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Document 02006R0865-20220119
Commission regulation (EC) No 865/2006 of 4 May 2006 laying down detailed rules concerning the implementation of Council Regulation (EC) No 338/97 on the protection of species of wild fauna and flora by regulating trade therein
Consolidated text: Commission regulation (EC) No 865/2006 of 4 May 2006 laying down detailed rules concerning the implementation of Council Regulation (EC) No 338/97 on the protection of species of wild fauna and flora by regulating trade therein
Commission regulation (EC) No 865/2006 of 4 May 2006 laying down detailed rules concerning the implementation of Council Regulation (EC) No 338/97 on the protection of species of wild fauna and flora by regulating trade therein
02006R0865 — EN — 19.01.2022 — 006.001
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COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No 865/2006 of 4 May 2006 (OJ L 166 19.6.2006, p. 1) |
Amended by:
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Official Journal |
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No |
page |
date |
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L 31 |
3 |
5.2.2008 |
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L 242 |
1 |
7.9.2012 |
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COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING REGULATION (EU) No 792/2012 of 23 August 2012 |
L 242 |
13 |
7.9.2012 |
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L 332 |
14 |
11.12.2013 |
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L 10 |
1 |
16.1.2015 |
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L 142 |
3 |
6.6.2015 |
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L 35 |
3 |
7.2.2019 |
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L 473 |
1 |
30.12.2021 |
COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No 865/2006
of 4 May 2006
laying down detailed rules concerning the implementation of Council Regulation (EC) No 338/97 on the protection of species of wild fauna and flora by regulating trade therein
CHAPTER I
DEFINITIONS
Article 1
Definitions
For the purposes of this Regulation, in addition to the definitions laid down in Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, the following definitions shall apply:
‘date of acquisition’ means the date on which a specimen was taken from the wild, born in captivity or artificially propagated, or, if such date is unknown, the earliest provable date on which it was possessed by any person;
‘second-generation offspring (F2)’ and ‘subsequent generation offspring (F3, F4, and so on)’ means specimens produced in a controlled environment from parents that were also produced in a controlled environment, as distinct from specimens produced in a controlled environment from parents at least one of which was conceived in or taken from the wild (first-generation offspring (F1));
‘breeding stock’ means all the animals in a breeding operation that are used for reproduction;
‘controlled environment’ means an environment that is manipulated for the purpose of producing animals of a particular species, that has boundaries designed to prevent animals, eggs or gametes of the species from entering or leaving, and the general characteristics of which may include but are not limited to artificial housing, waste removal, health care, protection from predators and the artificial supply of food;
‘cultivated parental stock’ means the ensemble of plants grown under controlled conditions that are used for reproduction, and which must have been, to the satisfaction of the competent management authority, in consultation with a competent scientific authority of the Member State concerned:
established in accordance with the provisions of CITES and relevant national laws and in a manner not detrimental to the survival of the species in the wild; and
maintained in sufficient quantities for propagation so as to minimise or eliminate the need for augmentation from the wild, with such augmentation occurring only as an exception and limited to the amount necessary to maintain the vigour and productivity of the cultivated parental stock;
‘hunting trophy’ means a whole animal, or a readily recognisable part or derivative of an animal, specified on any accompanying CITES permit or certificate that fulfils the following conditions:
is raw, processed or manufactured;
was legally obtained by the hunter through hunting for the hunter's personal use;
is being imported, exported or re-exported by or on behalf of the hunter, as part of the transfer from its country of origin, ultimately to the hunter's State of usual residence;
‘a person normally residing in the Community’ means a person who lives in the Community for at least 185 days in each calendar year because of occupational ties, or, in the case of a person with no occupational ties, because of personal ties which show close links between that person and the place where he is living;
‘travelling exhibition’ means a sample collection, circus, menagerie, plant exhibition, orchestra or museums exhibition that is used for commercial display for the public;
‘transaction-specific certificates’ means certificates issued in accordance with Article 48 that are valid only for one or more specified transactions;
‘specimen-specific certificates’ means certificates issued in accordance with Article 48, other than transaction-specific certificates;
‘sample collection’ means a collection of legally acquired dead specimens, parts and derivatives thereof, that are transported across borders for presentation purposes;
‘pre-Convention specimen’ means a specimen acquired before the species concerned was first included in the Appendices to the Convention.
CHAPTER II
FORMS AND TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS
▼M3 —————
Article 4
Completion of forms
However, applications for import and export permits, for re-export certificates, for the certificates provided for in Articles 5(2)(b), 5(3), 5(4), 8(3) and 9(2)(b) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, for personal ownership certificates, for sample collection certificates, for musical instrument certificates and for travelling exhibition certificates as well as import notifications, continuation sheets and labels may be completed in manuscript, provided this is done legibly, in ink and in block capitals.
Article 5
Contents of permits, certificates and applications for the issue of such documents
Information and references in permits and certificates, as well as in applications for the issue of such documents, shall comply with the following requirements:
the description of specimens must, where it is provided for, include one of the codes contained in Annex VII;
for the indication of units of quantity and net mass, those contained in Annex VII must be used;
the taxa to which the specimens belong must be indicated to species level except where the species is differentiated to subspecies level in accordance with the Annexes to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 or where the Conference of the Parties to the Convention has decided that differentiation to a higher taxonomic level is sufficient;
the standard references for nomenclature contained in Annex VIII to this Regulation must be used to indicate the scientific names of taxa;
where required, the purpose of a transaction must be determined applying the criteria set out in Article 5c and indicated on the relevant permit or certificate, using one of the codes contained in point 1 of Annex IX to this Regulation;
the source of specimens must be indicated using one of the codes contained in point 2 of Annex IX to this Regulation.
Where the use of the codes referred to in point (6) is subject to compliance with the criteria laid down in Regulation (EC) No 338/97 or in this Regulation, they must comply with those criteria.
Article 5a
Specific content of permits, certificates and applications for plant specimens
In case of plant specimens that cease to qualify for an exemption from the provisions of the Convention or Regulation (EC) No 338/97 in accordance with the ‘Notes on the interpretation of Annexes A, B, C and D’ in the Annex thereto, under which they were legally exported and imported, the country to be indicated in box 15 of the forms in Annexes I and III provided for in Implementing Regulation (EU) No 792/2012, box 4 of the forms in Annex II provided for in Implementing Regulation (EU) No 792/2012 and box 10 of the forms in Annex V provided for in Implementing Regulation (EU) No 792/2012 may be the country in which the specimens ceased to qualify for the exemption.
In those cases the box reserved for the entry of ‘special conditions’ in the permit or certificate shall include the statement ‘Legally imported under exemption from the provisions of CITES’ and shall specify to which exemption this refers.
Article 5b
Specific content of permits and certificates for live rhinoceros and live elephants
Permits and certificates issued under Article 4 or Article 5 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 for import or re-export of live rhinoceroses or live elephants from populations included in Annex B to that Regulation shall contain a condition stating that horn or ivory from those animals or from their progeny may not enter commercial trade or commercial activities within the Union. In addition, live rhinoceroses or live elephants from those populations shall not be subject to trophy hunting outside of their historic range.
Article 5c
Purpose of transaction
The code shall indicate the reason why there is an exchange or movement of the specimen(s) from the exporter to the importer or from the re-exporter to the importer.
Article 6
Annexes to forms
If an annex attached to any of the forms referred to in Article 2 of Implementing Regulation (EU) No 792/2012 is an integral part of that form, that fact and the number of pages shall be clearly indicated on the permit or certificate concerned and each page of the annex shall include the following:
the number of the permit or certificate and its date of issue;
the signature and the stamp or seal of the management authority which issued the permit or certificate.
Article 7
Permits and certificates issued by third countries
CHAPTER III
ISSUE, USE AND VALIDITY OF DOCUMENTS
Article 8
Issue and use of documents
Documents shall be issued and used in accordance with the provisions and under the conditions laid down in this Regulation and in Regulation (EC) No 338/97, and in particular in Article 11(1) to (4) of the latter Regulation. Permits and certificates may be issued in paper format or in electronic format.
In order to ensure compliance with those Regulations and with the provisions of national law adopted for their implementation, the issuing management authority may impose stipulations, conditions and requirements, which shall be set out in the documents concerned.
Management authorities shall decide on the issue of permits and certificates within one month of the date of submission of a complete application.
However, where the issuing management authority consults third parties, such a decision may be taken only after the satisfactory completion of such consultation. Applicants shall be notified of significant delays in processing their applications.
Article 9
Shipments of specimens
Without prejudice to Articles 31, 38, 44b, 44i and 44p, a separate import permit, import notification, export permit or re-export certificate shall be issued for each shipment of specimens shipped together as part of one load.
Article 10
Validity of import and export permits, re-export certificates, travelling exhibition certificates, personal ownership certificates, sample collection certificates and musical instrument certificates
As regards caviar of sturgeon species (Acipenseriformes spp.) from shared stocks subject to export quotas, which is covered by an export permit, import permits referred to in the first subparagraph shall not be valid beyond the last day of the quota year in which the caviar was harvested and processed or the last day of the 12-month period referred to in the first subparagraph, whichever is the earlier.
As regards caviar of sturgeon species (Acipenseriformes spp.) covered by a re-export certificate, import permits referred to in the first subparagraph shall not be valid beyond the last day of the period of 18 months after the date of issuance of the relevant original export permit or the last day of the 12-month period referred to in the first subparagraph, whichever is the earlier.
As regards caviar of sturgeon species (Acipenseriformes spp.) from shared stocks subject to export quotas, export permits referred to in the first subparagraph shall not be valid beyond the last day of the quota year in which the caviar was harvested and processed or the last day of the six-month period referred to in the first subparagraph, whichever is the earlier.
As regards caviar of sturgeon species (Acipenseriformes spp.), re-export certificates referred to in the first subparagraph shall not be valid beyond the last day of the period of 18 months after the date of issuance of the relevant original export permit or the last day of the six-month period referred to in the first subparagraph, whichever is the earlier.
Article 11
Validity of used import permits and of the certificates referred to in Articles 47, 48, 49, 60 and 63
Copies for the holder of used import permits shall cease to be valid in the following cases:
where live specimens referred to therein have died;
where live animals referred to therein have escaped or have been released to the wild;
where specimens referred to therein have been lost, destroyed or stolen;
where any of the entries in boxes 3, 6 or 8 no longer reflects the actual situation.
The certificates referred to in Articles 47, 48, 49 and 63 shall cease to be valid in the following cases:
where live specimens referred to therein have died;
where live animals referred to therein have escaped or have been released to the wild;
where specimens referred to therein have been lost, destroyed or stolen;
where any of the entries in boxes 2 and 4 no longer reflects the actual situation;
where any special conditions specified in box 20 are no longer fulfilled.
Certificates issued in accordance with Articles 48 and 63 shall be transaction-specific unless the specimens covered by such certificates are uniquely and permanently marked or, in the case of dead specimens which can not be marked, identified by other means.
The management authority of the Member State in which the specimen is located may also, in consultation with the relevant scientific authority, decide to issue transaction‐specific certificates where it is considered that there are other factors relating to the conservation of the species that militate against the issuance of a specimen-specific certificate.
Where a transaction specific certificate is issued for the purpose of allowing several transactions, it shall be valid only within the territory of the issuing Member State. Where transaction specific certificates are to be used in a Member State other than the issuing Member State, they shall be issued for one transaction only and their validity shall be limited to that transaction. It shall be indicated in box 20 whether the certificate is for one or more transactions and the Member State(s) in whose territory it is valid.
The certificates referred to in Article 48(1)(d) and Article 60 shall cease to be valid where the entry in box 1 no longer reflects the actual situation.
Article 12
Documents cancelled, lost, stolen, destroyed or expired
Article 13
Time of application for import and (re)-export documents and assignation to a customs procedure
Article 14
Validity of documents from third countries
In the case of the introduction of specimens into the Community, the requisite documents from third countries shall be considered valid only where they have been issued for export or re-export from that country and used for that purpose prior to their last day of validity and are used for introduction of specimens into the Community no later than six months from their date of issue.
However, certificates of origin for specimens of species listed in Annex C to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 may be used for the introduction of specimens into the Union until 12 months from their date of issue and travelling exhibition certificates, personal ownership certificates and musical instrument certificates may be used for the introduction of specimens into the Union and for the purpose of applying for respective certificates in accordance with Articles 30, 37 and 44h of this Regulation until three years from their date of issue.
Article 15
Retrospective issue of certain documents
As regards specimens imported or (re-)exported as personal and household effects, to which the provisions of Chapter XIV apply, and as regards personally owned live animals, which are legally acquired and held for personal non-commercial purposes, the derogation provided for in paragraph 1 shall also apply where the competent management authority of the Member State, in consultation with the relevant enforcement authority, is satisfied that there is evidence that a genuine error has been made and that there was no attempt to deceive and the import or (re-)export of the specimens concerned is in compliance with Regulation (EC) No 338/97, the Convention and the relevant legislation of a third country.
Documents issued pursuant to paragraph 1 shall clearly indicate that they have been issued retrospectively and the reasons for such issue.
In the case of Community import permits, Community export permits and Community re-export certificates, that information shall be indicated in box 23.
In the case of import permits issued pursuant to the second subparagraph of paragraph 2 for those personally owned live animals and for specimens of species listed in Annex A to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 and referred to in Article 4(5)(b) thereof, the stipulation ‘by way of derogation to Article 8(3) or (5) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, commercial activities, as laid down in Article 8(1) of that Regulation, shall be prohibited for at least two years from the date of issuance of this permit’ shall be included in box 23.
Article 16
Specimens in transit through the Community
Articles 14 and 15 of this Regulation shall apply mutatis mutandis to specimens of species listed in Annexes A and B to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 which are in transit through the Community where that transit is otherwise in accordance with the latter Regulation.
Article 17
Phytosanitary certificates
In the case of artificially propagated plants of the species listed in Annexes B and C to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 and of artificially propagated hybrids produced from the unannotated species listed in Annex A thereto, the following shall apply:
Member States may decide that a phytosanitary certificate is to be issued instead of an export permit;
phytosanitary certificates issued by third countries shall be accepted instead of an export permit.
Where a phytosanitary certificate as referred to in paragraph 1 is issued, it shall include the scientific name at the species level or, if this is impossible for those taxa included by family in the Annexes to Regulation (EC) No 338/97, at the generic level.
However, artificially propagated orchids and cacti listed in Annex B to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 may be referred to as such.
Phytosanitary certificates shall also include the type and quantity of specimens and bear a stamp, seal or other specific indication stating that ‘the specimens are artificially propagated as defined by CITES’.
Article 18
Simplified procedures with regard to certain trade in biological samples
In the case of trade that will have no impact on the conservation of the species concerned or only a negligible impact, simplified procedures on the basis of pre‐issued permits and certificates may be used for biological samples of the type and size specified in Annex XI, where those samples are urgently required to be used in the manner specified in that Annex and provided that the following conditions are satisfied:
each Member State must establish and maintain a register of the persons and bodies that may benefit from simplified procedures, hereinafter ‘registered persons and bodies’, as well as of the species that they may trade under such procedures, and must ensure that the register is reviewed by the management authority every five years;
Member States must provide registered persons and bodies with partially completed permits and certificates;
Member States must authorise registered persons or bodies to enter specific information on the face of the permit or certificate where the management authority of the relevant Member State has included the following items in box 23, or in an equivalent place, or in an annex to the permit or certificate:
a list of the boxes that registered persons or bodies are authorised to complete for each shipment;
a place for the signature of the person who completed the document.
If the list referred to in point (c)(i) includes scientific names, the management authority shall include an inventory of approved species on the face of the permit or certificate or in an annex thereto.
