New Jersey Statutes

§ 23:2B-20 — Findings, declarations, determinations relative to horseshoe crab and shorebird conservation.

New Jersey § 23:2B-20
JurisdictionNew Jersey
Title 23FISH AND GAME, WILD BIRDS AND ANIMALS

This text of New Jersey § 23:2B-20 (Findings, declarations, determinations relative to horseshoe crab and shorebird conservation.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N.J. Stat. Ann. § 23:2B-20 (2026).

Text

1.The Legislature finds and declares that each spring more than a million shorebirds of six species, including the red knot, ruddy turnstone, sanderling, semipalmated sandpiper, short-billed dowitcher, and dunlin, stop at Delaware Bay beaches and feed upon horseshoe crab eggs; that the red knot was once considered one of New Jersey's most abundant shorebirds; that this critical food source of horseshoe crab eggs consumed during the stopover of the red knot in New Jersey and Delaware is needed for the birds to gain sufficient weight to continue their migration north to breeding grounds in the Canadian Arctic, survive until food becomes available, and successfully reproduce ; that surveys have shown that red knots migrating through the bay region have declined by more than 75 percent since

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Bluebook (online)
New Jersey § 23:2B-20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/nj/23/23%3A2B-20.