It is legal to hunt doves over standing crops, manipulated agricultural fields, feedlots, or where seeds are scattered through normal farming practices, such as top-sowing or aerial seeding. However, waterfowl rules are stricter: unharvested crops cannot be manipulated before flooding, and hunters may not possess lead shot.
Top-sowing wheat or rye for cover crops is allowed if planting rates follow University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service guidelines – no more than 60 pounds per acre, evenly spread without piles.
For hunters using pay-to-hunt fields, officials recommend asking landowners about recent field preparation, inspecting the ground for scattered grain, and watching for abnormal dove concentrations.
Dove season runs Sept. 6 through Oct. 26 and Dec. 8 through Jan. 15. Daily limits are 15 mourning or white-winged doves per hunter, with no limit on Eurasian collared-doves, which must remain fully feathered in the field. Hunters 16 and older need a license and free HIP registration; duck stamps are only required for waterfowl.
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