Article 19
Simplified procedures with regard to export or re-export of dead specimens
In the case of the export or re-export of dead specimens of species, including any parts or derivatives thereof, listed in Annexes B and C to Regulation (EC) No 338/97, Member States may provide for the use of simplified procedures on the basis of pre-issued export permits or re-export certificates, provided that the following conditions are satisfied:
a competent scientific authority must advise that such export or re-export will have no detrimental impact on the conservation of the species concerned;
each Member State must establish and maintain a register of the persons and bodies that may benefit from simplified procedures, hereinafter ‘registered persons and bodies’, as well as of the species that they may trade under such procedures, and must ensure that the register is reviewed by the management authority every five years;
Member States must provide registered persons and bodies with partially completed export permits and re-export certificates;
Member States must authorise registered persons or bodies to enter specific information in boxes 3, 5, 8 and 9 or 10 of the permit or certificate provided that they comply with the following requirements:
they sign the completed permit or certificate in box 23;
they immediately send a copy of the permit or certificate to the issuing management authority;
they maintain a record which they produce to the competent management authority on request and which contains details of the specimens sold, including the species name, the type of specimen, the source of the specimen, the dates of sale and the names and addresses of the persons to whom they were sold.
CHAPTER IV
IMPORT PERMITS
Article 20
Applications
The duly completed form shall be submitted to the management authority of the Member State of destination and shall contain the information and be accompanied by the documentary evidence that the authority deems necessary in order to enable it to determine whether, on the basis of Article 4 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, a permit should be issued.
The omission of information from the application must be justified.
Article 20a
Rejection of applications for import permits
Member States shall reject applications for import permits for caviar and meat of sturgeon species (Acipenseriformes spp.) from shared stocks unless export quotas have been set for the species in accordance with the procedure approved by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention.
Article 21
Import permits issued for specimens of species included in Appendix I to the Convention and listed in Annex A to Regulation (EC) No 338/97
In the case of an import permit issued for specimens of species included in Appendix I to the Convention and listed in Annex A to Regulation (EC) No 338/97, the copy for the exporting or re-exporting country may be returned to the applicant for submission to the management authority of the country of export or re-export, for the purposes of the issue of an export permit or re-export certificate. The original of that import permit shall, in accordance with Article 4(1)(b)(ii) of that Regulation, be withheld pending presentation of the corresponding export permit or re-export certificate.
Where the copy for the exporting or re-exporting country is not returned to the applicant, the latter shall be given a written statement that an import permit will be issued and on what conditions.
Article 22
Documents to be surrendered by the importer to the customs office
Without prejudice to Article 53, the importer or his authorised representative shall surrender all the following documents to the border customs office at the point of introduction into the Community, designated in accordance with Article 12(1) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97:
the original import permit (form 1);
the ‘copy for the holder’ (form 2);
where specified in the import permit, any documentation from the country of export or re-export.
Where appropriate, the importer or his authorised representative shall indicate in box 26 the number of the bill of lading or air waybill.
Article 23
Handling by the customs office
The customs office referred to in Article 22, or, where applicable, Article 53(1), shall, after completing box 27 of the original import permit (form 1) and the ‘copy for the holder’ (form 2), return the latter to the importer or to his authorised representative.
The original import permit (form 1) and any documentation from the country of export or re‐export shall be forwarded in accordance with Article 45.
CHAPTER V
IMPORT NOTIFICATIONS
Article 24
Documents to be surrendered by the importer to the customs office
Article 25
Handling by the customs office
The customs office referred to in Article 24, or, where applicable, Article 53(1), shall, after completing box 14 of the original import notification (form 1) and the ‘copy for the importer’ (form 2), return the latter to the importer or to his authorised representative.
The original import notification (form 1) and any documentation from the country of export or re-export shall be forwarded in accordance with Article 45.
CHAPTER VI
EXPORT PERMITS AND RE-EXPORT CERTIFICATES
Article 26
Applications
The duly completed form shall be submitted to the management authority of the Member State in whose territory the specimens are located and shall contain the information and be accompanied by the documentary evidence that the authority deems necessary to enable it to determine whether, on the basis of Article 5 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, a permit/certificate should be issued.
The omission of information from the application must be justified.
Where in support of an application for a re-export certificate, a ‘copy for the holder’ of an import permit, or a ‘copy for the importer’ of an import notification, or a certificate issued on the basis thereof is presented, such documents shall be returned to the applicant only after amendment of the number of specimens for which the document remains valid.
Such a document shall not be returned to the applicant if the re-export certificate is granted for the total number of specimens for which the document is valid, or where the document is replaced in accordance with Article 51.
Article 26a
Rejection of applications for export permits
Member States shall reject applications for export permits for caviar and meat of sturgeon species (Acipenseriformes spp.) from shared stocks unless export quotas have been set for the species in accordance with the procedure approved by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention.
Article 27
Documents to be surrendered by the (re-)exporter to the customs office
The (re-)exporter or his authorised representative shall surrender the original export permit or re-export certificate (form 1), the copy for the holder (form 2) and the copy for return to the issuing management authority (form 3) to a customs office designated in accordance with Article 12(1) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97.
Where appropriate, the (re-)exporter or his authorised representative shall indicate in box 26 the number of the bill of lading or air waybill.
Article 28
Handling by the customs office
The customs office referred to in Article 27 shall, after completing box 27, return the original export permit or re-export certificate (form 1) and the copy for the holder (form 2) to the (re‐)exporter or to his authorised representative.
The copy for return to the issuing management authority (form 3) of the export permit or re‐export certificate shall be forwarded in accordance with Article 45.
Article 29
Pre-issued permits for nurseries
Where, in compliance with the guidelines adopted by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention, a Member State registers nurseries which export artificially propagated specimens of species included in Annex A to Regulation (EC) No 338/97, it may make pre‐issued export permits for species listed in Annexes A or B to that Regulation available to the nurseries concerned.
In box 23 of those pre-issued export permits, the registration number of the nursery shall be indicated, as well as the following statement:
‘Permit valid only for artificially propagated plants as defined by CITES Resolution Conf. 11.11 (Rev. CoP13). Valid only for the following taxa: …’.
CHAPTER VII
TRAVELLING EXHIBITION CERTIFICATES
Article 30
Issue
Member States may issue travelling exhibition certificates in respect of legally acquired specimens which form part of a travelling exhibition and which meet either of the following criteria:
they were born and bred in captivity in accordance with Articles 54 and 55, or artificially propagated in accordance with Article 56;
they were acquired in, or introduced into, the Community before the provisions relating to species listed in Appendices I, II or III to the Convention, or in Annex C to Regulation (EEC) No 3626/82, or in Annexes A, B and C to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 became applicable to them.
Article 31
Use
A travelling exhibition certificate may be used as follows:
as an import permit, in accordance with Article 4 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
as an export permit or re-export certificate, in accordance with Article 5 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
as a certificate in accordance with Article 8(3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 for the sole purpose of allowing the specimens to be displayed to the public for commercial purposes.
Article 32
Issuing authority
Article 33
Requirement for specimens
Where a specimen is covered by a travelling exhibition certificate, all the following requirements shall be met:
the specimen must be registered by the issuing management authority;
the specimen must be returned to the Member State in which it is registered before the date of expiry of the certificate;
the specimen must be uniquely and permanently marked, in accordance with Article 66 in the case of live animals, or otherwise identified in such a way that the authorities of each Member State into which the specimen enters can verify that the certificate corresponds to the specimen being imported or exported.
In the case of travelling exhibition certificates issued in accordance with Article 32(2), points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 of this Article shall not apply. In such cases, the certificate shall include the following text in box 20:
‘This certificate is not valid unless accompanied by an original travelling exhibition certificate issued by a third country.’
Article 34
Applications
The applicant for a travelling exhibition certificate shall, where appropriate, complete boxes 3 and 9 to 18 of the application form (form 3) and boxes 3 and 9 to 18 of the original and all copies.
Member States may, however, provide that only an application form is to be completed, in which case such an application may be for more than one certificate.
The duly completed form shall be submitted to the management authority of the Member State in which the specimens are located, or in the case referred to in Article 32(2), to the management authority of the Member State of first destination, together with the necessary information and the documentary evidence that that authority deems necessary so as to enable it to determine whether a certificate should be issued.
The omission of information from the application must be justified.
Article 35
Documents to be surrendered to the customs office by the holder
In the case of a travelling exhibition certificate issued in accordance with Article 32(1), the holder or his authorised representative shall, for verification purposes, surrender the original of that certificate (form 1), and the original and a copy of the continuation sheet, to a customs office designated in accordance with Article 12(1) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97.
The customs office shall, after completing the continuation sheet, return the original documents to the holder or his authorised representative, endorse the copy of the continuation sheet and forward that endorsed copy to the relevant management authority in accordance with Article 45.
In the case of a travelling exhibition certificate issued in accordance with Article 32(2), paragraph 1 of this Article shall apply, except that the holder or his authorised representative shall also submit the original certificate and the continuation sheet issued by the third country for verification purposes.
The customs office shall, after completing both continuation sheets, return the original travelling exhibition certificates and continuation sheets to the importer or his authorised representative and forward an endorsed copy of the continuation sheet of the certificate issued by the Member State's management authority to that authority in accordance with Article 45.
Article 36
Replacement
A travelling exhibition certificate that has been lost, stolen or destroyed may be replaced only by the authority which issued it.
The replacement shall bear the same number, if possible, and the same date of validity as the original document, and shall include, in box 20, one of the following statements:
‘This certificate is a true copy of the original’, or ‘This certificate cancels and replaces the original bearing the number xxxx issued on xx.xx.xxxx.’
CHAPTER VIII
PERSONAL OWNERSHIP CERTIFICATE
Article 37
Issue
Article 38
Use
Provided that the specimen covered by a personal ownership certificate is accompanied by its legal owner, the certificate may be used as follows:
as an import permit in accordance with Article 4 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
as an export permit or re-export certificate in accordance with Article 5 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, where the country of destination so agrees.
Article 39
Issuing authority
The personal ownership certificate shall include the following text in box 23 or in an appropriate annex to the certificate:
‘Valid for multiple cross-border movements where the specimen is accompanied by its owner. Legal owner to retain original form.
The specimen covered by this certificate may not be sold or otherwise transferred except in accordance with Article 43 of Commission Regulation (EC) No 865/2006. This certificate is non-transferable. If the specimen dies, is stolen, destroyed or lost, or if it is sold or if ownership of the specimen is otherwise transferred, this certificate must be immediately returned to the issuing management authority.
This certificate is not valid unless accompanied by a continuation sheet, which must be stamped and signed by a customs official at each border crossing.
This certificate shall in no way affect the right to adopt stricter national measures regarding restrictions or conditions for the holding/keeping of live animals.’
Article 40
Requirements for specimens
Where a specimen is covered by a personal ownership certificate, the following requirements shall be met:
the specimen must be registered by the management authority of the Member State in which the owner has his usual residence;
the specimen must be returned to the Member State in which it is registered before the date of expiry of the certificate;
the specimen may not be used for commercial purposes except subject to the conditions provided for in Article 43;
the specimen must be uniquely and permanently marked in accordance with Article 66.
In the case of personal ownership certificates issued in accordance with Article 39(2), points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 of this Article shall not apply.
In such cases, the certificate shall include the following text in box 23:
‘This certificate is not valid unless accompanied by an original personal ownership certificate issued by a third country and unless the specimen to which it relates is accompanied by its owner.’
Article 41
Applications
The applicant for a personal ownership certificate shall, where appropriate, complete boxes 1, 4 and 6 to 23 of the application form and boxes 1, 4 and 6 to 22 of the original and all copies.
Member States may, however, provide that only an application form is to be completed, in which case such an application may be for more than one certificate.
The duly completed form shall be submitted to a management authority of the Member State in which the specimens are located, or in the case referred to in Article 39(2), to the management authority of the Member State of first destination, together with the necessary information and the documentary evidence that that authority deems necessary so as to enable it to determine whether a certificate should be issued.
The omission of information from the application must be justified.
Where an application is made for a certificate relating to specimens for which such an application has previously been rejected, the applicant shall inform the management authority of that fact.
Article 42
Documents to be surrendered by the holder to the customs office
In the case of the import, export or re-export of a specimen covered by a personal ownership certificate issued in accordance with Article 39(1), the holder of the certificate shall, for verification purposes, surrender the original of that certificate (form 1) and the original and a copy of the continuation sheet to a customs office designated in accordance with Article 12(1) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97.
The customs office shall, after completing the continuation sheet, return the original documents to the holder, endorse the copy of the continuation sheet and forward that endorsed copy to the relevant management authority in accordance with Article 45 of this Regulation.
In the case of a personal ownership certificate issued in accordance with Article 39(2), paragraph 1 of this Article shall apply, except that the holder shall also submit for verification purposes the original certificate issued by the third country.
The customs office shall, after completing both continuation sheets, return the original documents to the holder and forward an endorsed copy of the continuation sheet of the certificate issued by the Member State's management authority to that authority in accordance with Article 45.
Article 43
Sales of specimens covered
Where the holder of a personal ownership certificate issued in accordance with Article 39(1) of this Regulation wishes to sell the specimen, he shall first surrender the certificate to the issuing management authority and, where the specimen belongs to a species listed in Annex A to Regulation (EC) No 338/97, shall apply to the competent authority for a certificate in accordance with Article 8(3) of that Regulation.
Article 44
Replacement
A personal ownership certificate that has been lost, stolen or destroyed may be replaced only by the authority which issued it.
The replacement shall bear the same number, if possible, and the same date of validity as the original document, and shall include, in box 23, one of the following statements:
‘This certificate is a true copy of the original.’, or ‘This certificate cancels and replaces the original bearing the number xxxx issued on xx.xx.xxxx.’
CHAPTER VIIIa
SAMPLE COLLECTION CERTIFICATES
Article 44a
Issue
Member States may issue sample collection certificates in respect of sample collections, provided the collection is covered by a valid ATA carnet and includes specimens, parts or derivatives of species listed in Annexes A, B or C of Regulation (EC) No 338/97.
For the purposes of the first paragraph, specimens, parts or derivatives of species listed in Annex A must comply with Chapter XIII of this Regulation.
Article 44b
Use
Provided that a sample collection covered by a sample collection certificate is accompanied by a valid ATA carnet, a certificate, issued in accordance with Article 44a, may be used as follows:
as an import permit in accordance with Article 4 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
as an export permit or re-export certificate in accordance with Article 5 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, where the country of destination recognises and allows the use of ATA carnets;
as a certificate in accordance with Article 8(3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 for the sole purpose of allowing the specimens to be displayed to the public for commercial purposes.
Article 44c
Issuing authority
Article 44d
Requirements
The following text shall be included in box 23 or in an appropriate annex to the certificate:
‘For sample collection accompanied by ATA carnet No: xxx
This certificate covers a sample collection and is not valid unless accompanied by a valid ATA carnet. This certificate is not transferable. The specimens covered by this certificate may not be sold or otherwise transferred whilst outside the territory of the State that issued this document. This certificate may be used for (re-)export from [indicate the country of (re-)export] via [indicate the countries to be visited] for presentation purposes and import back to [indicate the country of (re-)export].’
In the case of sample collection certificates issued in accordance with Article 44c(2), paragraphs 1 and 4 of this Article shall not apply. In such cases, the certificate shall include the following text in box 23:
‘This certificate is not valid unless accompanied by an original CITES document issued by a third country in accordance with the provisions established by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention.’
Article 44e
Applications
Member States may, however, provide that only an application form is to be completed.
The omission of information from the application must be justified.
Article 44f
Documents to be surrendered by the holder to the customs office
The customs office shall, after processing the ATA carnet in accordance with the customs rules contained in Regulation (EC) No 2454/93, and, if necessary, entering the number of the accompanying ATA carnet into the original and copy of the sample collection certificate, return the original documents to the holder or his authorised representative, endorse the copy of the sample collection certificate and forward that endorsed copy to the relevant management authority in accordance with Article 45.
