NEPA warns hunters to adhere to bird-shooting guidelines
KINGSTON, Jamaica — The National Environment and Planning Agency (NEPA) is reminding persons to adhere to the regulations for participation in the annual bird-shooting season or risk being prosecuted for breaches.
This comes after NEPA cited two bird hunters for shooting in a game reserve in Clarendon on Saturday, August 26.
One of the hunters was also cited for shooting outside the prescribed time for hunting during the game bird-shooting season. A third hunter in the parish of Portland was issued a summons for hunting without a licence, also on the 26th of August, while four hunters were issued a warning for shooting near a residential area in St Elizabeth on the 27th.
In a press release from NEPA on Monday, the organisation expressed that in light of the recent developments, it is issuing a warning to hunters who “insist on flouting the law administered by the Agency to regulate the sport.”
Among the requirements for hunting under the Wild Life Protection Act (WLPA) is a mandate to confine such activities to areas designated for shooting and to refrain from hunting within game bird reserves.
Hunters are also forbidden to shoot within 40 yards of residential dwellings and to adhere to the time restrictions granted for shooting.
The season’s hunting sessions are from sunrise to 9:00 am, and 2:30 pm to sunset on Saturdays, and from sunrise to 9:00 am on Sundays. It is also imperative that hunters adhere to the stipulated bag limit for the number of birds that they can shoot during each session.
Hunters must also bear in mind that they can only shoot the following game birds:
• Zenaida Dove/Pea Dove
• White-winged Dove
• White-crowned Pigeon/Baldpate
• Mourning Dove/Long-tailed Pea Dove
According to the WLPA, persons found guilty of breaching the game-bird shooting law may incur a maximum fine of $100,000 or face imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months.
Information on the location of game reserves and other rules governing the staging of the annual bird shooting season can be obtained from the hunter’s handbook, which is usually given to hunters when they purchase their licence at NEPA’s head office.
Additionally, a copy of the handbook is obtainable from the Agency’s website.
