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Answers to FAQ

Mississippi
Department of Marine Resources
Yes, a saltwater fishing license at a cost of $11.85
is required to fish South of Highway 90. Above Highway 90 and below I-10
either a saltwater or freshwater license will suffice, and above I-10 a
freshwater license is required. Persons under the age of 16 and over 65
are exempt.
You can purchase a saltwater license at the
Department of Marine Resources headquarters in the Bolton State Office
Building at 1141 Bayview Avenue in Biloxi or at any K-Mart or Wal-Mart.
Many tackle shops will also offer licenses for sale.
- I've caught a big fish. Is it a record breaker?
Maybe! Check out our
records page for current record holders and forms for
submitting your catch.
Yes, piers are regulated activities requiring a wetlands permit from
the Department of Marine Resources.
The entire front beach offers excellent wade fishing
during the spring, summer, and fall months; and there are numerous
public fishing piers and jetties in the three coastal counties that also
provide good fishing opportunities.
The ways to catch fish are as different as the
fishermen who try to catch them, but live shrimp fished under a popping
cork is, by far, the most popular among local anglers.
From the near shore beaches to the offshore barrier
islands, the Sound averages only about eleven feet in depth, including
the deepwater channels that run in excess of thirty feet.
Both offshore and near shore
reef coordinates (GPS) are available on the Department of
Marine Resources web site.
For most of us, anytime we get the chance is a good
time to go fishing. As the saying goes, "even a bad day fishing is
better than a good day at the office." If you want to improve your
chances of catching fish though, you should fish when the tide is moving
strongly – either right as it begins to fall or several hours before it
reaches its peak height.
Fishing violations can be called in to the Marine Patrol through a
toll-free number (1-800-294-5551).
Processing times for permits for wetlands
construction activities vary greatly, depending on the extent of the
work involved and the anticipated impacts. For a typical bulkhead
construction involving no complications, the permit could be obtained in
as little time as two weeks to a month.
Boat and water safety certification training is
periodically offered by the Department of Marine Resources.
Contact the Marine Patrol Office
for the time and place of the next classes offered near you.
The Commission
on Marine Resources meetings begin at 9 a.m. on the third
Tuesday of the month unless otherwise posted. Unless otherwise posted,
they are held in the Mississippi State Extension Center, 1815 Popps
Ferry Road, Biloxi, MS 39532, until the Bolton Building repairs are
completed. The public is invited to attend.
A “jubilee” occurs whenever the dissolved oxygen in
the water reaches critical levels for fish, causing them to come to the
surface and even run up onto the shore in an attempt to breathe.
This is most common during the hot summer months when the oxygen
carrying capacity of the water is at its lowest.
Generally, no, the variable water quality in these
near shore areas has resulted in many of them being classified as
prohibited or restricted to protect public health.
You do not need a license to catch bait using a small mesh beach
seine provided that it is under 100‘ in length.
If you have caught a fish that you feel qualifies as
a new state record, you can obtain an application from the
Office of Marine Fisheries or from the records
web page.
You will need a photograph of the fish as well as a photograph of you
and the fish, a positive identification by a qualified individual, and
witnesses to the catch and weighing.
You can click here:
Tide Table
Tide tables are also published daily in the
Sun-Herald newspaper, available at newsstands across the coast.
The Mississippi Sea Grant Advisory Service also publishes annual Tide
Tables for Mississippi waters.
Besides Marine Fisheries Management and Wetlands
Permitting, the agency is also responsible for seafood plant inspection
and certification,
coastal preserves
management, installation of
marine pump out stations, removal of
derelict vessels, administration of
boat and
water safety programs, marine law enforcement, shellfish
growing-waters management,
saltwater fish/shrimp/oyster
licensing, Tidelands
program administration, and management of the Grand Bay National
Estuarine Research Reserve.
Contact the Public
Affairs Office
at the DMR.
Contact the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council
at 888-833-1844 or access their Web page at
http://www.gulfcouncil.org.