However, at the time of the first export from the Community, the customs office shall, after completing box 27, return the original sample collection certificate (form 1) and the copy for the holder (form 2) to the holder or his authorised representative, and forward the copy for return to the issuing management authority (form 3) in accordance with Article 45.
Article 44g
Replacement
A sample collection certificate that has been lost, stolen, or destroyed may be replaced only by the authority which issued it.
The replacement shall bear the same number, if possible, and the same date of validity as the original document, and shall include, in box 23, one of the following statements:
‘This certificate is a true copy of the original’, or ‘This certificate cancels and replaces the original bearing the number xxxx issued on xx/xx/xxxx’.
CHAPTER VIIIb
MUSICAL INSTRUMENT CERTIFICATE
Article 44h
Issue
Member States may issue a musical instrument certificate for non-commercial cross-border movement of musical instruments for purposes including, but not limited to, personal use, performance, production (recordings), broadcast, teaching, display or competition, where such instruments meet all of the following requirements:
they are derived from species listed in Annexes A, B or C of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, other than specimens of species listed in Annex A of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 acquired after the species was included in Appendices to the Convention;
the specimen used in the manufacture of the musical instrument has been legally acquired;
the musical instrument is appropriately identified.
Article 44i
Use
The certificate may be used in either of the following ways:
as an import permit in accordance with Article 4 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
as an export permit or re-export certificate in accordance with Article 5 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97.
Article 44j
Issuing authority
The musical instrument certificate shall include the following text in box 23 or in an appropriate annex to the certificate:
‘Valid for multiple cross-border movements. Original to be retained by holder.
The musical instrument covered by this certificate, which permits multiple cross-border movements, is for non-commercial use for purposes including, but not limited to, personal use, performance, production (recordings), broadcast, teaching, display or competition. The musical instrument covered by this certificate may not be sold or possession of it transferred whilst it is outside the State in which the certificate was issued.
This certificate must be returned to the management authority of the State which issued the certificate before the expiration of the certificate.
This certificate is not valid unless accompanied by a continuation sheet, which must be stamped and signed by a customs official at each border crossing.’
.Article 44k
Requirements for specimens
Where a specimen is covered by a musical instrument certificate, the following requirements shall be met:
the musical instrument must be registered by the issuing management authority;
the musical instrument must be returned to the Member State in which it is registered before the date of expiry of the certificate;
the specimen may not be sold or possession of it transferred whilst outside the applicant's State of usual residence except subject to the conditions provided for in Article 44n;
the musical instrument must be appropriately identified.
Article 44l
Applications
Member States may provide that only an application form is to be completed, in which case such an application may be for more than one certificate.
Any omission of information from the application must be justified.
Article 44m
Documents to be surrendered by the holder to the customs office
In the case of the introduction into the Union, export or re-export of a specimen covered by a musical instrument certificate issued in accordance with Article 44j, the holder of the certificate shall, for verification purposes, surrender the original of that certificate and the original and a copy of the continuation sheet to a customs office designated in accordance with Article 12(1) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97.
The customs office shall, after completing the continuation sheet, return the original documents to the holder, endorse the copy of the continuation sheet and forward the endorsed copy to the relevant management authority in accordance with Article 45.
Article 44n
Sales of specimens covered
Where the holder of a musical instrument certificate issued in accordance with Article 44j of this Regulation wishes to sell the specimen, he shall first surrender the certificate to the issuing management authority and, where the specimen belongs to a species listed in Annex A to Regulation (EC) No 338/97, shall apply to the competent authority for a certificate in accordance with Article 8(3) of that Regulation.
Article 44o
Replacement
A musical instrument certificate that has been lost, stolen or destroyed may be replaced only by the authority which issued it.
The replacement shall bear the same number, if possible, and the same date of validity as the original document, and shall include, in box 23, one of the following statements:
‘This certificate is a true copy of the original.’, or ‘This certificate cancels and replaces the original bearing the number xxxx issued on xx/xx/xxxx.’
Article 44p
Introduction of musical instruments into the Union with certificates issued by third countries
The introduction into the Union of a musical instrument shall not require the presentation of an export document or an import permit provided that it is covered by a musical instrument certificate issued by a third country under similar conditions to those set out in Articles 44h and 44j. Re-export of that musical instrument shall not require the presentation of a re-export certificate.
CHAPTER IX
CUSTOMS PROCEDURE
Article 45
Forwarding of documents presented to customs offices
Customs offices shall without delay forward to the relevant management authority of their Member State all documents which have been presented to them in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 338/97 and this Regulation.
Management authorities receiving such documents shall without delay forward those issued by other Member States to the relevant management authorities, together with any supporting documents issued in accordance with the Convention. For reporting purposes, original import notifications shall also be forwarded to the management authorities of the country of import, when it is different from the country where the specimen was introduced into the Union.
CHAPTER X
CERTIFICATES PROVIDED FOR IN ARTICLES 5(2)(b), 5(3), 5(4), 8(3) AND 9(2)(b) OF REGULATION (EC) No 338/97
Article 46
Issuing authority
Certificates provided for in Articles 5(2)(b), 5(3), 5(4), 8(3) and 9(2)(b) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 may be issued by the management authority of the Member State in which the specimens are located, on receiving an application in accordance with Article 50 of this Regulation.
Article 47
Certificates provided for in Article 5(2)(b), (3) and (4) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 (certificates required for export or re-export)
The certificates provided for in Article 5(2)(b), (3) and (4) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall indicate which of the following statements apply in the case of the specimens covered:
they were taken from the wild in accordance with the legislation of the Member State of origin;
they were abandoned or had escaped and were recovered in accordance with the legislation of the Member State where the recovery took place;
they were acquired in, or introduced into the Community, in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
they were acquired in, or introduced into the Community, before 1 June 1997 in accordance with Regulation (EEC) No 3626/82;
they were acquired in, or introduced into, the Community before 1 January 1984 in accordance with the Convention;
they were acquired in, or introduced into, the territory of a Member State before the Regulations referred to in points (3) or (4) or the Convention became applicable to them, or became applicable in that Member State.
Article 48
Certificate provided for in Article 8(3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 (certificate for commercial use)
A certificate for the purposes of Article 8(3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall state that specimens of species listed in Annex A thereto are exempted from one or more of the prohibitions laid down in Article 8(1) of that Regulation for any of the following reasons:
they were acquired in, or introduced into, the Community before the provisions relating to species listed in Annex A to Regulation (EC) No 338/97, or in Appendix I to the Convention, or in Annex C1 to Regulation (EEC) No 3626/82 became applicable to them;
they originate in a Member State and were taken from the wild in accordance with the legislation of that Member State;
they are, or are parts of, or are derived from animals born and bred in captivity;
they are authorised to be used for one of the purposes referred to in Article 8(3)(c) and (e) to (g) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
they are worked specimens containing elephant ivory that were acquired more than 50 years previously as defined in Article 2(w) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97.
Article 49
Certificate provided for in Article 9(2)(b) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 (certificate for movement of live specimens)
A certificate for the purposes of Article 9(2)(b) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall state that the movement of live specimens of a species listed in Annex A thereto, from the prescribed location indicated in the import permit, or in a previously issued certificate, is authorised.
Article 50
Application for the certificates provided for in Articles 5(2)(b), 5(3), 5(4), 8(3) and 9(2)(b) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97
The applicant for the certificates provided for in Articles 5(2)(b), 5(3), 5(4), 8(3) and 9(2)(b) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall, where appropriate, complete boxes 1, 2 and 4 to 19 of the application form and boxes 1 and 4 to 18 of the original and all copies.
Member States may, however, provide that only an application form is to be completed, in which case such an application may be for more than one certificate.
The duly completed form shall be submitted to a management authority of the Member State in which the specimens are located, together with the necessary information and the documentary evidence that that authority deems necessary so as to enable it to determine whether a certificate should be issued.
The omission of information from the application must be justified.
Where an application is made for a certificate relating to specimens for which such an application has previously been rejected, the applicant shall inform the management authority of that fact.
Article 51
Amendments to permits, notifications and certificates
Where a shipment, covered by a ‘copy for the holder’ (form 2) of an import permit, or a ‘copy for the importer’ (form 2) of an import notification, or a certificate, is split or where, for other reasons, the entries in those documents no longer reflect the actual situation, the management authority may take either of the following actions:
it may make the necessary amendments to those documents in accordance with Article 4(2).
it may issue one or more corresponding certificates for the purposes referred to in Articles 47 and 48.
For the purposes of point (b), the management authority must first establish the validity of the document to be replaced, where necessary in consultation with the management authority of another Member State.
CHAPTER XI
LABELS
Article 52
Use of labels
A registration number shall be attributed to the scientists and scientific institutions referred to in paragraph 1 by the management authority of the Member State in which they are located.
That registration number shall contain five digits, the first two of which shall be the two-letter ISO country code for the Member State concerned and the last three a unique number assigned to each institution by the competent management authority.
CHAPTER XII
DEROGATIONS FROM CUSTOMS PROCEDURES AS REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 4(7) OF REGULATION (EC) No 338/97
Article 53
Customs offices other than the border customs office at the point of introduction
CHAPTER XIII
SPECIMENS BORN AND BRED IN CAPTIVITY AND ARTIFICIALLY PROPAGATED SPECIMENS
Article 54
Specimens born and bred in captivity of animal species
Without prejudice to Article 55, a specimen of an animal species shall be considered to be born and bred in captivity only if a competent management authority, in consultation with a competent scientific authority of the Member State concerned, is satisfied that the following criteria are met:
the specimen is, or is derived from, the offspring born or otherwise produced in a controlled environment of either of the following:
parents that mated or had gametes otherwise transferred in a controlled environment, if reproduction is sexual;
parents that were in a controlled environment when development of the offspring began, if reproduction is asexual;
the breeding stock was established in accordance with the legal provisions applicable to it at the time of acquisition and in a manner not detrimental to the survival of the species concerned in the wild;
the breeding stock is maintained without the introduction of specimens from the wild, except for the occasional addition, in accordance with the legal provisions applicable and in a manner not detrimental to the survival of the species concerned in the wild, of animals, eggs or gametes exclusively for one or more of the following purposes:
to prevent or alleviate deleterious inbreeding, the magnitude of such addition being determined by the need for new genetic material;
to dispose of confiscated animals in accordance with Article 16(3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
exceptionally, for use as breeding stock;
the breeding stock has itself produced second or subsequent generation offspring (F2, F3 and so on) in a controlled environment, or is managed in a manner that has been demonstrated to be capable of reliably producing second-generation offspring in a controlled environment.
Article 55
Establishment of ancestry
Where, for the purposes of Articles 54, 62(1) or 63(1), a competent authority considers it necessary to establish the ancestry of an animal through the analysis of blood or other tissue, such analysis or the necessary samples shall be made available in a manner established by that authority.
Article 56
Artificially propagated specimens of plant species
A specimen of a plant species shall be considered to be artificially propagated only if a competent management authority, in consultation with a competent scientific authority of the Member State concerned, is satisfied that the following criteria are met:
the specimen is, or is derived from, plants grown from seeds, cuttings, divisions, callus tissues or other plant tissues, spores or other propagules under controlled conditions;
the cultivated parental stock is established and maintained in accordance with the definition set out in Article 1(4a);
▼M2 —————
in the case of grafted plants, both the root stock and the graft have been artificially propagated in accordance with points (a) and (b).
For the purposes of point (a), controlled conditions refers to a non-natural environment that is intensively manipulated by human intervention, which may include but is not limited to tillage, fertilisation, weed control, irrigation, or nursery operations such as potting, bedding and protecting from weather. For agarwood producing taxa, which are grown from seeds, cuttings, grafting, marcoting-air-layering, divisions, callus tissues or other plant tissues, spores or other propagules ‘under controlled conditions’ refers to a tree plantation, including other non-natural environment that is manipulated by human intervention for the purpose of producing plants or plant's parts and derivatives.
Trees of agarwood producing taxa grown in cultivation such as:
gardens (home and/or community garden);
state, private or community production plantation, either monospecific or mixed species,
shall be considered to be artificially propagated in accordance with paragraph 1.
CHAPTER XIV
PERSONAL AND HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS
Article 57
Introduction and reintroduction into the Community of personal and household effects
The derogation from Article 4 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 for personal or household effects, provided for in Article 7(3) of that Regulation, shall not apply to specimens used for commercial gain, sold, displayed for commercial purposes, kept for sale, offered for sale or transported for sale.
That derogation shall only apply to specimens, including hunting trophies, if they meet one of the following conditions:
they are contained in the personal luggage of travellers coming from a third country;
they are contained in the personal property of a natural person transferring his normal place of residence from a third country to the Community;
they are hunting trophies taken by a traveller and imported at a later date.
The first introduction into the Community of personal or household effects, including hunting trophies, by a person normally residing in the Community and involving specimens of species listed in Annex B to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall not require the presentation to customs of an import permit, provided that the original of a (re-)export document and a copy thereof are presented.
Customs shall forward the original in accordance with Article 45 of this Regulation and return the stamped copy to the holder.
The reintroduction into the Community, by a person normally residing in the Community, of personal or household effects, including hunting trophies, that are specimens of species listed in Annex A or B to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall not require the presentation to customs of an import permit, provided that one of the following is presented:
the customs-endorsed ‘copy for the holder’ (form 2) of a previously used Community import or export permit;
the copy of the (re-)export document referred to in paragraph 3;
proof that the specimens were acquired within the Community.
By way of derogation from paragraphs 3 and 4, the introduction or re-introduction into the Community of the following items listed in Annex B to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall not require the presentation of a (re-)export document or an import permit:
caviar of sturgeon species (Acipenseriformes spp.), up to a maximum of 125 grams per person, in containers that are individually marked in accordance with Article 66(6);
rainsticks of Cactaceae spp., up to three per person;
dead worked specimens of Crocodylia spp., excluding meat and hunting trophies, up to four per person;
shells of Strombus gigas, up to three per person;
Hippocampus spp. up to four dead specimens per person;
shells of Tridacnidae spp. up to three specimens per person not exceeding three kg in total, where a specimen may be one intact shell or two matching halves;
specimens of agarwood (Aquilaria spp. and Gyrinops spp.) — up to 1 kg woodchips, 24 ml oil, and two sets of beads or prayer beads (or two necklaces or bracelets) per person.
Article 58
Export and re-export from the Community of personal and household effects
The derogation from Article 5 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 for personal or household effects, provided for in Article 7(3) of that Regulation, shall not apply to specimens used for commercial gain, sold, displayed for commercial purposes, kept for sale, offered for sale or transported for sale.
That derogation shall apply to specimens only if they meet one of the following conditions:
they are contained in the personal luggage of travellers going to a third country;
they are contained in the personal property of a natural person transferring his normal place of residence from the Community to a third country.
The re-export, by a person normally residing in the Community, of personal or household effects, including personal hunting trophies, that are specimens of species listed in Annexes A or B to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall not require the presentation to customs of a re-export certificate, provided that one of the following is presented:
the customs-endorsed ‘copy for the holder’ (form 2) of a previously used Community import or export permit;
the copy of the (re-)export document referred to in Article 57(3) of this Regulation;
proof that the specimens were acquired within the Community.
The provisions in the previous subparagraph do not apply to re-export of rhino horn or elephant ivory contained in personal or household effects; for these specimens the presentation to customs of a re-export certificate shall be required.
Article 58a
Commercial use of personal and household effects within the Union
Commercial activities for specimens of species listed in Annex B to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 which are introduced into the Union in accordance with Article 7(3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 may be authorised by a management authority of a Member State only under the following conditions:
the applicant needs to demonstrate that the specimen has been introduced into the Union at least two years before it can be used for commercial purpose; and
the management authority of the Member State concerned has verified that the specimen in question could have been imported for commercial purposes in accordance with Article 4(2) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 at the time when it was introduced into the Union.
