Shotguns, handguns, muzzleloaders, bows and center-fire rifles. If there is more than one owner, there is still a maximum of four licenses for the farm unit. Licenses may be divided among qualifying family members. It is illegal to use a LOT deer license to hunt on land owned or controlled by another individual.
If a LOT General license is purchased for the shotgun season, it is valid for both shotgun seasons, but only one deer may be harvested and tagged. There is one General Deer license available for purchase per farm unit for landowners, and their eligible family members, even if there are multiple landowners registered on the same farm unit.
There is one General Deer license available for purchase per farm unit for tenants, and their eligible family. Up to three LOT Antlerless-only licenses are available for purchase per farm unit for landowners, and their eligible family members, even if there are multiple landowners registered on the same farm unity. Up to three LOT antlerless-only license are available for purchase per farm unit for tenants, and their eligible family members, even if there are multiple tenants registered on the same farm unit.
How many LOT licenses can I buy? Landowners registerd on the same parcel share a maximum of four Landowner-Tenant licenses, one General deer and three Antlerless-only licenses. These licenses may be divided among the registered landowners in any way the family or co-owners choose. If there is no tenant on the property, the maximum number of licenses available is still four for the farm unit.
Deer population management zones are used to reduce or maintain deer numbers. Each management zone has its own license quota, season dates, license restrictions and proficiency requirements.
Most licenses are Antlerless-only. Licenses for these hunts will not count in determining the number of licenses an individual may have, or against the county quota for Antlerless-only Licenses. Hunters who harvest a deer or wild turkey must report the harvest to the DNR by midnight on the day after it is tagged, or before taking it to a locker or taxidermist, or before processing it for consumption, or before transporting it out-of-state, whichever occurs first.
The hunter whose name is on the transportation tag is responsible for making the report. If no animal is harvested, no report is necessary.
Failure to report or reporting falsely may result in a misdemeanor citation and possible loss of hunting privileges.
The Harvest Reporting System will issue a confirmation number to the hunter that must be written on the Harvest Report Tag and attached to the leg of the animal. Failure to do so may result in a misdemeanor citation. Iowa Deer and Turkey tags consist of two portions.
The lower portion of the tag is the Transportation Tag and the upper portion is the Harvest Report Tag. Each performs different functions. A Transportation Tag with the date of kill properly shown shall be visibly attached to the turkey immediately or the deer within 15 minutes of the time it is located after being taken or before the carcass is moved to be transported by any means, whichever occurs first, in a manner that the tag cannot be removed without mutilating or destroying it.
However, the carcass may be moved away from an obstacle, entanglement, waterway, roadway or other area if that location would be a safety hazard, but only so far as necessary to avoid the hazard, then tagged immediately before being moved to be transported.
For antlered deer , attach the Transportation Tag on the main beam between two points as shown. This tag shall be proof of possession and remain affixed to the carcass until the animal is processed for consumption. The head, and antlers if any, shall remain attached to the deer while being transported from the place where taken to the processor or commercial preservation facility or until the deer has been processed for consumption.
The Harvest Report Tag, with the confirmation number properly recorded, must be attached to the leg of the animal after reporting and before the reporting deadline pictured below. The Harvest Report Tag must be attached so that.
Press halves of the tag together to bond. When reporting, you will need the harvest registration number from your tag and the Iowa county where.
For deer, report whether it was a doe, button buck, antlered buck, or shed-antler buck. For turkeys, report the length of the beard fall or length of the longest spur spring. Veterans learn valuable skills while making leather products from the hides. Contact your local Elks Lodge for information on the deer hides donation program and collection location. Iowa law allows lawfully taken game carcasses and waste from home meat processing to be disposed with other residential waste, although your solid waste hauler may have some restrictions regarding the maximum size or weight of an individual bag.
The waste should be sealed in plastic bags in lots that are similar in size and weight to a typical bag of residential waste. Contact your local waste hauler or landfill for the specific waste disposal requirements in your area.
Events and Hunter Education Certification Classes. Harvest Reporting. License Activity Packages. Iowa Resident residency switch. Successful applicants will receive an Any deer and an Antlerless only license.
If unsuccessful, neither license will be issued. Hunters who tag a deer must report the harvest to the DNR by midnight of the day after it is killed, before taking it to a locker, before processing it for consumption or before leaving the state, whichever occurs first.
The youth season coincides with the disabled hunter deer season for hunters who meet certain criteria. Each season runs Sept.
Each youth must be under direct supervision of an adult mentor, with a valid license and habitat fee if required. The youth license is valid statewide and for any legal deer. In , hunters purchased nearly 12, licenses for the youth season and reported harvesting more than 5, deer, which was a 47 percent increase over
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