(Provided by Indiana DNR)

The Indiana Natural Resources Commission has approved rules that include a limited river otter trapping season beginning this fall.

New rules allow river otter trapping in 66 counties that are within watersheds where river otters were released during the 1990s. Trappers will not be allowed to take river otters in 26 central Indiana counties where river otters were not reintroduced and where otters have not become established.

In addition to the county restrictions, a licensed trapper can take no more than two otters per season with a statewide quota of 600 otters. The trapping season will be Nov. 15 to March 15, unless the statewide quota is reached sooner.

The rules also allow for the sale of hides from legally taken river otters.

The rules still need approval from the Attorney General’s Office and Governor’s office before taking effect. Details will be included in the 2015-16 Indiana Hunting & Trapping Guide that will be available in August.

River otters, a native Indiana species, are one of several successful management projects of the DNR Division of Fish & Wildlife, along with the restoration of white-tailed deer, wild turkeys, bald eagles, and peregrine falcons.

By the early 1900s, the loss of habitat and unregulated trapping led to a declining population of river otters, prompting Indiana to ban the taking of river otters in 1921. It is believed the species was gone from the state by the 1940s.

The DNR began reintroducing otters to state waterways in 1995. Over a five-year period, 303 river otters were captured in Louisiana and released in northern and southern Indiana. Their populations increased enough through natural reproduction that river otters were removed from the state endangered species list in 2005. Presently, river otters have expanded their range to include over 80 percent of Indiana’s counties and their numbers continue to increase.

The proposed trapping season will not adversely affect the river otter population. Currently, regulated trapping is used to manage river otters in at least 33 states, many of which reintroduced river otter. The conservative bag limit and statewide quota are designed to allow otters the opportunity to continue to expand their range and population densities in central Indiana.