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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Wildlife Feeding

Seminole vs Tarpon Springs

How do wildlife feeding rules compare between Seminole, FL and Tarpon Springs, FL?

Seminole and Tarpon Springs have similar restriction levels.

Seminole, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

Feeding wildlife in Seminole is restricted under Florida Fish and Wildlife rules and local nuisance code. Feeding alligators, bears, raccoons, and sandhill cranes is prohibited or strictly regulated to prevent habituation and public safety risks.

View full Seminole rules →

Tarpon Springs, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

Tarpon Springs follows Florida law prohibiting the intentional feeding of alligators and certain wildlife, and city nuisance rules discourage feeding ducks or other animals when it creates sanitation, safety, or property concerns.

View full Tarpon Springs rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactSeminoleTarpon Springs
Alligator feedingProhibited statewide-
Bear feedingProhibited-
Sandhill cranesCannot be fed-
Songbird feedersGenerally allowed-
Maximum fine$500 plus jail time-
FWC rule-F.A.C. 68A-4.001
Feeding alligators-Second-degree misdemeanor
Other species-Bears, cranes, raccoons, pelicans
City overlay-Chapter 4 nuisance rules
Hot spots-Anclote River, Lake Tarpon

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Seminole FAQ

Can I feed ducks at Lake Seminole?

Feeding wild ducks is discouraged due to health concerns and is prohibited if it creates nuisance or attracts protected species. Bread feeding harms waterfowl.

Is feeding alligators illegal?

Yes, intentionally feeding alligators is a second-degree misdemeanor under FAC 68A-4.001 statewide because it makes alligators dangerous to humans.

Can I keep bird feeders in my yard?

Yes, bird feeders for songbirds are generally permitted, but you must not allow them to attract raccoons, bears, or other regulated wildlife species.

Tarpon Springs FAQ

Can I feed ducks at Tarpon Springs parks?

Feeding waterfowl is discouraged because it can attract alligators and create sanitation issues; some parks post no-feeding signs that the city enforces under nuisance rules.

What's the penalty for feeding an alligator?

Under FWC rules it is a second-degree misdemeanor punishable by up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine, regardless of intent or whether harm occurred.

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