter would be entitled to harvest one alligator per year, provided the take occurs on private property. Under the proposed new section, hunters who harvested an alligator would immediately complete and affix a Wildlife Resource Document to the alligator, and complete and mail to the department within 72 hours a Harvest Report (PWD-304A), which will be available in the Texas Parks and Wildlife Outdoor Annual, at department offices, and on the department’s website), accompanied by a $20 payment for a CITES tag. The department would then mail a CITES tag to the hunter, who would then permanently tag the alligator. The department does not anticipate that the additional harvest under the proposed new rule will be biologically significant. Although the department conducts comprehensive biological survey efforts in the core counties, limited resources do not allow for similar efforts everywhere in the state; however, the federal issuance of CITES tags to Texas, which is based on overall harvest data submitted to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) on an annual basis, has never been exceeded; in fact, tag utilization does not typically exceed 86% of tag issuance. Therefore, the department reasons that additional demand, since it will be restricted to areas outside of the core counties where the majority of the alligator population occurs, is unlikely to exceed permit availability, and in any event, since the total permit issuance by the Service cannot be exceeded, harvest on a macro level will not be biologically significant.

Additionally, the proposed amendment would prohibit the employment of more than one taking device per unused hide tag in possession at a time on properties for which hide tags have been issued. Under current regulations, hide tags must be obtained prior to hunting and hunters are prohibited from utilizing more than one taking device per unused hide tag in possession. The one-to-one ratio of taking devices to tags was established to prevent hunters from accidentally exceeding the number of alligators authorized for take, and to prevent the practice of ‘culling,’ whereby an unscrupulous person would take more alligators than authorized and retain only the most desirable individuals for tagging purposes. Because proposed new §65.49 would allow tags to be issued on a post-harvest basis in parts of the state where the bag limit is one alligator, it is necessary to create a parallel to the current requirements for persons hunting with hide tags in hand. The proposed amendment is necessary to prevent persons from exceeding bag limits and overharvest of the resource.

The proposed amendments to §§65.54, concerning Game Birds: Open Seasons and Bag Limits; 65.56, concerning, Lesser Prairie Chicken: Open Seasons, Bag, and Possession Limits; 65.60, concerning Pheasant: Open Seasons, Bag, and Possession Limits; 65.62, concerning, Quail: Open Seasons, Bag, and Possession Limits; 65.64, concerning Turkey; and 65.66, concerning Chachalacas, would add language to each section to create exceptions for the provisions of proposed §65.11, which would implement special seasons and bag limits for upland game birds on properties under department-approved management plans. The amendments are necessary to prevent regulatory conflicts. The proposed amendment to §65.66 also would include language to the effect that in all counties where there is not an open season, the season is closed. The amendment is necessary to be consistent with the structure of other sections, and to provide clarification.

The proposed amendment to §65.72, concerning Fish, consists of several changes. The proposed amendment would add Kinney County to the current list of counties where bait fish are restricted to common carp, fathead minnows, gizzard and threadfin shad, golden shiners, goldfish, Mexican tetra, Rio Grande cichlid, silversides (Atherinidae family), and sunfish (Lepomis). The restrictions were promulgated to protect endangered pupfish (Cyprinodon) in the western Texas posed by the introduction and potential establishment of exotic species that prey upon or compete with indigenous species. The proposed amendment would also protect the Devils River minnow, which only occurs in Val Verde and Kinney counties.

The current harvest regulations for largemouth bass on Marine Creek Reservoir (Tarrant County) consist of statewide 14-inch minimum length limit and a five-fish daily bag limit. The proposed amendment would implement an 18-inch minimum length limit. The proposed amendment is necessary because Marine Creek Reservoir has been selected to be involved in the Operation World Record research project. The project will involve stocking coded-wire tagged largemouth bass and monitoring their growth for a minimum of five years following stocking. The stocked bass are ShareLunker offspring and are valuable, considering the limited number that will be produced and their importance to the project. The ShareLunker program allows anglers to loan largemouth bass weighing 13 pounds or more to the department for spawning and research purposes, which include the study of genetics, life history, growth, performance, behavior, and competition. The increased length limit will protect the stocked bass through at least 18 inches and will increase the department’s ability to evaluate their performance in natural systems.

