Post by Steve Sutton on Apr 29, 2010 19:58:08 GMT -5
2010 Public Alligator Hunting season applications available online May 1
Beginning May 1st, the S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will start
accepting online applications for the 2010 Public Alligator Hunting season at
www.dnr.sc.gov/wildlife/alligator/index.html.
Applicants for the alligator hunting season are required to apply and pay online
through the application available on the DNR website or at one of the walk-up counters at
a DNR Regional Office in Clemson, Florence, Columbia, or Charleston. No paper
applications will be accepted. This year's season will begin at 12 p.m. (noon) on Sept.
11 and run until 12 p.m. (noon) on Oct. 9.
First time users of the online application system will have to create a new user
account that requires creating a personal user ID and password. Be sure to write down
your user ID and password using exact upper and lower case characters you chose. Your
access to this site will be controlled by the accurate entry of this information at a
future sign-on. Returning users will be able to sign on using their current information.
A $10 nonrefundable application fee is required to apply for the hunt, and a randomized
computer drawing will determine the selection of hunters.
One thousand permits are available and the coastal plain is divided into four
alligator management units with 250 permits allocated for each unit (1000 total).
Applicants can select the option to be considered for any number (or all) of the units,
but the issued permit will only allow them to hunt in one unit per season. If selected, a
$100 fee for the permit and one harvest tag is required to be paid online through the
same application process. Selected alligator hunters will be allowed to take one
alligator on public waters or private lands where hunting rights are granted. No
alligator hunting is allowed on Wildlife Management Areas (except in navigable waters),
state parks, or federal properties like National Wildlife Refuges. Unsuccessful
applicants will accumulate preference points for future alligator hunt drawings.
For the hunting season, only alligators four feet or greater in length may be taken
and the hunter must tag the animal immediately with a harvest tag provided by DNR. This
hunting season does not allow the shooting of unsecured alligators, even on private land.
All alligators must be secured using approved equipment and brought boat-side or onto
land before they can be dispatched. While others may assist the permitted hunter, all
participants (including permittee) must possess a valid South Carolina hunting license.
All permitted hunters are required to report their harvest to the DNR whether an
alligator was taken or not in order to participate in any way in the following year's
alligator hunt.
All hunters will be notified beginning in July of selection status. DNR will begin
to send out permits and tags to fully paid applicants after Aug. 1st. This deadline for
paying the $100 permit fee for selected applicants is Oct. 1, but you must allow the
department five business days to deliver the permit and tag after receipt of payment.
Hunters that fail to pay the $100 permit fee by the end of the Alligator Hunting Season
will not receive any preference points and will forfeit any accumulated points.
DNR will conduct a series of optional seminars for those selected for the alligator
season that will include vital information on how to conduct a safe and successful hunt.
DNR will closely monitor these hunts and the harvest and regulations may be modified for
future seasons.
More than 100,000 alligators live from the Midlands to the coast of South Carolina
and the population is not threatened by the regulated removal of a relatively small
number of alligators. Last year, hunters took 452 alligators during the public alligator
hunting season with the average size being 9'5" in length.
South Carolina's natural resources are essential for economic development and
contribute nearly $30 billion and 230,000 jobs to the state's economy overall. Find out
more at: www.dnr.sc.gov/green/index.html.
#
Beginning May 1st, the S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will start
accepting online applications for the 2010 Public Alligator Hunting season at
www.dnr.sc.gov/wildlife/alligator/index.html.
Applicants for the alligator hunting season are required to apply and pay online
through the application available on the DNR website or at one of the walk-up counters at
a DNR Regional Office in Clemson, Florence, Columbia, or Charleston. No paper
applications will be accepted. This year's season will begin at 12 p.m. (noon) on Sept.
11 and run until 12 p.m. (noon) on Oct. 9.
First time users of the online application system will have to create a new user
account that requires creating a personal user ID and password. Be sure to write down
your user ID and password using exact upper and lower case characters you chose. Your
access to this site will be controlled by the accurate entry of this information at a
future sign-on. Returning users will be able to sign on using their current information.
A $10 nonrefundable application fee is required to apply for the hunt, and a randomized
computer drawing will determine the selection of hunters.
One thousand permits are available and the coastal plain is divided into four
alligator management units with 250 permits allocated for each unit (1000 total).
Applicants can select the option to be considered for any number (or all) of the units,
but the issued permit will only allow them to hunt in one unit per season. If selected, a
$100 fee for the permit and one harvest tag is required to be paid online through the
same application process. Selected alligator hunters will be allowed to take one
alligator on public waters or private lands where hunting rights are granted. No
alligator hunting is allowed on Wildlife Management Areas (except in navigable waters),
state parks, or federal properties like National Wildlife Refuges. Unsuccessful
applicants will accumulate preference points for future alligator hunt drawings.
For the hunting season, only alligators four feet or greater in length may be taken
and the hunter must tag the animal immediately with a harvest tag provided by DNR. This
hunting season does not allow the shooting of unsecured alligators, even on private land.
All alligators must be secured using approved equipment and brought boat-side or onto
land before they can be dispatched. While others may assist the permitted hunter, all
participants (including permittee) must possess a valid South Carolina hunting license.
All permitted hunters are required to report their harvest to the DNR whether an
alligator was taken or not in order to participate in any way in the following year's
alligator hunt.
All hunters will be notified beginning in July of selection status. DNR will begin
to send out permits and tags to fully paid applicants after Aug. 1st. This deadline for
paying the $100 permit fee for selected applicants is Oct. 1, but you must allow the
department five business days to deliver the permit and tag after receipt of payment.
Hunters that fail to pay the $100 permit fee by the end of the Alligator Hunting Season
will not receive any preference points and will forfeit any accumulated points.
DNR will conduct a series of optional seminars for those selected for the alligator
season that will include vital information on how to conduct a safe and successful hunt.
DNR will closely monitor these hunts and the harvest and regulations may be modified for
future seasons.
More than 100,000 alligators live from the Midlands to the coast of South Carolina
and the population is not threatened by the regulated removal of a relatively small
number of alligators. Last year, hunters took 452 alligators during the public alligator
hunting season with the average size being 9'5" in length.
South Carolina's natural resources are essential for economic development and
contribute nearly $30 billion and 230,000 jobs to the state's economy overall. Find out
more at: www.dnr.sc.gov/green/index.html.
#