Boats are registered by the Mississippi Department of
Wildlife Fisheries and Parks in Jackson MS . Their phone number is (601)
364-2036, and their web site is
http://www.mdwfp.com/.
The Department of Marine Resources sells the state duck stamp at 1141
Bayview Ave, Biloxi, Mississippi.
The Department of Marine Resources does sell hunting and fishing
licenses at 1141 Bayview Ave, Biloxi, Mississippi.
No. With a recreational license, it is illegal to sell any of your
catch.
See our licensing web pages at
Licensing and
Shrimp Licensing.
You can apply for a Captain's License at the Biloxi
Marine Training Center, the address is 717-A Water St., Biloxi MS.
Phone (228) 436-3110.
A saltwater sports fishing license costs $11.85 and
fish caught cannot be offered for sale. A commercial license costs
$200.00, which allows you to sell your catch.
The precise date is set after it has been determined
that the shrimp have reached the minimum legal size of 68 to the
pound. Shrimp season has historically opened sometime during the
first two weeks of June. When the shrimp reach the specified size,
the Executive Director of The Department of Marine Resources will
declare the season open and the season will close December 31.
Your hunter education card is issued by the Department of Wildlife
Fisheries and Parks, and their phone number is 1-800-670-9616.
Commercial speckled trout season opens on October 1st
and closes on or before September 30th of the following year when the
established 40,000 pound catch limit has been reported. When this quota
has been met, The Mississippi Department of Marine Resources will issue
a public notice closing state waters to commercial speckled trout
fishing.
The seafood health safety program is managed by the
Mississippi Department of Marine Resources through its Seafood
Technology program that includes seafood sanitation and health safety
inspections of certified shellfish dealers.
Sanitation and health safety processing guidelines
for molluscan shellfish are developed by the Interstate Shellfish
Sanitation Conference. These guidelines are published in the National
Shellfish Sanitation Program (NSSP) Guide For The Control Of Molluscan
Shellfish. These guidelines are standardized, revised as needed and
applied nationwide in all states involved in the handling molluscan
shellfish. The DMR applies the NSSP guidelines when conducting
sanitation and health safety compliance inspections of all Mississippi
certified molluscan shellfish dealers.
The US Food and Drug Administration periodically
reviews the program for compliance with the NSSP guidelines.
In the long history of oyster processing in
Mississippi, there have been no documented disease outbreaks caused by
the processing procedures used by certified Mississippi oyster dealers.
This record reflects the success of a program that
provides consumers of Mississippi oysters the utmost confidence that
they have purchased a safe an wholesome product.
The following activities require permits:
- Dredging of channels, canals, boat slips, marinas
- Construction of bulkheads, piers, boat ramps, boat houses,
structures on designed sites for water dependent industry (Coastal
area only)
- Any type of filling
- Burning
- Clearing
- Seismic Exploration
If in doubt, call the
Coastal Ecology Permitting Department for an inspection to help
determine your requirements. Please provide the exact location with
directions to the property and landmarks. Lot numbers are insufficient
directions. These directions may be faxed to (228) 374-5008 or
emailed .
Call the Permitting Department at (228) 374-5000 ext.
4106, and give the representative your name and mailing address. A
packet with the necessary forms and instructions will be mailed to you
within 24 hours or download it on our
permitting web page.
Yes. The following fees, payable to State of Mississippi, apply:
- $50.00 Residential
- $500.00 Commercial
- $50.00 Cost of Public Notice Fee
As the weather warms, the number of permits
applications increases. Applications are processed upon receipt and
property inspections are scheduled in the order of receipt of the
application.
We ask for your patience during the peak season;
however, if you have a questions regarding the status of your
application, please call the Permitting Department at (228) 374-5022
ext. 5180. Please have the following information ready:
- First and last name
- Mailing address
- Project description
- Project location
- Impacted waterway
- Impacted waterway's county
Call the Permitting
Department and ask for a "Request for Disclosure of Public
Records" form. There is a small fee for reproductions of the public
records which is explained in these instructions.
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