Once those conditions are fulfilled, the management authority shall deliver a written statement attesting that the specimen can be used for commercial purposes.
CHAPTER XV
EXEMPTIONS AND DEROGATIONS
Article 59
Exemptions from Article 8(1) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 as provided for in Article 8(3) thereof
Article 60
Derogation from Article 8(1) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 for the benefit of scientific institutions
Without prejudice to Article 9 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 a derogation from the prohibition laid down in Article 8(1) thereof may be granted to scientific institutions, approved by a management authority in consultation with a scientific authority, by the issue of a certificate covering all specimens in their collection of species listed in Annex A to that Regulation, that are intended for either of the following:
captive breeding or artificial propagation from which conservation benefits will accrue to the species concerned;
research or education aimed at the preservation or conservation of the species concerned.
Any sale of specimens covered by such a certificate may be made only to other scientific institutions holding such a certificate.
Article 61
Exemptions from Article 8(1) and (3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97
Without prejudice to Article 9 of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, neither the prohibition laid down in Article 8(1) thereof of the purchase, offer of purchase, or acquisition of specimens of species listed in Annex A thereto for commercial purposes nor the provision laid down in Article 8(3) thereof, to the effect that exemptions from those prohibitions are to be granted by the issue of a certificate on a case-by-case basis, shall apply where the specimens involved meet either of the following criteria:
they are covered by one of the specimen-specific certificates provided for in Article 48 of this Regulation;
they are covered by one of the general exemptions provided for in Article 62 of this Regulation.
Article 62
General exemptions from Article 8(1) and (3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97
The provision laid down in Article 8(3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, to the effect that exemptions from the prohibitions in Article 8(1) are to be granted by the issue of a certificate on a case-by-case basis, shall not apply to, and no certificate shall be required for, the following:
specimens of captive born and bred animals of the species listed in Annex X to this Regulation, and hybrids thereof, provided that specimens of annotated species are marked in accordance with Article 66(1) of this Regulation;
artificially propagated specimens of plant species;
worked specimens that were acquired more than 50 years previously, as defined in Article 2(w) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, except specimens containing elephant ivory;
dead specimens of Crocodylia species included in Annex A with source code D, provided that they are marked or identified via other means in accordance with this Regulation;
caviar of Acipenser brevirostrum and its hybrids, with source code D, provided that it is contained in a container marked in accordance with this Regulation.
Article 63
Pre-issued certificates under Article 8(3) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97
For the purposes of Article 8(3)(d) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, a Member State may make pre-issued certificates available to breeders approved for that purpose by a management authority, provided that they maintain breeding records and that they produce those records, on request, to the competent management authority.
Such certificates shall, in box 20, include the following statement:
‘Certificate only valid for the following taxon/taxa: …’
For the purposes of Article 8(3)(d) and (h) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, a Member State may make pre-issued certificates available to persons who have been approved by a management authority to sell on the basis of such certificates dead captive-bred specimens and/or small numbers of dead specimens legally taken from the wild within the Community, provided that any such person meets the following requirements:
he maintains a record, which is produced on request to the competent management authority and which contains details of specimens/species sold, the cause of death if known, the persons from whom specimens were acquired and the persons to whom they were sold;
he submits an annual report to the competent management authority which contains details of sales during that year, the type and number of specimens, the species concerned and how the specimens were acquired.
CHAPTER XVI
MARKING REQUIREMENTS
Article 64
Marking of specimens for the purpose of imports and commercial activities within the Community
Import permits for the following items shall be issued only if the applicant has satisfied the competent management authority that the specimens have been individually marked in accordance with Article 66(6):
specimens that derive from a captive breeding operation that was approved by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention;
specimens that derive from a ranching operation that was approved by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention;
specimens from a population of a species listed in Appendix I to the Convention for which an export quota has been approved by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention;
raw tusks of African elephant and cut pieces thereof that are both 20 cm or more in length and 1 kg or more in weight;
raw, tanned and/or finished crocodilian skins, flanks, tails, throats, feet, backstrips and other parts thereof that are exported to the Community, and entire raw, tanned, or finished crocodilian skins and flanks that are re-exported to the Community;
live vertebrates of species listed in Annex A to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 that belong to a travelling exhibition;
any container of caviar of Acipenseriformes spp., including tins, jars or boxes into which such caviar is directly packed.
Article 65
Marking of specimens for the purpose of export and re-export
Article 66
Marking methods
Articles 33(1), 40(1), 48(2), 59(5) and 65(4) shall not apply where the competent management authority is satisfied that, at the time of issue of the relevant certificate, the physical properties of the specimens involved do not allow the safe application of any marking method.
Where that is the case, the management authority concerned shall issue a transaction‐specific certificate and shall record that fact in box 20 of the certificate, or, where a marking method can be safely applied at a later date, shall include the appropriate stipulations therein.
Specimen-specific certificates, travelling exhibition certificates and personal ownership certificates shall not be issued in respect of live specimens covered by this paragraph.
Caviar from different Acipenseriformes species shall not be mixed into a primary container, except in the case of pressed caviar (i.e. caviar composed of unfertilized eggs (roe) of one or more sturgeon or paddlefish species, remaining after the processing and preparation of higher quality caviar).
Licensed processing and (re-)packaging plants shall be required to maintain adequate records of the quantities of caviar imported, exported, re-exported, produced in situ or stored, as appropriate. These records must be available for inspection by the management authority in the relevant Member State.
A unique registration code shall be attributed to each such processing or (re-)packaging plant by that management authority.
The list of facilities licensed in accordance with this paragraph, as well as any changes thereto, shall be notified to the Secretariat of the Convention and to the Commission.
For the purpose of this paragraph processing plants shall include caviar producing aquaculture operations.
Captive born and bred birds, as well as other birds born in a controlled environment shall be marked by means of a uniquely marked seamlessly closed leg-ring.
A seamlessly closed leg-ring refers to a ring or band in a continuous circle, without any break or join, which has not been tampered with in any way, of a size which cannot be removed from the bird when its leg is fully grown after having been applied in the first days of the bird's life and which has been commercially manufactured for that purpose.
Article 67
Humane marking methods
Where, in the territory of the Community, the marking of live animals requires the attachment of a tag, band, ring or other device, or the marking of a part of the animal's anatomy, or the implantation of microchip transponders, this shall be undertaken with due regard to humane care, well-being and natural behaviour of the specimen concerned.
Article 68
Mutual recognition of marking methods
CHAPTER XVII
REPORTS AND INFORMATION
Article 69
Reports on imports, exports and re-exports and on implementation.
Member States shall collect data on imports into and exports and re-exports from the Community that have taken place on the basis of permits and certificates issued by their management authorities, irrespective of the actual place of introduction or (re‐)export.
Member States shall, in compliance with Article 15(4)(a) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97, report that information to the Commission, relating to a calendar year, in accordance with the time schedule set out in paragraph 4 of this Article, for species listed in Annexes A, B and C to that Regulation, in a computerised form and in accordance with the Guidelines for the preparation and submission of CITES annual reports issued by the Secretariat of the Convention.
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The information referred to in paragraph 1 shall be presented in two separate parts, as follows:
a part on imports, exports and re-exports of specimens of species listed in the Appendices to the Convention;
a part on imports, exports and re-exports of specimens of other species listed in Annexes A, B and C to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 and on the introduction into the Community of specimens of species listed in Annex D thereto.
The information referred to in Article 15(4)(c) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 shall include details on legislative, regulatory and administrative measures taken to implement and enforce the provisions of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 and of this Regulation.
In addition, Member States shall report on the following aspects:
persons and bodies registered in accordance with Articles 18 and 19 of this Regulation;
scientific institutions registered in accordance with Article 60 of this Regulation;
breeders approved in accordance with Article 63 of this Regulation;
caviar (re-)packaging plants licensed in accordance with Article 66(7) of this Regulation;
their use of phytosanitary certificates in accordance with Article 17 of this Regulation;
cases where export permits and re-export certificates were issued retrospectively in accordance with Article 15 of the Regulation.
The information referred to in the second subparagraph of paragraph 5, where it is not included in the communication pursuant to Article 15(4)(a) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 or in the notification pursuant to Article 66(7), shall be submitted in a computerised form together with the communication pursuant to Article 15(4)(c).
Article 70
Amendments to the Annexes to Regulation (EC) No 338/97
With a view to the preparation of amendments to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 pursuant to Article 15(5) of that Regulation, Member States shall, with regard to species already listed in the Annexes to that Regulation and those that may be eligible for listing, forward all relevant information to the Commission relating to the following aspects:
their biological and trade status;
the uses to which specimens of such species are put;
methods of controlling specimens in trade.
CHAPTER XVIII
FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 71
Rejection of applications for import permits following the establishment of restrictions
Save where otherwise provided, the restrictions referred to in paragraph 1 shall not apply to the following specimens:
specimens born and bred in captivity in accordance with Articles 54 and 55, or artificially propagated in accordance with Article 56;
specimens being imported for the purposes specified in Article 8(3)(e), (f) or (g) of Regulation (EC) No 338/97;
specimens, alive or dead, that are part of the household possessions of persons moving into the Community to take up residence there.
Article 72
Transitional measures
Article 73
Notification of implementing provisions
Each Member State shall notify to the Commission and the Secretariat to the Convention the provisions which it adopts specifically for the application of this Regulation and all legal instruments used and measures taken for the application and enforcement thereof. The Commission shall communicate this information to the other Member States.
Article 74
Repeal
Regulation (EC) No 1808/2001 is repealed.
References to the repealed Regulation shall be construed as references to this Regulation and shall be read in accordance with the correlation table in Annex XII.
Article 75
Entry into force
This Regulation shall enter into force on the 20th day following its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.
This Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
▼M3 —————
ANNEX VII
Codes to be included in the description of specimens and units of measure to be used in permits and certificates pursuant to Article 5(1) and (2):
Description |
Trade term code |
Preferred unit |
Alternative unit |
Explanation |
baleen |
BAL |
kg |
no. |
whalebone |
bark |
BAR |
kg |
|
tree bark (raw, dried or powdered; unprocessed) |
body |
BOD |
no. |
kg |
substantially whole dead animals, including fresh or processed fish, stuffed turtles, preserved butterflies, reptiles in alcohol, whole stuffed hunting trophies, etc. |
bone |
BON |
kg |
no. |
bones, including jaws |
calipee |
CAL |
kg |
|
calipee or calipash (turtle cartilage for soup) |
carapace |
CAP |
no. |
kg |
raw or unworked whole shells of Testudines species |
carving |
CAR |
kg |
no. |
carved products other than ivory, bone or horn — for example coral and wood (including handicrafts). N.B: Ivory carvings should be specified as such (see below - ‘IVC’). Also, for species from which more than one type of product may be carved (e.g. horn and bone), the trade term code should indicate the type of product in trade (e.g. bone carving ‘BOC’ or horn carving - ‘HOC’), where possible. |
carving — bone |
BOC |
kg |
no. |
bone carving |
carving — horn |
HOC |
kg |
no. |
horn carving |
carving — ivory |
IVC |
kg |
no. |
