border
sSNAKESs : Reptile Forum
 

Go Back   sSNAKESs : Reptile Forum > General Information Forums > Field Herping

Notices

Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 10-19-02, 12:38 AM   #1
jay76
Member
 
jay76's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct-2002
Location: Central Ontario
Age: 47
Posts: 1,054
Country:
Send a message via MSN to jay76
Question collecting regulations?

Does anyone know what the regulations on field collection are in ontario? If I found a garter snake in my backyard, say, would I be able to keep it (in the name of education of course )

A recurring thought I've been having

Jay
jay76 is offline  
Login to remove ads
Old 10-19-02, 01:04 AM   #2
Kyle Barker
Member
 
Kyle Barker's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug-2002
Location: The Island
Posts: 1,017
Send a message via MSN to Kyle Barker
Look at you provincial governments web site. Look up trapping restrictions or similar topics. Not sure about there but in bc its illegal to catch any animal at al with a permit(like anyone knows/cares).

kyle
Kyle Barker is offline  
Old 10-19-02, 08:46 AM   #3
casacrow
Member
 
casacrow's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul-2002
Location: Ottawa/Lindsay ON
Age: 43
Posts: 278
Send a message via MSN to casacrow
I believe that you require a permit to keep them in Lindsay. If you want to see something awsome head out to Reaboro in the spring. There are many dens around the train tracks leading into town and you will see thousands of garters.

-DONNY
__________________
Snakes are the animal that is most dreamed about by women.........I want to be reincarnated as a snake!
casacrow is offline  
Old 10-19-02, 11:03 AM   #4
jay76
Member
 
jay76's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct-2002
Location: Central Ontario
Age: 47
Posts: 1,054
Country:
Send a message via MSN to jay76
Really? Reaboro? I'll have to make a day trip
jay76 is offline  
Old 10-22-02, 05:55 PM   #5
Kyle Walkinshaw
Member
 
Kyle Walkinshaw's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct-2002
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Age: 38
Posts: 498
permits

I believe that you need permits to keep ANY wild specimens and I am also curious to find out how you can get pemits for keeping w/c's in Ontario and also I know you need a permit for capturing native species. Does anyone know how I could get either of these licenses??
Kyle Walkinshaw is offline  
Login to remove ads
Old 10-22-02, 06:30 PM   #6
Jonathan Crowe
Member
 
Jonathan Crowe's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar-2002
Location: Shawville, Quebec
Age: 52
Posts: 52
Send a message via ICQ to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via AIM to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via MSN to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via Yahoo to Jonathan Crowe
Ontario law on native wildlife

For animals that are listed as specially protected or game wildlife under the <i><a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm">Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act, 1997</a></i>, you need a licence to collect or hunt them (<a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P381_15589">section 5</a>), a licence to keep them (<a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P663_40828">section 40</a>), a licence to buy or sell them (<a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P728_47585">section 48</a>) and a licence to breed them (<a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P699_44655">section 45</a>). Doing so without such a licence is illegal, and, based on what I know and have heard, you're not likely to get a licence without a good reason. Reptiles and amphibians that are protected in this manner are listed in Schedules <a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P1361_107421">4</a>, <a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P1370_107545">5</a>, <a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P1512_109736">9</a> and <a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P1559_110632">10</a> of the Act.

Animals that are <em>not</em> protected under the Act technically require a small game hunting licence under <a href="http://192.75.156.68/DBLaws/Statutes/English/97f41_e.htm#P394_16721">clause 6(1)(h)</a> of the Act to collect from the wild. This includes all frogs (except bullfrogs), American toads, mudpuppies and newts, and eastern garter, ribbon, brown, red-bellied and ringneck snakes.
Jonathan Crowe is offline  
Old 10-22-02, 07:57 PM   #7
jay76
Member
 
jay76's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct-2002
Location: Central Ontario
Age: 47
Posts: 1,054
Country:
Send a message via MSN to jay76
I might be reading this wrong, but 40 (1) seems to say that you can't keep live wildlife or live protected wildlife without a permit/license unless it's for consumption or personal education (single specimen)... but if you want to keep more than one wild animal of the same species for collection purposes or sale you need the license, even if the species in question isn't protected. It suggests that if I collected, say, a wild garter, I could do so without a permit, as long as I had only 1, and had no intention of breeding or selling it, and if questioned was just trying to learn more about them . I'm not the best at reading legalese though... did I miss something? For instance, 6(1) seems to be contradicted by 40(2)(b).

