Statewide Regulations
These methods are
legal for taking both game and nongame fish throughout the year, statewide,
unless restricted
under "Special Area Regulations"
DEFINITIONS:
ROD AND REEL:
A person may use up to seven (7) rods while fishing unless restricted further under "Special Area Regulations."TROTLINE/THROWLINE:
Trotlines/throwlines are restricted to no more than three (3) lines and 100 hooks per person. A legal trotline/throwline has: no glass or metallic floating device on the line;
no metallic posts in water for attachment;
lines made of nonmetallic material only;
hooks at least 24 inches apart;
owners name and address attached to each line;
been attended at least once every 24 hours;
not been set within three (3) ft. of surface of water at any point beyond six
(6) ft. from either point of attachment, except at Great Salt Plains and Ft.
Supply reservoirs where water is less than three (3) ft. deep.
JUGLINE:
Juglines are restricted to no more than five (5) hooks per line and 20 juglines per person. A legal jugline is a vertical line suspended from a nonmetallic or nonglass floating device, drifting free or anchored and has: owners name and address attached;
been attended at least once every 24 hours.
LIMBLINE:
Limblines are restricted to no more than two (2) hooks per line and 20 limblines per person. A legal limbline is a line attached to a limb, branch, other natural object, or non-metallic manmade materials and has: the owners name and address attached;
been attended at least once every 24 hours.
YO-YO:
Yo-yos are restricted to no more than 20 per person and shall: have the owners name and address attached;
not be left unattended for more than six (6) hours;
not be strung or suspended from any horizontal line across any channel or
navigable waterway;
have no more than 10 yo-yos attached from any one line or support;
not have metallic material in lines used for attachment;
have lines no greater than 50 feet in length and must be placed or suspended
without restricting or impeding boat traffic. Lines must be visible to boats at
all times, day or night.
These methods are legal for taking nongame fish according to the following provisions unless restricted under "Special Area Regulations."
BOW AND ARROW:
Bowfishing may be used to take nongame fish only, throughout the year in all waters unless restricted under "Special Area Regulations." Legal bowfishing is restricted to: any bow except a crossbow;
arrows having no more than three (3) points with no more than two (2) barbs on
each point.
GIG, GRABHOOK, SPEAR AND SPEARGUN:
Gigs and spears are legal for taking nongame fish and white bass only. Grabhooks (handheld hook or handheld pole or rope with a single hook attached used in the initial taking of a fish) are prohibited in all state waters, except SCUBA divers in Delaware and Mayes counties (excluding tailwaters which are closed) may use grabhooks to take nongame fish only from June 15 through July 31. Spearguns used by SCUBA divers are legal for taking nongame fish, blue and channel catfish. Gigs, spears and spearguns shall: not contain more than three (3) points with no more than two
(2) barbs on each point;
be lawful in all rivers and streams from Dec. 1 through Mar. 31, and
year-round in all reservoirs, unless restricted under "Special Area
Regulations."
Gigs shall be lawful year-round in rivers and streams in Delaware and Mayes
Counties, unless restricted under "Special Area Regulations."
SNAGGING:
Snagging, the dragging of one single hook or one treble hook attached to a fishing line through the water to impale fish, shall be lawful in all waters year-round for nongame fish only unless restricted under "Special Area Regulations."NOODLING:
Noodling is the taking of nongame fish only by use of hands only. Possession of hooks, gaffs, spears, poles or ropes with hooks attached while in the act of noodling shall be proof of violation of the "hands only" noodling law. Noodling shall be lawful year-round in all waters unless restricted under "Special Area Regulations."NETTING (Noncommercial):
Only nets defined as gill nets, trammel nets, hoop nets, or haul seines may be used to take nongame fish only, except prohibited April through May. No fish taken by these methods may be transported from the state or be sold. All nets must be attended at least once every 24 hours. Each license holder is limited to 300 feet of net or a total of 4 hoop nets in the water at any time. Each unattended net must have owners name and address attached.Legal hoop nets shall be:
no longer than 10 feet in length;
no smaller than 3-inch square mesh;
constructed of nonmetallic mesh only;
constructed with no more than seven (7) hoops, three (3) feet in diameter or
smaller.
Legal mesh size for gill or trammel nets or seines used in
noncommercial netting shall be:
no smaller than 4-inches square.
The following lakes and reservoirs are closed year-round to all
noncommercial netting for any fish:
all Wildlife Department Fishing Areas;
all Corps of Engineers, State Parks, GRDA, OG&E and Bureau of Reclamation
lakes;
Lakes Atoka, Carl Albert, Carl Blackwell, Ellsworth, Eucha, Lawtonka, Lone
Chimney, Spavinaw, Taft, Hefner, Overholser (including tailwaters and downstream
to NW 10th St. bridge), Draper, all waters within the Wichita Mountains NWR, all
lakes and ponds within the Ouachita National Forest and all Oklahoma City "Close
to Home" fishing waters.
The following rivers and creeks are closed year-round to all noncommercial netting for any fish:
Baron Fork Creek
Black Fork Creek
Blue River
Caney River
Deep Fork River upstream from Lake Eufaula to Arcadia Lake dam
Glover River upstream from Hwy. 3 & 7
Illinois River
Kiamichi River above and below Hugo Lake to the Red River
Lee Creek
Little River tributary of Lake Thunder-bird above Franklin Road in Cleveland
County
Little River upstream from Hwy. 98 bridge
Lukfata Creek
McGee Creek
Mountain Fork River upstream from Hwy 70 bridge
Pennington Creek
Poteau and Fourche Maline rivers in Le Flore County
Red River from Choctaw/Bryan county line upstream to I-35 bridge
Sans Bois tributary of R.S. Kerr Lake
Washita River upstream to Hwy. 77 bridge south of Davis
all cutoffs, oxbows, side channels and tributaries of the above named rivers
and streams
all of the old oxbows and cutoffs of the Arkansas River in Le Flore and
Sequoyah counties
Canadian River from Lake Eufaula dam downstream to the confluence with Robert
S. Kerr
Arkansas River
Cimarron River and its tributaries
Neosho River from Kansas border downstream to the confluence with Webbers
Falls
Salt Creek in Osage County
Salt Fork River
Spring River
Verdigris River
SEINES, CAST NETS, TRAWLS AND DIP NETS (Noncommercial):
Seining, cast netting, trawling and dip netting bait for personal use is lawful in all waters year-round except Lakes Taft, Lone Chimney, Overholser (including tailwaters and downstream to NW 10th St. bridge), Hefner, Draper, Close to Home Fishing Waters (see page 31), the Wichita Mountains NWR, and in Wildlife Department Fishing Areas (see page 29), however cast nets may be used to take bait for personal use at Lake Carl Etling.Any person may seine, trap or transport minnows for their own use as bait, provided the seine does not exceed 20 feet in length and 1/4-inch mesh. Cast nets, trawls and handheld dip nets are lawful for taking nongame fish only as bait for personal use. No person may take and/or export out-of-state via land-based transportation more than two hundred (200) nongame fish, including shad, for potential use as bait. Cast nets shall have a mesh size no greater than 3/8-inch square. Trawl nets pulled by motor driven boats may not exceed three (3) feet in diameter and 3/8-inch square mesh. A resident or nonresident fishing license is required of each person using these methods, unless exempt.
All other methods for taking both game and nongame fish are illegal.
Last modified: December 29, 2008