MO Missouri Porch

Orientation

Foraging in Missouri, explained

Gathering wild food for your own table is allowed on many MDC conservation areas and on Mark Twain National Forest, for personal use, as long as you don't damage the plant. But state parks, national park land, Corps lakes, refuges, Natural Areas, and nature centers are much stricter — and the moment you dig, cut a whole plant, or pocket a rock, fossil, or arrowhead, the rules change. On public land, some of that is illegal.

1. Ask the two questions first

Whose land are you on? Whose land are you on? Private land, an MDC conservation area, a state park, a Missouri Natural Area, the national forest, a Corps lake, or national park land — each one has very different rules.

What are you taking? What are you taking? Something you pick and eat is one thing; digging a root, taking a whole plant, pocketing a rock, or keeping a relic is another thing entirely.

2. The rule of thumb

If you can pick it and eat it, it may be allowed for personal use on land where foraging is allowed. If you have to dig it, cut down the whole plant, pocket a rock, or keep a relic, stop and check first. On public land, leave the artifacts.

3. "Personal use" means your kitchen, not the market

The personal-use rule applies all year on public conservation land: it's for your kitchen, not the market. Take a reasonable amount and leave plenty for wildlife and the next person.

4. On private land you have the most freedom — with permission

With the owner's OK you can forage food, harvest ginseng, rockhound, and surface-collect arrowheads. Without permission it's trespassing, and sometimes theft. Get it first — and in writing for ginseng and artifacts.

Question one: whose land?

Where can you take it? Land by land

The land you're standing on decides almost everything. Find it in the left column, then read across to what you want to take. When two rules disagree, the stricter one wins — and on public land, you leave the artifacts.

Whose land Wild food Digging / whole plants / roots Rocks & fossils Artifacts Metal detecting
Private land Yes, with the owner's permission. Yes, with permission (including ginseng in season). Yes, with permission (including pay-to-dig sites). Surface collecting only, with written permission — don't dig. Yes, with permission.
MDC conservation area Nuts, berries, fruit, edible greens & mushrooms for personal use. No digging; no whole plants or roots (that needs a plant-collecting letter). No ginseng, ever. No — rocks, minerals, and fossils stay. No — leave them. No — no ground disturbance.
Missouri Natural Area Nuts, berries, fruit & mushrooms for personal use — but NO edible greens. No. No. No. No (and no rock climbing).
State park / historic site (DNR) Look, don't take — no plants or mushrooms without written permission. No. No — rocks, fossils, even downed wood stay. No. Designated swim beaches only, at listed parks, with free registration and tool-size limits.
Mark Twain National Forest Personal-use fruit, nuts, berries & mushrooms — no permit. Commercial collection is prohibited. No threatened/endangered species. (Personal-use firewood has its own permit.) Surface only, reasonable personal amount — no motorized gear or sluice boxes; not in wilderness, caves, or historical/archaeological areas. No — protected (36 CFR 261.9). Find one? Stop and tell the Forest Service. Developed rec areas unless posted; surface only, no new ground disturbance; never keep an artifact.
Ozark Riverways & other NPS land Only the specific edible fruits, nuts, berries & mushrooms the superintendent's compendium lists, in listed amounts — check it first. No roots or whole plants. No. No — strictly protected by federal law. No.
Corps of Engineers lake Varies by project — check the project office. Check the project office. No. Illegal. Only in designated beaches or approved/disturbed areas — call the project office first. Never keep an artifact.

5. Who decides?

Different agencies write the rules for different things. When you have a question, this is who to ask:

Before you gather

Missouri Porch explains; the landowner and the land manager decide.

Last checked: 2026-06-18. Rules differ by land type and change over time — and eating a wild plant or mushroom is a health decision, not a website decision. When in doubt, ask the land manager, check a field guide, and don't eat anything you can't name with certainty.

This is a plain-English summary, not legal advice. Foraging and collecting rules change and depend on whose land you're on and what you're taking — always confirm with the landowner or land manager before you gather. For a suspected poisoning, call Poison Control at 1-800-222-1222 or 911.

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