Native migratory birds are protected by the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act and Arizona ARS Β§17-235. Killing, trapping, or possessing protected birds, eggs, or feathers without a permit is illegal. Maricopa County supports compliance through MCACC and AZGFD wildlife reporting.
The Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 protects nearly every native bird species, plus their nests, eggs, and feathers. Arizona layers on ARS Β§17-235 and AZGFD rules requiring a license or permit to take, possess, or transport wildlife, including non-game birds. Common Maricopa County species like mourning doves, hummingbirds, hawks, owls, and Gambel's quail are covered. Removing an active nest with eggs or chicks generally requires a federal depredation permit; even nuisance pigeons need humane handling. House sparrows, European starlings, and rock pigeons are non-native and not MBTA-protected, but cannot be killed inhumanely under ARS Β§13-2910. AZGFD enforces state rules; injured wildlife should go to a licensed rehabilitator.
MBTA violations are federal misdemeanors with fines up to fifteen thousand dollars and six months in jail; commercial violations escalate to felonies. ARS Title 17 violations bring state fines, license suspension, and jail. Inhumane killing triggers ARS Β§13-2910 cruelty charges.
Mesa, AZ
Coyotes are common throughout Mesa's desert-edge neighborhoods. Arizona Game and Fish manages the species under ARS Title 17, prohibits hazing harassment bey...
Mesa, AZ
Mesa discourages feeding wildlife under nuisance and public health provisions. Intentional feeding of javelina, coyotes, and other urban wildlife can lead to...
See how Mesa's bird protection rules stack up against other locations.
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