The proposed amendment to §65.72 also would allow the take of channel, blue, and flathead catfish by means of lawful archery equipment or crossbows. The use of archery equipment has historically been prohibited, primarily because of concerns that the guaranteed mortality of fish caught by mistake or in violation of legal length limits could negatively impact reproductive potential and age distribution in sensitive populations. Based on the estimated number of persons believed to currently engage in the take of fish by archery equipment (less than 1% of all licensed anglers), the department has determined that the take of catfish by archery equipment probably will not result in significant impacts to catfish populations.

The proposed amendment to §65.72 also would eliminate the requirement that tarpon be tagged and instead would implement a minimum length limit. Under current rules, no person may catch and retain a tarpon of less than 80 inches in length, but may retain one tarpon of more than 80 inches in length by tagging the fish with the trophy tarpon tag. The proposed amendment would eliminate the tagging requirement and replace it with a bag limit of one tarpon of 80” in length or longer per person per day. The amendment is necessary because the department is seeking ways to reduce regulatory complexity and paperwork. The proposed amendment would offer the same protection to the resource while allowing for pursuit and retention of a record size tarpon.

The proposed amendment to §65.72 also would modify the rules governing possession of black drum. Currently, black drum are managed by means of a bag limit combined with minimum and maximum size limits. The proposed amendment would allow a person to keep one black drum of greater than 52 inches in length per day as part of the five-fish daily bag limit. The amendment is necessary because the department would like to make it possible for anglers to pursue and retain a state record black drum.

The proposed amendment to §65.72 also would reduce the possession limit for flounder taken under a recreational license. Under current rule, the possession limit for any fish is twice the daily bag limit, unless specified otherwise. Thus, with a daily bag limit of 10, the possession limit for flounder is 20, and for those flounder fishing trips which last past midnight, a 20 fish per angler possession limit applies. The proposed amendment would make the possession limit identical to the daily bag limit. The proposed amendment is necessary because data indicate that after a long-term declining trend in abundance, flounder have begun to stabilize and this will aid in maintaining or enhancing the current level of recovery. The proposed amendment would exert a limited but positive impact on flounder stocks and should aid law enforcement by providing less of an incentive for recreational catches to enter the commercial market.

The proposed amendment to §65.72 also would implement bag and minimum size limits for tripletail. The amendment is necessary because the species is becoming increasingly popular with anglers. The size limit should protect young females from harvest prior to first spawn. The bag limit will have the effect of distributing harvest opportunity. The department intends to continue monitoring populations to see what effect the regulation change has on the population of tripletail in Texas waters.

The proposed amendment to §65.82 would prohibit the take of sawfish (Pristis perotteti). The proposed amendment is necessary because the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has listed the smalltooth sawfish (Pristis pectinata) as endangered. Due to the extreme difficulty in distinguishing the smalltooth sawfish from the largetooth sawfish, the department believes that protection of both species is the only way to protect the listed species.
2. Fiscal Note.

Mr. Robert Macdonald, Regulations Coordinator, has determined that for each of the first five years that the rules as proposed are in effect, there will be fiscal implications to state government as a result of enforcing or administering the rules. The expansion of alligator hunting opportunity will result in additional revenue to the department of up to approximately $68,000. The estimate was obtained by taking the number of unused CITES hide tags in the most recent year for which data is available (3,400 in FY 2005) and multiplying that number by the cost of an alligator hide tag ($20).


3. Public Benefit/Cost Note.

Mr. Macdonald also has determined that for each of the first five years the rules as proposed are in effect:

(A) The public benefit anticipated as a result of enforcing or administering the rules as proposed will be the dispensation of the agency’s statutory duty to protect and conserve the wildlife resources of this state, the duty to equitably distribute opportunity for the enjoyment of those resources among the citizens, and the execution of the commission’s policy to maximize recreational opportunity within the precepts of sound biological management practices.

(B) There will be no adverse economic effect on small businesses, microbusinesses, or persons required to comply with the rules as proposed. The economic impact of hunting and fishing in Texas, particularly in rural areas of the state, is significant. The Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-related Recreation, conducted at five-year intervals since 1955 by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, estimates that approximately $3.5 billion was spent by hunters and anglers in Texas in 2001, the last year for which survey data is available. Of that total, nearly $1.5 billion was spent on food, lodging, transportation, and fuel; $1.3 billion was spent on equipment; and $366 million was spent on licenses, permits, and fees paid to landowners for hunting rights. From these data it is readily apparent that hunting and fishing represent a significant positive economic impact to many individuals and types of businesses in the state.

