State Laws: Louisiana (Revised)
To put it simply: no, all foxes are not legal in Louisiana.
Note:
Red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) and gray foxes (Urocyon cinereoargenteus) are defined asĀ ānongame quadrupedsā in the state of Louisiana. While nongame quadrupeds can beĀ āraisedā by nongame quadruped exhibitors and nongame quadruped breeders, Louisiana definesĀ āraisingā asĀ āproductionā (i.e. breeding for the purpose of fox/coyote hunting preserves, for chasing with hounds).
Louisiana prohibits the importation and exportation of any species of foxes or coyotes to or from Louisiana in an effort to prevent possible disease and parasite contamination of native wild canids.
While exotic, nonnative foxes are technically not regulated and therefore legal to own, they are not legal to import into the state, and there are no fox breeders in Louisiana, so owning a fox is impossible.Ā
The legal jargon:
TITLE 56 WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES
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CHAPTER 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS FOR WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES PART I. WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES COMMISSION
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§8.  Definitions
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(89) Ā "Nongame quadruped" means alligators, beavers, bobcats, coyotes, gray foxes, minks, muskrats, nutrias, opossums, otters, raccoons, red foxes, skunks, and other wild quadrupeds valuable for their skins or furs.
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PART V. TRAPPING FUR-BEARING ANIMALS OR ALLIGATORS SUBPART A. GENERAL PROVISIONS
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§262.  Nongame quadrupeds; breeding, propagation, and exhibition
A. Ā Whoever desires to engage in the business of raising and/or exhibiting imported or native nongame quadrupeds shall apply to the department for a license to do so. Ā If it appears that the application is made in good faith, upon a payment of ten dollars, a nongame quadruped exhibitor license may be issued permitting the applicant to breed and/or exhibit such animals provided he meets rules and regulations of the department. Ā
B. Ā Whoever desires to engage in the business of raising, exhibiting, and selling imported or native nongame quadrupeds or collecting and selling wild alligator eggs shall apply to the department for a license to do so. Ā If it appears that the application is made in good faith, upon payment of twenty-five dollars, a nongame quadruped breeder license may be issued permitting the applicant to breed, propagate, exhibit, and sell such animals alive or sell their parts; and to kill and transport them and sell their pelts, skins, or carcasses as hereinafter provided in this Section. Ā
C. Ā Nongame quadruped breeder and exhibitor licenses shall expire on the thirty-first of December of each year. Ā On or before the first of December of each year, every licensee shall apply for a renewal of his exhibitor or breeder license. Ā In conjunction with this application, or without application if not renewing the license, the licensee shall provide a report including all information as specified by the department. Ā
D. Ā Nongame quadrupeds raised on such licensed breeding farms may be sold alive or taken for their pelts, skins, or for food according to rules and regulations of the commission. Ā All skins shall be tagged according to rules and regulations of the commission. Ā The severance tax as fixed by law shall be paid before the raw pelts or alligator skins are shipped out of state, or tanned within the state, and a written affidavit as to the number and kinds shipped or tanned shall be furnished to the department as specified. Ā
E. Ā All nongame quadruped carcasses or parts intended for sale shall be shipped, transported, sold, or offered for sale according to commission regulations. Ā
F. Ā The department may issue a permit to a duly licensed breeder to take such wild animals as needed for use as breeding stock. Ā The licensed breeder shall apply in writing, stating where the animals are to be taken, at what time, and in what numbers. Ā
G. Ā Whoever under the authority of this Section has in his lawful possession any such animal or parts thereof on such posted or fenced breeding area shall have a property right therein and shall be the owner thereof. Ā Whoever enters the nongame quadruped farm or catches, takes, or molests such animals when the area has been posted or fenced according to law shall be punished as though the animals were ordinary domestic animals and subject to the property rights of the state of Louisiana.
H. Ā The department may revoke the license of any person violating the provisions of this Section. Ā
I. Ā All other rules and regulations pertaining to the breeding, propagation, and sale of nongame quadrupeds shall be determined solely by the commission. Ā