I found this list of endangered/threatened/extirpated/extinct Ontario wildlife (it's the 2002 update) -

http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/MNR/VTEEElist_2002_eng.pdf
jay76 is offline  
Old 10-23-02, 06:16 AM   #8
Jonathan Crowe
Member
 
Jonathan Crowe's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar-2002
Location: Shawville, Quebec
Age: 52
Posts: 52
Send a message via ICQ to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via AIM to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via MSN to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via Yahoo to Jonathan Crowe
Fortunately, reading legalese is my day job.

Two points where you're confused:

- <em>Catching</em> vs. <em>keeping</em>: section 40 deals with keeping; sections 5 and 6 deal with hunting and catching. Not the same thing. It's legal to keep a single specially protected animal for the purposes of personal education, but it's definitely <em>not</em> legal to go out and catch one.

- <em>Specially protected/game wildlife</em> vs. <em>all other wildlife</em>: sections 5, 40, 45 and 48 only deal with specially protected/game wildlife; section 6 covers everything else. Eastern garters are not protected.

So, if you had a small game hunting licence for them, you could collect eastern garter snakes. If you acquired the eastern garter snakes by another method (i.e., captive bred, or a long term captive from someone else), you wouldn't need a permit at all.
Jonathan Crowe is offline  
Old 10-23-02, 07:08 AM   #9
jay76
Member
 
jay76's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct-2002
Location: Central Ontario
Age: 47
Posts: 1,054
Country:
Send a message via MSN to jay76
I knew I missed something. Thanks for the clarification, Jonathan.
jay76 is offline  
Old 10-27-02, 06:33 PM   #10
Christina
Member
 
Join Date: Sep-2002
Location: Ontario
Posts: 224
Now we were under the assumption that you could catch one unprotected species if it was educational purposes for a child with out any permit at all.
Christina
Christina is offline  
Login to remove ads
Old 11-05-02, 03:14 PM   #11
Lisa
Member
 
Lisa's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun-2002
Location: Trenton
Posts: 6,075
Send a message via ICQ to Lisa Send a message via MSN to Lisa Send a message via Yahoo to Lisa
If you own the land where you find the animals do you still need a hunting licence?
__________________
Neo-Slither (Snake fanatic mailing list) http://<br /> http://groups.yahoo.c...p/Neo-Slither/

May you live in interesting times.
Lisa is offline  
Old 11-27-02, 02:05 PM   #12
Jonathan Crowe
Member
 
Jonathan Crowe's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar-2002
Location: Shawville, Quebec
Age: 52
Posts: 52
Send a message via ICQ to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via AIM to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via MSN to Jonathan Crowe Send a message via Yahoo to Jonathan Crowe
I don't check these boards often enough; sorry for the late reply.

Christina:

You can <em>keep</em> (but <em>not</em> catch) <u>one</u> specimen of a <em>protected</em> species for educational purposes. That provision was meant to deal with animals that were already in captivity when the new law came into force in 1999. So your information got things a bit mixed up, there.

(Incidentally, the scuttlebutt is that this exemption will be tightened up so that vulnerable, threatened or endangered species will require a licence even if you only have one.)

Going out and hunting something is covered by some sort of licencing requirement, it's just a matter of which one. But keeping something is a whole 'nother kettle of fish.

Lisa:

The exception is if you are a farmer and it is your farm.
Jonathan Crowe is offline  
Closed Thread

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 08:20 AM.

Powered by vBulletin®
©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2002-2023, Hobby Solutions.

right