(C) Typically, the department’s annual changes to the regulations governing recreational fish and wildlife use are characterized by minor alterations, usually affecting bag limits, bag composition, season lengths, or provisions affecting licenses or permits. The proposed amendments and new section are believed to be typical in this regard. In assessing the effect of the proposed amendments and new section on small businesses, microbusinesses, and persons required to comply, the department has made the assumption that the majority of economic influence exerted by fish and wildlife regulations is a function of the presence or absence of opportunity, which is directly tied to the biological parameters (availability, viability, surplus, etc.) that determine whether or not the commission is able to provide an open season under the requirements of Parks and Wildlife Code, Chapter 61.

In order to assess these impacts, the department compared the results of the 2001 Fish and Wildlife Service survey with previous survey results. A comparison employing a 90 percent confidence interval around survey estimates from 1991 to 2001 reveals that economic activity (in adjusted dollars) surrounding hunting and angling has remained statistically stable during that time, the notable exception being an approximately 46% increase in travel expenses related to hunting. This comparison, when viewed against the backdrop of continual changes to regulations, would seem to indicate that minor fluctuations in the regulations do not, in and of themselves, result in significant economic impacts to the economy as a whole. While this comparison indicates little or no change at the macro (statewide level) there could be minor changes at the micro (local) level.

(D) The department has not drafted a local employment impact statement under the Administrative Procedure Act, §2001.022, as the agency has determined that the rules as proposed will not impact local economies.

(E) The department has determined that there will not be a taking of private real property, as defined by Government Code, Chapter 2007, as a result of the proposed rules.

(F) The department has determined that Government Code, §2001.0225 (Regulatory Analysis of Major Environmental Rules) does not apply to the proposed rules.
4. Request for Public Comment.

Comments on the proposed rules may be submitted by phone (area code 512) or e-mail to Robert Macdonald (Wildlife 389-4775; e-mail: robert.macdonald@tpwd.state.tx.us), Ken Kurzawski (Inland Fisheries 389-4591; e-mail: ken.kurzawski@tpwd.state.tx.us), Jerry Cooke (Coastal Fisheries 389-4492; e-mail: jerry.cooke@tpwd.state.tx.us), David Sinclair (Wildlife Enforcement 389-4854; e-mail: david.sinclair@tpwd.state.tx.us), or Bill Robinson (Fisheries Enforcement 389-4628; e-mail: bill.robinson@tpwd.state.tx.us), Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin, Texas 78744; (512) 389-4775 or 1-800-792-1112.


5. Statutory Authority.

The amendments and new section are proposed under the authority of Parks and Wildlife Code, §46.0085, which authorizes the department to issue tags for finfish species allowed by law to be taken during each year or season from coastal waters of the state to holders of licenses authorizing the taking of finfish species or to other categories of persons; Chapter 61, which requires the commission to regulate the periods of time when it is lawful to hunt, take, or possess game animals, game birds, or aquatic animal life in this state; the means, methods, and places in which it is lawful to hunt, take, or possess game animals, game birds, or aquatic animal life in this state; the species, quantity, age or size, and, to the extent possible, the sex of the game animals, game birds, or aquatic animal life authorized to be hunted, taken, or possessed; and the region, county, area, body of water, or portion of a county where game animals, game birds, or aquatic animal life may be hunted, taken, or possessed; Chapter 65, which authorizes the commission to regulate the taking, possession, propagation, transportation, exportation, importation, sale, and offering for sale of alligators, alligator eggs, or any part of an alligator that the commission considers necessary to manage this species, including regulations providing for permit application forms, fees, and procedures; the periods of time when it is lawful to take, possess, sell, or purchase alligators, alligator hides, alligator eggs, or any part of an alligator; and limits, size, means, methods, and places in which it is lawful to take or possess alligators, alligator hides, alligator eggs, or any part of an alligator.

The proposed amendments and new section affect Parks and Wildlife Code, Chapters 46, 61, and 65.



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