J. Ā Violation of this Section constitutes a class three violation.
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TITLE 76 WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES
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Part V. Wild Quadrupeds and Wild Birds
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§113. Fox/Coyote Hunting Preserve, Purchase and Sale of Live Foxes and Coyotes, Permitting YearRound Coyote Trapping
A. Purpose. These regulations are to govern the purchasing, selling and holding in captivity of live foxes and coyotes for chasing with hounds. These regulations will prohibit the importation and exportation of any species of foxes or coyotes to or from Louisiana in an effort to prevent possible disease and parasite contamination of native wild canids. Humans are subject to infection with the liver being the most common site of larval growth. The infection is termed alveolar hydatid disease (AHD). The number of deaths per number of infected individuals has been 50-75 percent. These regulations are also enacted to allow the sport of fox/coyote hunting with dogs within enclosed areas. The regulations provide general rules including licensing, permits, fees, live trapping, sale and purchase of animals, holding cage requirements, enclosure requirements, acclimation requirements and report requirements.Ā
B. Definitions
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Raisingāthe production of red fox, grey fox, or coyotes in controlled environmental conditions or in outside facilities.
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D. General Rules
1. No person shall take, possess, purchase or sell live foxes or coyotes, except as provided in these regulations and R.S. Title 56.
2. No person shall hold in captivity any live foxes or coyotes, except as provided in these regulations and R.S. Title 56.
3. Fox/coyote hunting preserves shall be of a type and construction such that it will insure the normal containment of foxes, coyotes and hounds.
4. Fox/coyote hunting preserves shall contain an adequate number of escape areas which are houndproof. These may be provided by maintaining thickets, brush piles, windrows, or where natural cover is insufficient, by providing manmade escapes such as culverts or houndproof feeding stations.
5. The owners of fox/coyote hunting preserves shall be required to make available to the game: a. food that is palatable, uncontaminated and nutritionally adequate to ensure normal growth and maintenance; b. water which is fresh, uncontaminated and available at all times.
6. No person shall transport, possess, purchase or sell any live foxes or coyotes taken outside the state of Louisiana. Live foxes and coyotes obtained from outside the state of Louisiana prior to the enacted date of these regulations and in possession of properly licensed persons shall be exempt.
7. No person shall transport from the state or offer for sale out of state any live foxes or coyotes.
8. Acclimation pens shall be constructed adjacent to or within an enclosure to insure the containment of foxes and coyotes and the exclusion of hounds. This requirement may be waived for "training enclosures" or in enclosures where running is discontinued for a minimum of two weeks while foxes/coyotes adjust to the enclosure environment.
9. No person may engage in the business of raising or exhibiting or otherwise possessing fox or coyotes for the purpose of operating a fox/coyote hunting preserve unless he or she has acquired and possesses a valid nongame quadruped breeder or exhibitor license.
10. A licensed trapper may offer for sale such live animals to any licensed nongame quadruped breeder or exhibitor during the open trapping season. During any such transactions, a bill of sale must be provided by the trapper to the nongame breeder or exhibitor and retained for a period of one year. WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES Louisiana Administrative Code January 2016 50
11. Permittees (trapping coyotes during the closed trapping season) will be required to use only the "soft catch" type trap not to exceed a size number 1 1/2, or a box-type trap, or a snare with a relaxing lock.
12. Permittees trapping coyotes during the closed trapping season and licensed as a nongame quadruped breeder may offer for sale such coyotes. During any such transaction, a bill of sale must be provided by the seller to the purchaser and retained for a period of one year by the purchaser.
13. It shall be unlawful to trap coyotes during the closed trapping season without a permit issued by the department.
14. Permittees will be required to check traps daily.
15. Permittees will be required to have in possession written permission from the landowners or lessee where traps are set.
16. Permittees shall release all nontarget species in a manner so as to keep stress or injury minimal.
17. It shall be unlawful to sell native wild foxes or coyotes outside the state of Louisiana.
18. Trappers and permittees who hold game for more than one day for sale shall confine animals at a rate of no more than one fox per 9 square feet and one coyote per 17 square feet. The cage must be high enough for each animal to easily sit or stand. The cage must be escape-proof and offer protection from adverse weather.
19. Fox/coyote hunting preserves shall be exempt from the commission action which prohibits the running of coyotes during the open turkey season.
20. The Department of Wildlife and Fisheries has the authority to conduct disease investigations at any time and, pending the results of the disease investigations, has the authority to quarantine fox/coyote hunting preserves if deemed necessary. The department also has the authority to prohibit the release of animals that are diseased or have been exposed to diseased animals.
21. The owners of fox/coyote hunting preserves shall be required to immediately report to the department the occurrence of any disease contracted by captive fox or coyotes. These diseases include but are not limited to rabies, canine distemper, sarcoptic mange or Echinococcus infections.
Citation:Ā LA RS 56:8 & 56:262; LA AC 76:113
