ivory carvings, including e.g. smaller worked pieces of ivory (knife handles, chess sets, mahjong sets etc.). NB: Whole carved tusk should be reported as tusks (see ‘TUS’ below). Jewellery made from carved ivory should be reported as ‘jewellery — ivory’ (see IJW below). |
caviar |
CAV |
kg |
|
unfertilized dead processed eggs from all species of Acipenseriformes; also known as roe |
chips |
CHP |
kg |
|
chips of timber, especially Aquilaria spp., Gyrinops spp. and Pterocarpus santalinus |
claw |
CLA |
no. |
kg |
claws — e.g. of Felidae, Ursidae or Crocodylia (NB: ‘turtle claws’ are usually scales and not real claws) |
cloth |
CLO |
m2 |
kg |
cloth — if the cloth is not made entirely from the hair of a CITES species, the weight of hair of the species concerned should instead, if possible, be recorded under ‘HAI’ |
coral (raw) |
COR |
no. |
kg |
raw or unworked coral and coral rock (also live rock and substrate) [as defined in Resolution Conf. 11.10 (Rev. CoP15)]. Coral rock should be recorded as ‘Scleractinia spp.’ NB: the trade should be recorded by number of pieces only if the coral specimens are transported in water. Live rock (transported moist in boxes) should be reported in kg; coral substrate should be reported as number of pieces (since these are transported in water as the substrate to which non-CITES corals are attached). |
cosmetics |
COS |
g |
ml |
►M8 Any product or mixture of products which is applied to an external part of the body only (e.g. skin, hair, nails, genitals, lips or teeth or the mucous membranes of the oral cavity) with the intent to clean, odorise, change the appearance or protect. Cosmetics may include the following: make-up, perfume, skin cream, nail polish, hair colorants, soap, shampoo, shaving cream, deodorant, sunscreens, toothpaste. The quantity should reflect the amount of CITES-listed species present. ◄ |
culture |
CUL |
no. of flasks, etc. |
|
cultures of artificially propagated plants |
derivatives |
DER |
kg/l |
|
derivatives (other than those included elsewhere in this table) |
dried plant |
DPL |
no. |
|
dried plants — e.g. herbarium specimens |
ear |
EAR |
no. |
|
ears — usually elephant |
egg |
EGG |
no. |
kg |
whole dead or blown eggs (see also ‘caviar’) |
egg (live) |
EGL |
no. |
kg |
live fertilized eggs — usually birds and reptiles but includes fish and invertebrates |
eggshell |
ESH |
g/kg |
|
raw or unworked eggshell except whole eggs |
extract |
EXT |
kg |
l |
extract — usually plant extracts |
feather |
FEA |
kg/no. of wings |
no. |
feathers — in the case of objects (e.g. pictures) made of feathers, record the number of objects |
fibre |
FIB |
kg |
m |
fibres — e.g. plant fibre but includes strings of tennis rackets |
fin |
FIN |
kg |
|
fresh, frozen or dried fins and parts of fins (including flippers) |
fingerlings |
FIG |
kg |
no. |
►M8 Live juvenile fish for the aquarium trade, aquaculture, hatcheries, consumption or for release, including live European eels (Anguilla anguilla) up to 12 cm in length. ◄ |
flower |
FLO |
kg |
|
flowers |
flower pot |
FPT |
no. |
|
flower pots made from parts of a plant — e.g. treefern fibres (NB: live plants traded in so- called ‘community pots’ should be recorded as ‘live plants’, not as flower pots) |
frog legs |
LEG |
kg |
|
frog legs |
fruit |
FRU |
kg |
|
fruit |
foot |
FOO |
no. |
|
feet — e.g. of elephant, rhinoceros, hippopotamus, lion, crocodile, etc. |
fur products (large) |
FPL |
no. |
|
large manufactured products of fur — e.g. bear or lynx fur blankets or other fur products of a substantial size. |
fur product (small) |
FPS |
no. |
|
small manufactured products of fur- including handbags, key fobs, purses, pillows, trim, etc. |
gall |
GAL |
kg |
|
gall |
gall bladder |
GAB |
no. |
kg |
gall bladder |
garment |
GAR |
no. |
|
garments — including gloves and hats but not shoes. Includes trimming or decoration on garments |
genitalia |
GEN |
kg |
no. |
castrates and dried penes |
gill plates |
GIL |
no. |
|
gill plates (e.g. for sharks) |
graft rootstock |
GRS |
no. |
|
graft rootstocks (without the grafts) |
hair |
HAI |
kg |
g |
hair — includes all animal hair, e.g. of elephant, yak, vicuña, guanaco |
hair products |
HAP |
no. |
g |
products made of hair (e.g. elephant hair bracelets) |
horn |
HOR |
no. |
kg |
horns — includes antlers |
jewellery |
JWL |
no. |
g |
jewellery — including bracelets, necklaces, and other items of jewellery from products other than ivory (e.g. wood, coral, etc.) |
jewellery — ivory |
IJW |
no. |
g |
jewellery made of ivory |
leather product (large) |
LPL |
no. |
|
large manufactured products of leather — e.g. briefcases, furniture, suitcases, travel trunks |
leather product (small) |
LPS |
no. |
|
small manufactured products of leather — e.g. belts, braces, bicycle saddles, cheque book or credit card holders, handbags, key fobs, notebooks, purses, shoes, tobacco pouches, wallets, watch-straps and trim |
live |
LIV |
no. |
kg |
live animals and plants |
leaf |
LVS |
kg |
no. |
leaves |
logs |
LOG |
m3 |
|
all wood in the rough, whether or not stripped of bark or sapwood, or roughly squared, for processing notably into sawn wood, pulpwood or veneer sheets. NB: trade in logs of special purpose timbers traded by weight (e.g. lignum vitae, Guaiacum spp.) should be recorded in kg |
meat |
MEA |
kg |
|
meat, including flesh of fish if not whole (see ‘body’), fresh or unprocessed meat as well as processed meat (e.g. smoked, raw, dried, frozen or tinned) |
medicine |
MED |
kg/l |
|
medicine |
musk |
MUS |
g |
|
musk |
oil |
OIL |
kg |
l |
oil — e.g. from turtles, seals, whales, fish, various plants |
pearl |
PRL |
no. |
|
pearl (e.g. for Strombus gigas) |
piano keys |
KEY |
no. |
|
ivory piano keys (e.g. one standard piano would be 52 ivory piano keys) |
piece — bone |
BOP |
kg |
|
pieces of bone, not manufactured |
piece — horn |
HOP |
kg |
|
pieces of horn, not manufactured — includes scrap |
piece — ivory |
IVP |
kg |
|
ivory pieces, not manufactured — includes scrap |
plate |
PLA |
m2 |
|
plates of fur skins — includes rugs if made of several skins |
plywood |
PLY |
m2 |
m3 |
material consisting of three or more sheets of wood glued and pressed one on the other and generally disposed so that the grains of successive layers are at an angle |
powder |
POW |
kg |
|
powder |
pupae |
PUP |
no. |
|
butterfly pupae |
root |
ROO |
no. |
kg |
roots, bulbs, corms or tubers NB: For the agarwood-producing taxa Aquilaria spp. and Gyrinops spp., the preferred unit is ‘kilograms’. The alternative unit is ‘number’. |
rug |
RUG |
no. |
|
rugs |
sawfish rostrum |
ROS |
no. |
kg |
sawfish rostrum |
sawn wood |
SAW |
m3 |
|
wood simply sawn lengthwise or produced by a profile-chipping process; normally exceeds 6mm in thickness. NB: trade in sawn wood of special purpose timbers traded by weight (e.g. lignum vitae, Guaiacum spp.) should be recorded in kg |
scale |
SCA |
kg |
|
scales — e.g. of turtle, other reptiles, fish, pangolin |
seed |
SEE |
kg |
|
seeds |
shell |
SHE |
no. |
kg |
raw or unworked shell of molluscs |
side |
SID |
no. |
|
sides or flanks of skins; does not include crocodilian Tinga frames (see under ‘skin’) |
skeleton |
SKE |
no. |
|
substantially whole skeletons |
skin |
SKI |
no. |
|
substantially whole skins, raw or tanned, including crocodilian Tinga frames, external body lining, with or without scales |
skin piece |
SKP |
kg |
|
skin pieces — including scraps, raw or tanned |
skull |
SKU |
no. |
|
skulls |
soup |
SOU |
kg |
l |
soup — e.g. of turtle |
specimen (scientific) |
SPE |
kg/l/ml/no. |
|
scientific specimens — includes blood, tissue (e.g. kidney, spleen, etc.), histological preparations, preserved museum specimens, etc. |
stem |
STE |
no. |
kg |
plant stems NB: For the agarwood-producing taxa Aquilaria spp. and Gyrinops spp., the preferred unit is ‘kilograms’. The alternative unit is ‘number’. |
swim bladder |
SWI |
kg |
|
hydrostatic organ, including isinglass/sturgeon glue |
tail |
TAI |
no. |
kg |
tails — e.g. of caiman (for leather) or fox (for garment trimming, collars, boas, etc.), also includes flukes of cetaceans. |
tooth |
TEE |
no. |
kg |
teeth — e.g. of whale, lion, hippopotamus, crocodile, etc. |
timber |
TIM |
m3 |
kg |
raw timber except saw-logs and sawn wood |
trophy |
TRO |
no. |
|
trophy — all the trophy parts of one animal if they are exported together: e.g. horns (2), skull, cape, back skin, tail and feet (i.e. ten specimens) constitute one trophy. But if, for example, the skull and horns are the only specimens of an animal that are exported, then these items together should be recorded as one trophy. Otherwise the items should be recorded separately. A whole stuffed body is recorded under ‘BOD’. A skin alone is recorded under ‘SKI’. Trade in ‘full mount’, ‘shoulder mount’ and ‘half mount’, along with any corresponding parts of the same animal exported together on the same permit, should be reported as ‘1 TRO’ |
trunk |
TRU |
no. |
kg |
elephant trunk. NB: An elephant trunk exported with other trophy items from the same animal on the same permit as part of a hunting trophy should be reported as ‘TRO’. |
tusk |
TUS |
no. |
kg |
substantially whole tusks, whether or not worked. Includes tusks of elephant, hippopotamus, walrus, narwhal, but not other teeth |
veneer sheets |
|
|
|
|
— rotary veneer |
VEN |
m3 |
kg |
thin layers or sheets of wood of uniform thickness, usually 6mm or less in thickness, usually peeled (rotary veneer) or sliced (sliced veneer), for use in making plywood, for veneering furniture, veneer containers, etc. |
— sliced veneer |
VEN |
m2 |
kg |
|
wax |
WAX |
kg |
|
Wax |
wood product |
WPR |
no. |
kg |
manufactured wood products, including finished wood products such as furniture and musical instruments. |
Key to units of measure
Unit of measure |
Unit code |
grams |
g |
kilograms |
kg |
liters |
l |
cubic centimeters |
cm3 |
milliliters |
ml |
meters |
m |
square meters |
m2 |
cubic meters |
m3 |
number of specimens |
no. |
NB. If no unit of measure is specified, the unit will be assumed to be number (e.g. of live animals).
ANNEX VIII
Standard references for nomenclature to be used pursuant to Article 5(4) to indicate scientific names of species in permits and certificates
FAUNA
|
|
Taxon concerned |
Taxonomic reference |
MAMMALIA |
|||
|
|
All MAMMALIA taxa — with the exception of the recognition of the following names for wild forms of species (in preference to names for domestic forms): Bos gaurus, Bos mutus, Bubalus arnee, Equus africanus, Equus przewalskii, and — with the exception of the taxa noted under the different Mammalia orders below |
Wilson, D. E. & Reeder, D. M. (ed.) (2005). Mammal Species of the World. A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Third edition, Vol. 1-2, xxxv + 2 142 pp. Baltimore (John Hopkins University Press). |
ARTIODACTYLA |
Bovidae |
Ovis spp. |
Valdez, R. & Weinberg, P.J. (2011). Species accounts 188-207 for Ovis spp., pp. 727-739 in Wilson, D.E., & Mittermeier, R.A. (eds.), Handbook of the Mammals of the World. Vol.2. Hoofed Mammals. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. ISBN 978-84-96553-77-4. |
|
Camelidae |
Lama guanicoe |
Wilson, D. E. & Reeder, D. M. (1993): Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Second edition. xviii + 1 207 pp., Washington (Smithsonian Institution Press). |
CARNIVORA |
Felidae |
Felidae spp. |
Kitchener A. C., Breitenmoser-Würsten CH., Eizirik E., Gentry A., Werdelin L., Wilting A., Yamaguchi N., Abramov A. V., Christiansen P., Driscoll C., Duckworth J. W., Johnson W., Luo S.-J., Meijaard E., O’Donoghue P., Sanderson J., Seymour K., Bruford M., Groves C., Hoffmann M., Nowell K., Timmons Z. & Tobe S. (2017). A revised taxonomy of the Felidae. The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group. Cat News Special Issue 11, 80 pp. |
CETACEA |
Balaenopteridae |
Balaenoptera omurai |
Wada, S., Oishi, M. & Yamada, T. K. (2003). A newly discovered species of living baleen whales. – Nature, 426: 278-281. |
|
Delphinidae |
Orcaella heinsohni |
Beasly, I., Robertson, K. M. & Arnold, P. W. (2005). Description of a new dolphin, the Australian Snubfin Dolphin, Orcaella heinsohni sp. n. (Cetacea, Delphinidae). -- Marine Mammal Science, 21 (3): 365-400. |
|
Delphinidae |
Sotalia fluviatilis Sotalia guianensis |
Caballero, S., Trujillo, F., Vianna, J. A., Barrios-Garrido, H., Montiel, M. G., Beltrán-Pedreros, S., Marmontel, M., Santos, M. C., Rossi-Santos, M. R. & Baker, C. S. (2007). Taxonomic status of the genus Sotalia: species level ranking for "tucuxi" (Sotalia fluviatilis) and "costero" (Sotalia guianensis) dolphins. - Marine Mammal Science, 23: 358-386. |
|
Delphinidae |
Sousa plumbea Sousa sahulensis |
Jefferson, T. A.& Rosenbaum, H. C. (2014). Taxonomic revision of the humpback dolphins (Sousa spp.), and description of a new species from Australia. Marine Mammal Science, 30 (4): 1494-1541. |
|
Delphinidae |
Tursiops australis |
Charlton-Robb, K., Gershwin, L.-A., Thompson, R., Austin, J., Owen, K. & McKechnie, S. (2011). A new dolphin species, the Burrunan Dolphin Tursiops australis sp. nov., endemic to southern Australian coastal waters. PLoS ONE, 6 (9): e24047. |
|
Iniidae |
Inia araguaiaensis |
Hrbek, T., da Silva, V. M. F., Dutra, N., Gravena, W., Martin, A. R. & Farias, I. P. (2014): A new species of river dolphin from Brazil or: How little do we know our biodiversity. PLoS ONE 83623: 1-12. |
|
Phocoenidae |
Neophocaena asiaeorientalis |
Jefferson, T. A. & Wang, J. Y. (2011). Revision of the taxonomy of finless porpoises (genus Neophocaena): The existence of two species. Journal of Marine Animals and their Ecology, 4 (1): 3-16. |
|
Physeteridae |
Physeter macrocephalus |
Rice, D. W. (1998). Marine Mammals of the World: Systematics and Distribution - Society of Marine Mammalogy Special Publication Number 4, The Society for Marine Mammalogy, Lawrence, Kansas. |
|
Platanistidae |
Platanista gangetica |
Rice, D. W., (1998). Marine Mammals of the World: Systematics and Distribution - Society of Marine Mammalogy Special Publication Number 4, The Society for Marine Mammalogy, Lawrence, Kansas. |
|
Ziphiidae |
Mesoplodon hotaula |
Dalebout, M. L., Scott Baker, C., Steel, D., Thompson, K., Robertson, K. M., Chivers, S. J., Perrin, W. F., Goonatilake, M., Anderson, C. R., Mead, J. G., Potter, C. W., Thompson, L., Jupiter, D. & Yamada, T. K. (2014). Resurrection of Mesoplodon hotaula Deraniyagala 1963: A new species of beaked whale in the tropical Indo-Pacific. Marine Mammal Science, 30 (3): 1081-1108. |
PRIMATES |
Atelidae |
Ateles geoffroyi |
Rylands, A. B., Groves, C. P., Mittermeier, R. A., Cortes-Ortiz, L. & Hines, J. J. (2006). Taxonomy and distributions of Mesoamerican primates. In: A. Estrada, P. Garber, M. Pavelka and L. Luecke (eds), New Perspectives in the Study of Mesoamerican Primates: Distribution, Ecology, Behavior and Conservation, pp. 29–79. Springer, New York, USA. |
|
Aotidae |
Aotus jorgehernandezi |
Defler, T. R. & Bueno, M. L. (2007). Aotus diversity and the species problem. – Primate Conservation, 22: 55-70. |
|
Cebidae |
Callithrix manicorensis |
