Illinois Administrative Code
Title 17 - CONSERVATION
Part 830 - COMMERCIAL FISHING AND MUSSELING IN CERTAIN WATERS OF THE STATE
Section 830.40 - Devices
Universal Citation: 17 IL Admin Code ยง 830.40
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Commercial Fishing
1) Devices used in the waters listed
in Section
830.10
shall conform to all regulations as outlined in Article 15 of the Fish and
Aquatic Life Code [515 ILCS 5 /Art.15]. Hoop nets, basket traps, trot lines and
dip nets may be used in all of the aforementioned waters.
2) It shall be unlawful:
A) To use trammel nets and gill nets except
in the Illinois River up to Route 89 Highway bridge, the Ohio River and the
Mississippi River, unless authorized by a Special Use Permit issued pursuant to
Section
830.80;
B) To use seines except in the Illinois,
Mississippi, Ohio and Wabash Rivers (except seining will not be permitted in
Boston Bay and its connected backwaters above the mouth of Boston Bay in Mercer
County); and
C) To use trammel nets
or gill nets in the Ohio River with less than 4 inch bar mesh netting, except
that, from May 1 through October 31, bar mesh size cannot be less than 4 inches
or greater than
4.5 inches.
b) Commercial Musseling
1) Devices used in waters open to commercial
musseling shall conform to all regulations as outlined in this subsection (b)
and in Articles 1 and 15 of the Fish and Aquatic Life Code [515 ILCS 5/Arts. 1
and 15].
2) It shall be unlawful:
A) To use hand forks;
B) To use basket dredges, mechanical devices
and hand dredges in the taking of mussels;
C) To harvest mussels in the Ohio River
except by using crowfoot bars; and
D) To tether or hold mussels in any
containment device. Mussels must be taken to the boat or released each
day.
3) Brail or
crowfoot bars must be 20 feet or less in length. No more than 3 bars may be
possessed in each boat.
c) Crayfish Harvest
Seines are the only commercial devices legal to use to commercially harvest crayfish in waters open to the commercial harvest of crayfish. They can be of any length, but not more than 6 feet in depth with a bag not more than 6 feet in height with a mesh no greater than 1/2 inch bar measurement.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Illinois may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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