Title 16ConservationRelease 119-73

§8101 Findings and purposes

Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 100— - NUTRIA ERADICATION AND CONTROL › § 8101

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Gives the Secretary of the Interior the power to give money to any State that shows it needs a program to remove or control nutria and to restore marshes they have damaged. Congress found that wetlands are valuable; South American nutria are causing serious marsh loss on federal, state, and private land; old harvest methods have failed and the loss is getting worse; and a pilot program under Public Law 105–322 is testing new ways to eradicate nutria.

Full Legal Text

Title 16, §8101

Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The Congress finds the following:
(1)Wetlands, tidal marshes, and agricultural lands provide significant cultural, economic, and ecological benefits to the Nation.
(2)The South American nutria (Myocastor coypus) is directly contributing to substantial marsh loss on Federal, State, and private land.
(3)Traditional harvest methods to control or eradicate nutria have failed. Consequently, marsh loss, loss of public and private wetlands, and loss of agricultural lands are accelerating.
(4)The nutria eradication and control pilot program authorized by Public Law 105–322 is to develop new and effective methods for eradication of nutria.
(b)The purpose of this chapter is to authorize the Secretary of the Interior to provide financial assistance to any State that has demonstrated the need for a program to implement measures to eradicate or control nutria and restore marshland damaged by nutria.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

References in Text

Public Law 105–322, referred to in subsec. (a)(4), is Pub. L. 105–322, Oct. 30, 1998, 112 Stat. 3027, which is not classified to the Code. This chapter, referred to in subsec. (b), was in the original “this Act”, meaning Pub. L. 108–16, Apr. 23, 2003, 117 Stat. 621, known as the Nutria Eradication and Control Act of 2003, which is classified principally to this chapter. For complete classification of this Act to the Code, see

Short Title

note below and Tables.

Amendments

2020—Subsec. (a)(1). Pub. L. 116–186, § 1(1)(A)(i), substituted “Wetlands, tidal marshes, and agricultural lands” for “Wetlands and tidal marshes of the Chesapeake Bay and in Louisiana”. Subsec. (a)(2). Pub. L. 116–186, § 1(1)(A)(ii), struck out “in Maryland and Louisiana” after “substantial marsh loss”. Subsec. (a)(3). Pub. L. 116–186, § 1(1)(A)(iii), amended par. (3) generally. Prior to amendment, par. (3) read as follows: “Traditional harvest methods to control or eradicate nutria have failed in Maryland and have had limited success in the eradication of nutria in Louisiana. Consequently, marsh loss is accelerating.” Subsec. (b). Pub. L. 116–186, § 1(1)(B), substituted “any State that has demonstrated the need” for “the State of Maryland and the State of Louisiana”.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Short Title

Pub. L. 108–16, § 1, Apr. 23, 2003, 117 Stat. 621, provided that: “This Act [enacting this chapter] may be cited as the ‘Nutria Eradication and Control Act of 2003’.”

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

16 U.S.C. § 8101

Title 16Conservation

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73