Garbino, T. & Siniciato, G. (2014). The taxonomic status of Mico marcai (Alperin 1993) and Mico manicorensis (van Roosmalen et al. 2000) (Cebidae, Callitrichinae) from Southwestern Brazilian Amazonia. International Journal of Primatology, 35 (2): 529-546. (for Mico marcai lumped with Mico manicorensis treated as Callithrix manicorensis under CITES] |
|
Cebidae |
Cebus flavius |
Oliveira, M. M. de & Langguth, A. (2006). Rediscovery of Marcgrave’s Capuchin Monkey and designation of a neotype for Simia flava Schreber, 1774 (Primates, Cebidae). – Boletim do Museu Nacional do Rio de Janeiro, N.S., Zoologia, 523: 1-16. |
|
Cebidae |
Mico rondoni |
Ferrari, S. F., Sena, L., Schneider, M. P. C. & Júnior, J. S. S. (2010). Rondon’s Marmoset, Mico rondoni sp. n., from southwestern Brazilian Amazonia. International Journal of Primatology, 31: 693-714. |
|
Cebidae |
Saguinus ursulus |
Gregorin, R. & de Vivo, M. (2013). Revalidation of Saguinus ursula Hoffmannsegg (Primates: Cebidae: Callitrichinae). Zootaxa, 3721 (2): 172-182. |
|
Cebidae |
Saimiri collinsi |
Merces, M. P., Alfaro, J. W. L., Ferreira, W. A. S., Harada, M. L. & Júnior, J. S. S. (2015). Morphology and mitochondrial phylogenetics reveal that the Amazon River separates two eastern squirrel monkey species: Saimiri sciureus and S. collinsi. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 82: 426-435. |
|
Cercopithecidae |
Cercopithecus lomamiensis |
Hart, J.A., Detwiler, K.M., Gilbert, C.C., Burrell, A.S., Fuller, J.L., Emetshu, M., Hart, T.B., Vosper, A., Sargis, E.J. & Tosi, A.J. (2012). Lesula: A new species of Cercopithecus monkey endemic to the Democratic Republic of Congo and implications for conservation of Congo’s Central Basin. PLoS ONE, 7 (9): e44271. |
|
Cercopithecidae |
Macaca munzala |
Sinha, A., Datta, A., Madhusudan, M. D. & Mishra, C. (2005). Macaca munzala: A new species from western Arunachal Pradesh, northeastern India. International Journal of Primatology, 26 (4): 977-989: doi:10.1007/s10764-005-5333-3. |
|
Cercopithecidae |
Rhinopithecus strykeri |
Geismann, T., Lwin, N., Aung, S. S., Aung, T. N., Aung, Z. M., Hla, T. H., Grindley, M. & Momberg, F. (2011). A new species of snub-nosed monkey, genus Rhinopithecus Milne-Edwards, 1872 (Primates, Colobinae), from Northern Kachin State, Northeastern Myanmar. – American Journal of Primatology, 73: 96-107. |
|
Cercopithecidae |
Rungwecebus kipunji |
Davenport, T. R. B., Stanley, W. T., Sargis, E. J., de Luca, D. W., Mpunga, N. E., Machaga, S. J. & Olson, L. E. (2006). A new genus of African monkey, Rungwecebus: Morphology, ecology, and molecular phylogenetics. Science, 312: 1378-1381. |
|
Cercopithecidae |
Trachypithecus villosus |
Brandon- Jones, D., Eudey, A. A., Geissmann, T., Groves, C. P., Melnick, D. J., Morales J. C., Shekelle, M. & Steward, C.-B. (2004). Asian primate classification. International Journal of Primatology, 25: 97-163. |
|
Cercopithecidae |
Cheirogaleus lavasoensis |
Thiele, D., Razafimahatratra, E. & Hapke, A. (2013). Discrepant partitioning of genetic diversity in mouse lemurs and dwarf lemurs – biological reality or taxonomic bias? Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 69: 593-609. |
|
Cercopithecidae |
Microcebus gerpi |
Radespiel, U., Ratsimbazafy, J. H., Rasoloharijaona, S., Raveloson, H., Andriaholinirina, N., Rakotondravony, R., Randrianarison, R. M. & Randrianambinina, B. (2012). First indications of a highland specialist among mouse lemurs (Microcebus spp.) and evidence for a new mouse lemur species from eastern Madagascar. Primates, 53: 157-170. |
|
Cercopithecidae |
Microcebus marohita Microcebus tanosi |
Rasoloarison, R. M., Weisrock, D. W., Yoder, A. D., Rakotondravony, D. & Kappeler, P. M. [2013]. Two new species of mouse lemurs (Cheirogaleidae: Microcebus) from Eastern Madagascar. - International Journal of Primatology, 34: 455-469. |
|
Hylobatidae |
Nomascus annamensis |
Van Ngoc Thinh, Mootnick, A. R., Vu Ngoc Thanh, Nadler, T. & Roos, C. (2010). A new species of crested gibbon from the central Annamite mountain range. Vietnamese Journal of Primatology, 4: 1-12. |
|
Lorisidae |
Nycticebus kayan |
Munds, R.A., Nekaris, K.A.I. & Ford, S.M. (2013). Taxonomy of the bornean slow loris, with new species Nycticebus kayan (Primates, Lorisidae). American Journal of Primatology, 75: 46-56. |
|
Pitheciidae |
Cacajao melanocephalus Cacajao oukary |
Ferrari, S. F., Guedes, P. G., Figueiredo-Ready, W. M. B. & Barnett, A. A. (2014). Reconsidering the taxonomy of the Black-faced Uacaris, Cacajao melanocephalus group (Mammalia: Pitheciidae), from the northern Amazon Basin. Zootaxa, 3866 (3): 353-370. |
|
Pitheciidae |
Callicebus aureipalatii |
Wallace, R. B., Gómez, H., Felton, A. & Felton, A. (2006). On a new species of titi monkey, genus Callicebus Thomas (Primates, Pitheciidae), from western Bolivia with preliminary notes on distribution and abundance. Primate Conservation, 20: 29-39. |
|
Pitheciidae |
Callicebus caquetensis |
Defler, T. R., Bueno, M. L. & García, J. (2010). Callicebus caquetensis: a new and Critically Endangered titi monkey from southern Caquetá, Colombia. Primate Conservation, 25: 1-9. |
|
Pitheciidae |
Callicebus vieira |
Gualda-Barros, J., Nascimento, F. O. & Amaral, M. K. (2012). A new species of Callicebus Thomas, 1903 (Primates, Pitheciidae) from the states of Mato Grosso and Pará, Brazil. Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia (São Paulo), 52: 261-279. |
|
Pitheciidae |
Callicebus miltoni |
Dalponte, J. C., Silva, F. E. & Silva Júnior, J. S. (2014). New species of titi monkey, genus Callicebus Thomas, 1903 (Primates, Pitheciidae), from Southern Amazonia, Brazil. Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia, São Paulo, 54: 457-472. |
|
Pitheciidae |
Pithecia cazuzai Pithecia chrysocephala Pithecia hirsuta Pithecia inusta Pithecia isabela Pithecia milleri Pithecia mittermeieri Pithecia napensis Pithecia pissinattii Pithecia rylandsi Pithecia vanzolinii |
Marsh, L.K. (2014). A taxonomic revision of the saki monkeys, Pithecia Desmarest, 1804. Neotropical Primates, 21: 1-163. |
|
Tarsiidae |
Tarsius lariang |
Merker, S. & Groves, C.P. (2006). Tarsius lariang: A new primate species from Western Central Sulawesi. International Journal of Primatology, 27 (2): 465-485. |
|
Tarsiidae |
Tarsius tumpara |
Shekelle, M., Groves, C., Merker, S. & Supriatna, J. (2010). Tarsius tumpara: A new tarsier species from Siau Island, North Sulawesi. Primate Conservation, 23: 55-64. |
PROBOSCIDEA |
Elephantidae |
Loxodonta africana |
Wilson, D. E. & Reeder, D. M. (1993). Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Second edition. xviii + 1 207 pp., Washington (Smithsonian Institution Press). |
SCANDENTIA |
Tupaiidae |
Tupaia everetti |
Roberts, T. E., Lanier, H. C., Sargis, E. J. & Olson, L. E. (2011). Molecular phylogeny of treeshrews (Mammalia: Scandentia) and the timescale of diversification in Southeast Asia. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 60 (3): 358-372. |
|
Tupaiidae |
Tupaia palawanensis |
Sargis, E. J., Campbell, K. K. & Olson, L. E. (2014). Taxonomic boundaries and craniometric variation in the treeshrews (Scandentia, Tupaiidae) from the Palawan faunal region. Journal of Mammalian Evolution, 21 (1): 111-123. |
AVES |
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|
|
Order- and family-level names for birds |
Morony, J. J., Bock, W. J. & Farrand, J., Jr. (1975). Reference List of the Birds of the World. American Museum of Natural History. 207 pp. |
|
|
All bird species – with the exception of the taxa mentioned below and for Lophura imperialis and Lophura hatinhensis, specimens of which should be treated as specimens of L. edwardsi |
Dickinson, E.C. (ed.) (2003). The Howard and Moore Complete Checklist of the Birds of the World. Revised and enlarged 3rd Edition. 1 039 pp. London (Christopher Helm). in combination with Dickinson, E.C. (2005). Corrigenda 4 (02.06.2005) to Howard & Moore Edition 3 (2003). |
APODIFORMES |
Trochilidae |
Chlorostilbon lucidus |
Pacheco, J. F. & Whitney, B. M. (2006). Mandatory changes to the scientific names of three Neotropical birds Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 126: 242-244. |
|
Trochilidae |
Eriocnemis isabellae |
Cortés-Diago, A., Ortega, L. A., Mazariegos-Hurtado, L. & Weller, A.-A. (2007) A new species of Eriocnemis (Trochilidae) from southwest Colombia. Ornitologia Neotropical, 18:161-170. |
|
Trochilidae |
Phaethornis aethopyga |
Piacentini, V. Q., Aleixo, A. & Silveira, L. F. (2009). Hybrid, subspecies or species? The validity and taxonomic status of Phaethornis longuemareus aethopyga Zimmer, 1950 (Trochilidae). Auk,126: 604-612. |
FALCONIFORMES |
Accipitridae |
Aquila hastata |
Parry, S. J., Clark, W. S. & Prakash, V. (2002). On the taxonomic status of the Indian Spotted Eagle Aquila hastata. Ibis, 144: 665-675. |
|
Accipitridae |
Buteo socotraensis |
Porter, R. F. & Kirwan, G. M. (2010). Studies of Socotran birds VI. The taxonomic status of the Socotra Buzzard. Bulletin of the British Ornithologists‘ Club, 130 (2): 116–131. |
|
Falconidae |
Micrastur mintoni |
Whittaker, A. (2002). A new species of forest-falcon (Falconidae: Micrastur) from southeastern Amazonia and the Atlantic rainforests of Brazil. Wilson Bulletin, 114: 421-445. |
PASSERIFORMES |
Muscicapidae |
Garrulax taewanus |
Collar, N. J. (2006). A partial revision of the Asian babblers (Timaliidae). Forktail, 22: 85-112. |
PSITTACIFORMES |
Cacatuidae |
Cacatua goffiniana |
Roselaar, C. S. & Michels, J. P. (2004). Nomenclatural chaos untangled, resulting in the naming of the formally undescribed Cacatua species from the Tanimbar Islands, Indonesia (Psittaciformes: Cacatuidae). Zoologische Verhandelingen, 350: 183-196. |
|
Loriidae |
Trichoglossus haematodus |
Collar, N. J. (1997). Family Psittacidae (Parrots). In del Hoyo, J., Elliot, A. and Sargatal, J. (eds.), Handbook of the Birds of the World, 4 (Sandgrouse to Cuckoos): 280-477. Barcelona (Lynx Edicions). |
|
Psittacidae |
Aratinga maculata |
Nemesio, A. & Rasmussen, C. (2009). The rediscovery of Buffon’s ‘Guarouba’ or ‘Perriche jaune’: two senior synonyms of Aratinga pintoi Silveira, Lima & Höfling, 2005 (Aves: Psittaciformes). Zootaxa, 2013: 1-16. |
|
Psittacidae |
Forpus modestus |
Pacheco, J. F. & Whitney, B. M. (2006). Mandatory changes to the scientific names of three Neotropical birds. Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club, 126: 242-244. |
|
Psittacidae |
Pionopsitta aurantiocephala |
Gaban-Lima, R., Raposo, M. A. & Hofling, E. (2002). Description of a new species of Pionopsitta (Aves: Psittacidae) endemic to Brazil. Auk, 119: 815-819. |
|
Psittacidae |
Poicephalus robustus Poicephalus fuscicollis |
Coetzer, W.G., Downs, C.T., Perrin, M.R. & Willows-Munro, S. (2015). Molecular Systematics of the Cape Parrot (Poicephalus robustus). Implications for Taxonomy and Conservation. PLoS ONE, 10(8): e0133376. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0133376. |
|
Psittacidae |
Psittacula intermedia |
Collar, N. J. (1997) Family Psittacidae (Parrots). In del Hoyo, J., Elliot, A. and Sargatal, J. (eds.), Handbook of the Birds of the World, 4 (Sandgrouse to Cuckoos): 280-477. Barcelona (Lynx Edicions). |
|
Psittacidae |
Pyrrhura griseipectus |
Olmos, F., Silva, W. A. G. & Albano, C. (2005). Grey-breasted Conure Pyrrhura griseipectus, an overlooked endangered species. Cotinga, 24: 77-83. |
|
Psittacidae |
Pyrrhura parvifrons |
Arndt, T. (2008). Anmerkungen zu einigen Pyrrhura-Formen mit der Beschreibung einer neuen Art und zweier neuer Unterarten. Papageien, 8: 278-286. |
STRIGIFORMES |
Strigidae |
Glaucidium mooreorum |
da Silva, J. M. C., Coelho, G. & Gonzaga, P. (2002). Discovered on the brink of extinction: a new species of pygmy owl (Strigidae: Glaucidium) from Atlantic forest of northeastern Brazil. Ararajuba, 10(2): 123-130. |
|
Strigidae |
Ninox burhani |
Indrawan, M. & Somadikarta, S. (2004). A new hawk-owl from the Togian Islands, Gulf of Tomini, central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, 124: 160-171. |
|
Strigidae |
Otus thilohoffmanni |
Warakagoda, D. H. & Rasmussen, P. C. (2004). A new species of scops-owl from Sri Lanka. Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club, 124 (2): 85-105. |
REPTILIA |
|||
CROCODYLIA & RHYNCHOCEPHALIA |
|
Crocodylia & Rhynchocephalia except for the taxa listed below |
Wermuth, H. & Mertens, R. (1996) (reprint). Schildkröte, Krokodile, Brückenechsen. xvii + 506 pp. Jena (Gustav Fischer Verlag). |
|
Crocodylidae |
Crocodylus johnstoni |
Tucker, A. D. (2010). The correct name to be applied to the Australian freshwater crocodile, Crocodylus johnstoni [Krefft, 1873]. Australian Zoologist, 35 (2): 432-434. |
|
Sphenodontidae |
Sphenodon spp. |
Hay, J. M., Sarre, S. D., Lambert, D. M., Allendorf, F. W. & Daugherty, C. H. (2010). Genetic diversity and taxonomy: a reassessment of species designation in tuatara (Sphenodon: Reptilia). Conservation Genetics, 11 (93): 1063-1081. |
SAURIA |
|
For delimitation of families within the Sauria |
Pough, F. H., Andrews, R. M., Cadle, J. E., Crump, M. L., Savitzky, A. H. & Wells, K. D. (1998). Herpetology. Upper Saddle River/New Jersey (Prentice Hall). |
|
Agamidae |
Saara spp. Uromastyx spp. |
Wilms, T. M., Böhme, W., Wagner, P., Lutzmann, N. & Schmitz, A. (2009). On the phylogeny and taxonomy of the genus Uromastyx Merrem, 1820 (Reptilia: Squamata: Agamidae: Uromastycinae) – resurrection of the genus Saara Gray, 1845. Bonner zool. Beiträge, 56 (1-2): 55-99. |
|
Anguidae |
Abronia spp. |
UETZ, P., FREED, P. & HŎSEK, J. (eds.) (2016). Taxonomic checklist of the species of the genus Abronia. Species information extracted from ‘The Reptile Database’, version of 15 August 2016, accessed 11 May 2017. See Annex 2 of AC29 Doc.35. at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/com/ac/29/E-AC29-35-A2.pdf |
|
Chamaeleonidae |
Chamaleonidae spp. |
Glaw, F. (2015). Taxonomic checklist of chamaeleons (Squamata: Chamaeleonidae). Vertebrate Zoology, 65 (2): 167-246. |
|
Cordylidae |
Cordylidae spp. except the taxon mentioned below |
Stanley, E. L., Bauer, A. M., Jackman, T. R., Branch, W. R. & P. le F. N. (2011). Between a rock and a hard polytomy: rapid radiation in the rupicolous girdled lizards (Squamata: Cordylidae). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 58 (1): 53-70. |
|
Cordylidae |
Cordylus marunguensis |
Greenbaum, E., Stanley, E. L., Kusamba, C., Moninga, W. M., Goldberg, S. R. & Cha (2012). A new species of Cordylus (Squamata: Cordylidae) from the Marungu Plateau of south-eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. African Journal of Herpetology, 61 (1): 14-39. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Cnemaspis psychedelica |
Grismer, L. L., Ngo, V. T. & Grismer, J. L. (2010). A colorful new species of insular rock gecko (Cnemaspis Strauch 1887) from southern Vietnam. Zootaxa, 58: 46–58. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Dactylonemis spp. Hoplodactylus spp. Mokopirirakau spp. |
Nielsen, S. V., Bauer, A. M., Jackman, T. R., Hitchmough, R. A. & Daugherty, C. H. (2011). New Zealand geckos (Diplodactylidae): Cryptic diversity in a post-Gondwanan lineage with trans-Tasman affinities. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 59 (1): 1-22. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Lygodactylus williamsi |
Species information extracted from UETZ, P., FREED, P. & HŎSEK, J. (eds.) (2016). The Reptile Database, version of 15 August 2016, accessed 11 May 2017. See Annex 2 of AC29 Doc.35 at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/com/ac/29/E-AC29-35-A2.pdf |
|
Gekkonidae |
Nactus serpensinsula |
Kluge, A.G. (1983). Cladistic relationships among gekkonid lizards. Copeia, 2: 465-475. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Naultinus spp. |
Nielsen, S. V., Bauer, A. M., Jackman, T. R., Hitchmough, R. A. & Daugherty, C. H. (2011). New Zealand geckos (Diplodactylidae): Cryptic diversity in a post-Gondwanan lineage with trans-Tasman affinities. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 59 (1): 1-22. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Paroedura masobe |
Nussbaum, R.A. & Raxworthy, C.J. (1994). A new rainforest gecko of the genus Paroedura Günther from Madagascar. Herpetological Natural History, 2 (1): 43-49. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Phelsuma spp. Rhoptropella spp. |
Glaw, F. & Rösler, H. (2015). Taxonomic checklist of the day geckos of the genera Phelsuma Gray, 1825 and Rhoptropella Hewitt, 1937 (Squamata: Gekkonidae). Vertebrate Zoology, 65 (2): 167-246. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Toropuku spp. Tukutuku spp. Woodworthia spp. |
Nielsen, S. V., Bauer, A. M., Jackman, T. R., Hitchmough, R. A. & Daugherty, C. H. (2011). New Zealand geckos (Diplodactylidae): Cryptic diversity in a post-Gondwanan lineage with trans-Tasman affinities. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 59 (1): 1-22. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Uroplatus spp. except for the taxa mentioned below |
Raxworthy, C.J. (2003). Introduction to the reptiles. In: Goodman, S.M. & Bernstead, J.P. (eds.), The natural history of Madagascar: 934-949. Chicago. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Uroplatus finiavana |
Ratsoavina, F. M., Louis jr., E. E., Crottini, A., Randrianiaina, R. -D., Glaw, F. & Vences, M. (2011). A new leaf tailed gecko species from northern Madagascar with a preliminary assessment of molecular and morphological variability in the Uroplatus ebenaui group. Zootaxa, 3022: 39-57. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Uroplatus giganteus |
Glaw, F., Kosuch, J., Henkel, W. F., Sound, P. & Böhme, W. (2006). Genetic and morphological variation of the leaf-tailed gecko Uroplatus fimbriatus from Madagascar, with description of a new giant species. Salamandra, 42: 129-144. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Uroplatus pietschmanni |
Böhle, A. & Schönecker, P. (2003). Eine neue Art der Gattung Uroplatus Duméril, 1805 aus Ost-Madagaskar (Reptilia: Squamata: Gekkonidae). Salamandra, 39 (3/4): 129-138. |
|
Gekkonidae |
Uroplatus sameiti |
Raxworthy, C. J., Pearson, R. G., Zimkus, B. M., Reddy, S., Deo, A. J., Nussbaum, R. A. & Ingram, C. M. (2008). Continental speciation in the tropics: contrasting biogeographic patterns of divergence in the Uroplatus leaf-tailed gecko radiation of Madagascar. Journal of Zoology, 275: 423–440. |
|
Iguanidae |
Iguanidae spp. except for the taxa mentioned below |
Hollingsworth, B. D. (2004). The Evolution of Iguanas: An Overview of Relationships and a Checklist of Species. In: Iguanas: Biology and Conservation (Alberts, A. C., Carter, R. L., Hayes, W. K. & Martins, E. P., Eds): 19-44.. Berkeley (University of California Press). |
|
Iguanidae |
Brachylophus bulabula |
Keogh, J. S., Edwards, D. L., Fisher, R. N. & Harlow, P. S. (2008). Molecular and morphological analysis of the critically endangered Fijian iguanas reveals cryptic diversity and a complex biogeographic history. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 363 (1508): 3413-3426. |
|
Iguanidae |
Conolophus marthae |
Gentile, G. & Snell, H. (2009). Conolophus marthae sp. nov. (Squamata, Iguanidae), a new species of land iguana from the Galápagos archipelago. Zootaxa, 2201: 1-10. |
|
Iguanidae |
Ctenosaura spp. |
Iguana Taxonomy Working Group (2016). A checklist of the iguanas of the world (Iguanidae; Iguaninae). In: Iguanas: Biology, Systematics, and Conservation (J. B. Iverson, T.D. Grant, C .R. Knapp, and S. A. Pasachnik, Eds.): 4–46. Herpetological Conservation and Biology 11(Monograph 6). |
|
Iguanidae |
Cyclura lewisi |
Burton, F. J. (2004). Revision to Species Cyclura nubila lewisi, the Grand Cayman Blue Iguana. Caribbean Journal of Science, 40 (2): 198-203. |
|
Iguanidae |
Phrynosoma blainvillii Phrynosoma cerroense Phrynosoma wigginsi |
Montanucci, R.R. (2004). Geographic variation in Phrynosoma coronatum (Lacertilia, Phrynosomatidae): further evidence for a peninsular archipelago. Herpetologica, 60: 117. |
|
Lanthanotidae |
Lanthanotidae spp. |
UETZ, P., FREED, P. & HŎSEK, J. (eds.) (2016). Family, genus and species information extracted from the Integrated Taxonomic Information Service (ITIS), an online reference; and species information extracted from The Reptile Database, version of 15 August 2016, accessed 11 May 2017. See Annex 2 of AC29 Doc.35 at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/com/ac/29/E-AC29-35-A2.pdf |
|
Teiidae |
Teiidae spp. |
Harvey, M. B., Ugueto, G. N. & Gutberlet, R. L. Jr. (2012). Review of teiid morphology with a revised taxonomy and phylogeny of the Teiidae (Lepidosauria: Squamata). Zootaxa, 3459: 1–156. |
|
Varanidae |
Varanidae spp. except for the taxa mentioned below |
Böhme, W. (2003). Checklist of the living monitor lizards of the world (family Varanidae) Zoologische Verhandelingen, Leiden, 341: 1-43. in combination with Koch, A., Auliya, M. & Ziegler, T. (2010.: Updated Checklist of the living monitor lizards of the world (Squamata: Varanidae). - Bonn zoological Bulletin, 57 (2): 127-136. |
|
Varanidae |
Varanus bangonorum Varanus dalubhasa |
Welton, L. J., Travers, S. L., Siler, C. D. & Brown, R. M. (2014). Integrative taxonomy and phylogeny-based species delimitation of Philippine water monitor lizards (Varanus salvator complex) with descriptions of two new cryptic species. Zootaxa, 3881 (3): 201–227. |
|
Varanidae |
Varanus hamersleyensis |
Maryan, B., Oliver, P. M., Fitch, A. J. & O’Connell, M. (2014). Molecular and morphological assessment of Varanus pilbarensis (Squamata: Varanidae), with a description of a new species from the southern Pilbara, Western Australia. Zootaxa, 3768 (2): 139–158. |
|
Varanidae |
Varanus nesterovi |
Böhme, W., Ehrlich, K., Milto, K. D., Orlov, N. & Scholz, S. (2015). A new species of desert monitor lizard (Varanidae: Varanus: Psammosaurus) from the western Zagros region (Iraq, Iran). Russian Journal of Herpetology, 22 (1): 41-52. |
|
Varanidae |
Varanus samarensis |
Koch, A., Gaulke, M. & Böhme, W. (2010). Unravelling the underestimated diversity of Philippine water monitor lizards (Squamata: Varanus salvator complex), with the description of two new species and a new subspecies. Zootaxa, 2446: 1–54. |
|
Varanidae |
Varanus sparnus |
Doughty, P., Kealley, L., Fitch, A. & Donnellan, S. C. (2014). A new diminutive species of Varanus from the Dampier Peninsula, western Kimberley region, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum, 29: 128–140. |
SERPENTES |
|
Loxocemidae spp. Pythonidae spp. Boidae spp. Bolyeriidae spp. Tropidophiidae spp. Viperidae spp. except for the retention of the genera Acrantophis, Sanzinia, Calabaria, Lichanura, the recognition of Epicrates maurus as valid species and except for the species mentioned below |
McDiarmid, R. W., Campbell, J. A. & Touré, T. A. (1999). Snake Species of the World. A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Volume 1, Washington, D.C. (The Herpetologists’ League). |
|
Boidae |
Candoia paulsoni Candoia superciliosa |
Smith, H. M., Chiszar, D., Tepedelen, K. & van Breukelen, F. (2001). A revision of the bevelnosed boas (Candoia carinata complex) (Reptilia: Serpentes). Hamadryad, 26 (2): 283-315. |
|
Boidae |
Corallus batesii |
Henderson, R. W., Passos, P. & Feitosa, D. (2009). Geographic variation in the Emerald Treeboa, Corallus caninus (Squamata: Boidae). Copeia, 2009 (3): 572-582. |
|
Boidae |
Epicrates crassus Epicrates assisi Epicrates alvarezi |
Passos, P. & Fernandes, R. (2008). Revision of the Epicrates cenchria complex (Serpentes: Boidae). Herpetological Monographs, 22: 1-30. |
|
Boidae |
Eryx borrii |
Lanza, B. & Nistri, A. (2005). Somali Boidae (genus Eryx Daudin 1803) and Pythonidae (genus Python Daudin 1803) (Reptilia Serpentes). Tropical Zoology, 18 (1): 67-136. |
|
Boidae |
Eunectes beniensis |
Dirksen, L. (2002). Anakondas. NTV Wissenschaft. |
|
Colubridae |
Xenochrophis piscator Xenochrophis schnurrenbergeri Xenochrophis tytleri |
Vogel, G. & David, P. (2012). A revision of the species group of Xenochrophis piscator (Schneider, 1799) (Squamata: Natricidae). Zootaxa, 3473: 1-60. |
|
Elapidae |
Micrurus ruatanus |
McCranie, J. R. (2015). A checklist of the amphibians and reptiles of Honduras, with additions, comments on taxonomy, some recent taxonomic decisions, and areas of further studies needed. Zootaxa, 3931 (3): 352–386. |
|
Elapidae |
Naja atra Naja kaouthia |
Wüster, W. (1996). Taxonomic change and toxinology: systematic revisions of the Asiatic cobras (Naja naja species complex). Toxicon, 34: 339-406. |
|
Elapidae |
Naja mandalayensis |
Slowinski, J. B. & Wüster, W. (2000). A new cobra (Elapidae: Naja) from Myanmar (Burma). Herpetologica, 56: 257-270. |
|
Elapidae |
Naja oxiana Naja philippinensis Naja sagittifera Naja samarensis Naja siamensis Naja sputatrix Naja sumatrana |
Wüster, W. (1996). Taxonomic change and toxinology: systematic revisions of the Asiatic cobras (Naja naja species complex). Toxicon, 34: 339-406. |
|
Pythonidae |
Leiopython bennettorum Leiopython biakensis Leiopython fredparkeri Leiopython huonensis Leiopython hoserae |
Schleip, W. D. (2008). Revision of the genus Leiopython Hubrecht 1879 (Serpentes: Pythonidae) with the redescription of taxa recently described by Hoser (2000) and the description of new species. Journal of Herpetology, 42 (4): 645–667. |
|
Pythonidae |
Morelia clastolepis Morelia kinghorni Morelia nauta Morelia tracyae |
Harvey, M. B., Barker, D. B., Ammerman, L. K. & Chippindale, P. T. (2000). Systematics of pythons of the Morelia amethistina complex (Serpentes: Boidae) with the description of three new species. Herpetological Monographs, 14: 139-185. |
|
Pythonidae |
Python bivittatus |
Jacobs, H. J., Auliya, M. & Böhme, W. (2009). Zur Taxonomie des Dunklen Tigerpythons, Python molurus bivittatus KUHL, 1820, speziell der Population von Sulawesi. Sauria, 31: 5-16. |
|
Pythonidae |
Python breitensteini Python brongersmai |
Keogh, J. S., Barker, D. G. & Shine, R. (2001). Heavily exploited but poorly known: systematics and biogeography of commercially harvested pythons (Python curtus group) in Southeast Asia. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 73: 113-129. |
|
Pythonidae |
Python kyaiktiyo |
Zug, G.R., Grotte, S. W. & Jacobs, J. F. (2011). Pythons in Burma: Short-tailed python (Reptilia: Squamata). Proceedings of the biological Society of Washington, 124 (2): 112-136. |
|
Pythonidae |
Python natalensis |
Broadley, D. G. (1999). The southern African python, Python natalensis A. Smith 1840, is a valid species. African Herp News, 29: 31-32. |
|
Tropidophiidae |
Tropidophis spp. except for the taxa mentioned below |
Hedges, S.B. (2002). Morphological variation and the definition of species in the snake genus Tropidophis (Serpentes, Tropidophiidae). Bulletin of the Natural History Museum, London (Zoology), 68 (2): 83-90. |
|
Tropidophiidae |
Tropidophis celiae |
Hedges, B. S., Estrada, A. R. & Diaz, L. M. (1999): New snake (Tropidophis) from western Cuba. Copeia, 1999 (2): 376-381. |
|
Tropidophiidae |
Tropidophis grapiuna |
Curcio, F. F., Sales Nunes, P. M., Suzart Argolo, A. J., Skuk, G. & Rodrigues, M. T. (2012). Taxonomy of the South American dwarf boas of the genus Tropidophis Bibron, 1840, with the description of two new species from the Atlantic forest (Serpentes: Tropidophiidae). Herpetological Monographs, 26 (1): 80-121. |
|
Tropidophiidae |
Tropidophis hendersoni |
Hedges, B. S. & Garrido, O. (2002). A new snake of the genus Tropidophis (Tropidophiidae) from Eastern Cuba Journal of Herpetology, 36:157-161. |
|
Tropidophiidae |
Tropidophis morenoi |
Hedges, B. S., Garrido, O. & Diaz, L. M. (2001). A new banded snake of the genus Tropidophis (Tropidophiidae) from north-central Cuba. Journal of Herpetology, 35: 615-617. |
|
Tropidophiidae |
Tropidophis preciosus |
Curcio, F. F., Sales Nunes, P. M., Suzart Argolo, A. J., Skuk, G. & Rodrigues, M. T. (2012). Taxonomy of the South American dwarf boas of the genus Tropidophis Bibron, 1840, with the description of two new species from the Atlantic forest (Serpentes: Tropidophiidae). Herpetological Monographs, 26 (1): 80-121. |
|
Tropidophiidae |
Tropidophis spiritus |
Hedges, B. S. & Garrido, O. (1999). A new snake of the genus Tropidophis (Tropidophiidae) from central Cuba. Journal of Herpetology, 33: 436-441. |
|
Tropidophiidae |
Tropidophis xanthogaster |
Domínguez, M., Moreno, L. V. & Hedges, S. B. (2006). A new snake of the genus Tropidophis (Tropidophiidae) from the Guanahacabibes Peninsula of Western Cuba. mphibia-Reptilia, 27 (3): 427-432. |
|
Viperidae |
Atheris desaixi Bitis worthingtoni |
UETZ, P., FREED, P. & HŎSEK, J. (eds.) (2016). Species information extracted from The Reptile Database, version of 15 August 2016, accessed 11 May 2017. See Annex 2 of AC29 Doc.35 at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/com/ac/29/E-AC29-35-A2.pdf |
TESTUDINES |
|
Testudines order names |
Wermuth, H. & Mertens, R. (1996) (reprint). Schildkröte, Krokodile, Brückenechsen. xvii + 506 pp. Jena (Gustav Fischer Verlag). |
|
|
Species and family names – with the exception of the retention of the following names Mauremys iversoni, Mauremys pritchardi, Ocadia glyphistoma, Ocadia philippeni, Sacalia pseudocellata, and except for the taxa mentioned below |
Fritz, U. & Havaš, P. (2007): Checklist of Chelonians of the World. Vertebrate Zoology, 57 (2): 149-368. Dresden. ISSN 1864-5755 [without its appendix] |
|
Emydidae |
Graptemys pearlensis |
Ennen, J. R., Lovich, J. E., Kreiser, B. R., Selman, W. & Qualls, C. P. (2010). Genetic and morphological variation between populations of the Pascagoula Map Turtle (Graptemys gibbonsi) in the Pearl and Pascagoula Rivers with description of a new species. Chelonian Conservation and Biology, 9 (1): 98-113. |
|
Geoemydidae |
Batagur affinis |
Praschag, P., Sommer, R. S., Mccarthy, C., Gemel, R. & Fritz, U. (2008). Naming one of the world's rarest chelonians, the southern Batagur. Zootaxa, 1758: 61-68. |
|
Geoemydidae |
Batagur borneoensis Batagur dhongoka Batagur kachuga Batagur trivittata |
Praschag, P., Hundsdörfer, A. K. & Fritz, U. (2007). Phylogeny and taxonomy of endangered South and South-east Asian freshwater turtles elucidated by mtDNA sequence variation (Testudines: Geoemydidae: Batagur, Callagur, Hardella, Kachuga, Pangshura). Zoologica Scripta, 36: 429-442. |
|
Geoemydidae |
Cuora bourreti Cuora picturata |
Spinks, P. Q., Thomson, R. C., Zhang, Y.P., Che, J., Wu, Y. & Shaffer, H. B. (2012). Species boundaries and phylogenetic relationships in the critically endangered Asian box turtle genus Cuora. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 63: 656–667. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2012.02.014. |
|
Geoemydidae |
Cyclemys enigmatica Cyclemys fusca Cyclemys gemeli Cyclemys oldhamii |
Fritz, U., Guicking, D., Auer, M., Sommer, R. S., Wink, M. & Hundsdörfer, A. K. (2008). Diversity of the Southeast Asian leaf turtle genus Cyclemys: how many leaves on its tree of life? Zoologica Scripta, 37: 367-390. |
|
Geoemydidae |
Mauremys reevesii |
Barth, D., Bernhard, D., Fritzsch, G. & U. Fritz (2004). The freshwater turtle genus Mauremys (Testudines, Geoemydidae) – a textbook example of an east-west disjunction or a taxonomic misconcept? Zoologica Scripta, 33: 213-221. |
|
Testudinidae |
Centrochelys sulcata |
Turtle Taxonomy Working Group [van Dijk, P. P., Iverson, J. B., Rhodin, A. G. J., Shaffer, H. B. & Bour, R. ]. (2014): Turtles of the world, 7TH edition: Annotated checklist of taxonomy, synonymy, distribution with maps, and conservation status. 000.v7. Chelonian Research Monographs, 5 doi: 10.3854/crm.5.000.checklist.v7.2014. |
|
Testudinidae |
Chelonoidis carbonarius Chelonoidis denticulatus Chelonoidis niger |
Olson, S .L. & David, N. (2014). The gender of the tortoise genus Chelonoidis Fitzinger, 1835 (Testudines: Testudinidae). - Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 126(4): 393-394. |
|
Testudinidae |
Gopherus morafkai |
Murphy, R. W., Berry, K. H., Edwards, T., Leviton, A. E., Lathrop, A. & Riedle, J. D. (2011). The dazed and confused identity of Agassiz’s land tortoise, Gopherus agassizii (Testudines, Testudinidae) with the description of a new species, and its consequences for conservation. Zookeys, 113: 39-71. |
|
Testudinidae |
Homopus solus |
Branch, W. R. (2007). A new species of tortoise of the genus Homopus (Chelonia: Testudinidae) from southern Namibia. African Journal of Herpetology, 56 (1): 1-21. |
|
Testudinidae |
Kinixys nogueyi Kinixys zombensis |
Kindler, C., Branch, W. R., Hofmeyr, M. D., Maran, J., Široký, P., Vences, M., Harvey, J., Hauswaldt, J. S., Schleicher, A., Stuckas, H. & Fritz, U. (2012). Molecular phylogeny of African hinge-back tortoises (Kinixys): implications for phylogeography and taxonomy (Testudines: Testudinidae). Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research, 50: 192–201. |
|
Trionychidae |
Lissemys ceylonensis |
Praschag, P., Stuckas, H., Päckert, M., Maran, J. & Fritz, U. (2011). Mitochondrial DNA sequences suggest a revised taxonomy of Asian flapshell turtles (Lissemys Smith, 1931) and the validity of previously unrecognized taxa (Testudines: Trionychidae). Vertebrate Zoology, 61 (1): 147-160. |
|
Trionychidae |
Nilssonia gangeticus Nilssonia hurum Nilssonia leithii Nilssonia nigricans |
Praschag, P., Hundsdörfer, A.K., Reza, A.H.M.A. & Fritz, U. (2007). Genetic evidence for wild-living Aspideretes nigricans and a molecular phylogeny of South Asian softshell turtles (Reptilia: Trionychidae: Aspideretes, Nilssonia). Zoologica Scripta, 36:301-310. |
AMPHIBIA |
|||
|
|
Amphibia spp. except for the taxa listed below |
Frost, D. R. (ed.) (2015). Taxonomic Checklist of Amphibian Species listed in the CITES Appendices and the Annexes of EC Regulation 338/97. Species information extracted from Amphibian Species of the World: a taxonomic and geographic reference, an online reference, version 6.0 as of May 2015 with additional comments by the Nomenclature Specialist of the CITES Animals Committee. See Annex 5 of CoP17 Doc. 81.1 at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/cop/17/WorkingDocs/E-CoP17-81-01-A5.pdf |
|
|
Anura: Microhylidae: Dyscophus spp and Scaphiophryne spp.; Telmatobiidae: Telmatobius culeus; and Caudata: Salamandridae: Paramesotriton hongkongensis |
FROST, D. R. (ed.) (2017). Species information extracted from Amphibian Species of the World: a taxonomic and geographic reference, an online reference, version 6.0, accessed 12 May 2017. See Annex 3 of AC29 Doc.35 at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/com/ac/29/E-AC29-35-A3.pdf |
|
|||
ELASMOBRANCHII, ACTINOPTERI, COELACANTHI, and DIPNEUSTI |
|||
|
|
All fish species, except the taxa listed below |
Eschmeyer, W.N. & Fricke, R. (eds.) (2015). Taxonomic Checklist of Fish species listed in the CITES Appendices and the Annexes of EC Regulation 338/97 (Elasmobranchii, Actinopteri, Coelacanthi, and Dipneusti, except the genus Hippocampus). Information extracted from Catalog of Fishes, an online reference, version update from 3 February 2015. See Annex 6 of CoP17 Doc. 81.1 at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/cop/17/WorkingDocs/E-CoP17-81-01-A6.pdf |
|
|
Elasmobranchii: Carcharhiniformes: Carcharhinidae: Carcharhinus falciformis; Lamniformes: Alopiidae: Alopias spp.; Myliobatiformes: Myliobatidae: Mobula spp.; Potamotrygonidae: Potamotrygon spp.; Actinopteri: Perciformes: Pomacanthidae: Holacanthus clarionensis |
ESCHMEYER, W. N., FRICKE, R., & VAN DER LAAN, R. (eds.) (2017). Information extracted from Catalog of Fishes: Genera, Species, References, an online reference, version of 28 April 2017, accessed 12 May 2017. See Annex 4 of AC29 Doc.35 at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/com/ac/29/E-AC29-35-A4.pdf |
SYNGNATHIFORMES |
Syngnathidae |
Hippocampus spp. |
Lourie, S. A., Pollom, R. A. and Foster, S. J. (2016). A global revision of the Seahorses Hippocampus Rafinesque 1810 (Actinopterygii: Sygnathiformes): Taxonomy and biogeography with recommendations for further research. Zootaxa, 4146 (1): 1-066. |
|
|||
ARACHNIDA |
|||
ARANEAE |
Theraphosidae |
Aphonopelma albiceps Aphonopelma pallidum Brachypelma spp. except for the taxa mentioned below |
Platnick, N. (2006). Taxonomic Checklist of CITES listed Spider Species. Information extracted from The World Spider Catalog, an online reference, Version 6.5 as of 7 April 2006. [available at http://www.cites.org/common/docs/Res/12_11/spider_checklist.pdf] |
|
Theraphosidae |
Brachypelma ruhnaui lumped with Brachypelma albiceps treated as Aphonopelma albiceps under CITES |
Platnick, N. I. (2014). The World Spider Catalogue, V15. http://platnick.sklipkani.cz/html/ |
|
Theraphosidae |
Brachypelma kahlenbergi |
Rudloff, J.-P. (2008). Eine neue Brachypelma-Art aus Mexiko (Araneae: Mygalomorphae: Theraphosidae: Theraphosinae). Arthropoda, 16 (2): 26-30. |
SCORPIONES |
Scorpionidae |
Pandinus spp. except for the taxa mentioned below |
Lourenço, W. R. & Cloudsley-Thompson, J. C. (1996). Recognition and distribution of the scorpions of the genus Pandinus Thorell, 1876 accorded protection by the Washington Convention. Biogeographica, 72 (3): 133-143. |
|
Scorpionidae |
Pandinus camerounensis Pandinus roeseli |
Lourenço, W. R. (2014). Further considerations on the identity and distribution of Pandinus imperator (C. L. Koch, 1841) and description of a new species from Cameroon (Scorpiones: Scorpionidae). Entomologische Mitteilungen aus dem Zoologischen Museum Hamburg, 17 (192): 139-151. |
|
|||
INSECTA |
|||
COLEOPTERA |
Lucanidae |
Colophon spp. |
Bartolozzi, L. (2005). Description of two new stag beetle species from South Africa (Coleoptera: Lucanidae). African Entomology, 13 (2): 347-352. |
LEPIDOPTERA |
Papilionidae |
Achillides spp. [only the species of the Philippines] |
Page, M. G. P. & Treadaway, C. G. (2004). Papilionidae of the Philippine Island. In: E. Bauer, and T. Frankenbach, Eds.). Butterflies of the world, Supplement 8. Goecke & Evers, Keltern. 58 pp. |
|
Papilionidae |
Ornithoptera spp. Trogonoptera spp. Troides spp. |
Matsuka, H. (2001). Natural History of Birdwing Butterflies. 367 pp. Tokyo (Matsuka Shuppan).(ISBN 4-9900697-0-6). |
|
|||
HIRUDINOIDEA |
|||
ARHYNCHOBDELLIDA |
Hirudinidae |
Hirudo medicinalis Hirudo verbana |
Nesemann, H. & Neubert, E. (1999). Annelida: Clitellata: Branchiobdellida, Acanthobdellea, Hirudine. Süßwasserfauna von Mitteleuropa, 6 (2), 178 pp., Berlin (Spektrum Akad. Verlag). ISBN 3-8274-0927-6. |
|
|||
BIVALVIA |
|||
VENEROIDA |
Tridacnidae |
Tridacna ningaloo |
Penny, S. & Willan, R. C. (2014). Description of a new species of giant clam (Bivalvia: Tridacnidae) from Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia. Molluscan Research, 34 (3): 201-211. |
|
Tridacnidae |
Tridacna noae |
Su, Y., Hung, J.-H., Kubo, H. & Liu, L.-L. (2014). Tridacna noae (Röding, 1798) – a valid giant clam species separated from T. maxima (Röding, 1798) by morphological and genetic data. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, 62: 124-135. |
CEPHALOPODA |
|||
|
Nautilidae |
Nautilidae spp. |
Family, genus and species information extracted from the Integrated Taxonomic Information Service (ITIS), an online reference. See Annex 5 of AC29 Doc.35 at https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/com/ac/29/E-AC29-35-A5.pdf |
|
|||
ANTHOZOA & HYDROZOA |
|
All CITES listed species |
Taxonomic Checklist of all CITES listed Coral Species, based on information compiled by UNEP-WCMC 2012. |
FLORA
|
|
Taxon concerned |
Taxonomic reference |
AMARYLLIDACEAE, PRIMULACEAE |
|
Cyclamen, Galanthus and Sternbergia |
Davis, A.P. et al. (1999). CITES Bulb Checklist, compiled by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland) as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Cyclamen and Galanthus and Sternbergia. |
APOCYNACEAE |
|
Pachypodium spp. |
CITES Aloe and Pachypodium Checklist (U. Eggli et al., 2001, compiled by Städtische Sukkulenten-Sammlung, Zurich, Switzerland, in collaboration with the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland) and its update: An Update and Supplement to the CITES Aloe & Pachypodium Checklist [J. M. Lüthy (2007), CITES Management Authority of Switzerland, Bern, Switzerland] as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Aloe and Pachypodium. |
|
|
Hoodia spp. |
Plants of Southern Africa: an annotated checklist. Germishuizen, G. & Meyer N. L. (eds.) (2003). Strelitzia 14: 150-151. National Botanical Institute, Pretoria, South Africa as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Hoodia. |
CACTACEAE |
|
All Cactaceae. |
CITES Cactaceae Checklist third edition (2016, compiled by D. Hunt) as a guideline when making reference to names of species of Cactaceae, and the amendments and updates outlined in A Supplement to the CITES Cactaceae Checklist Third Edition 2016 (Hunt, D. 2018). The checklist and its supplement can be found on the website of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, UK at ‘goo.gl/M26yL8’. |
CYCADACEAE, STANGERIACEAE and ZAMIACEAE |
|
All Cycadaceae, Stangeriaceae and Zamiaceae. |
The World List of Cycads: CITES and Cycads: Checklist 2013 (Roy Osborne, Michael A. Calonje, Ken D. Hill, Leonie Stanberg and Dennis Wm. Stevenson) in CITES and Cycads a user’s guide (Rutherford, C. et al., Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. UK 2013), as a guideline when making reference to names of species of Cycadaceae, Stangeriaceae and Zamiaceae. |
DICKSONIACEAE |
|
Dicksonia species of the Americas. |
Dicksonia species of the Americas (2003, compiled by Bonn Botanic Garden and the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation, Bonn, Germany) as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Dicksonia. |
DROSERACEAE, NEPENTHACEAE, SARRACENIACEAE |
|
Dionaea, Nepenthes and Sarracenia. |
CITES Carnivorous Plant Checklist (B. von Arx et al., 2001, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, UK) as a guideline when making reference to names of species of Dionaea, Nepenthes and Sarracenia. |
EBENACEAE |
|
Diospyros spp. – populations of Madagascar. |
The genus Diospyros in Madagascar: a Preliminary Checklist for CITES Parties (CVPM 2016) based on the Catalogue of the Vascular Plants of Madagascar is available on the Catalogue website. This reference is to be used as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Diospyros from Madagascar. See http://www.tropicos.org/ProjectWebPortal.aspx?pagename=Diospyros&projectid=17 .There is a link to the page here: http://www.tropicos.org/Name/40031908?projectid=17 and the pdf download is here: http://www.tropicos.org/docs/MadCat/Diospyros%20checklist%2028.03.2016.pdf For information only: Updates on new names will be regularly made available on the online database ‘Catalogue of the Vascular Plants of Madagascar’ (http://www.tropicos.org/Project/Madagascar). |
EUPHORBIACEAE |
|
Succulent species of Euphorbia. |
The CITES Checklist of Succulent Euphorbia Taxa (Euphorbiaceae), Second edition (S. Carter and U. Eggli, 2003, published by the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation, Bonn, Germany) as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of succulent euphorbias. |
LEGUMINOSAE |
|
Dalbergia spp. – populations of Madagascar |
A Preliminary Dalbergia checklist for Madagascar for CITES (CVPM 2014) based on the Catalogue of the Vascular Plants of Madagascar is available as a pdf on the CITES website as SC65 Inf. 21. This reference is to be used as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Dalbergia from Madagascar. See: https://cites.org/sites/default/files/eng/com/sc/65/Inf/E-SC65-Inf-21.pdf For information only: Updates on new names will be regularly made available on the online database ‘Catalogue of the Vascular Plants of Madagascar’. (http://www.tropicos.org/Project/Madagascar). |
LEGUMINOSAE |
|
Paubrasilia echinata |
Gagnon, E., Bruneau, A., Hughes, C.E., de Queiroz, L. P. & Lewis, G.P. (2016). A new generic system for the pantropical Caesalpinia group (Leguminosae) as a guideline making reference to the name of this taxon. This reference can be found on ‘https://phytokeys.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=9203’, with free access, and additional information on the taxon can be found at ‘http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/listaBrasil’ |
LEGUMINOSAE |
|
Platymiscium pleiostachyum |
Bente B. Klitgraard (2005). Platymiscium (Leguminosae: Dalbergieae); biogeography, systematics, morphology, taxonomy and uses. Kew Bulletin. Vol. 60, No. 3 (2005), pp. 321 – 400 be used as a guideline when making reference to the name of this taxon. This reference is available online at https://www.jstor.org/stable/4111062?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents. Free access is possible to this reference. |
LILIACEAE |
|
Aloe spp. |
CITES Aloe and Pachypodium Checklist (U. Eggli et al., 2001, compiled by Städtische Sukkulenten-Sammlung, Zurich, Switzerland, in collaboration with the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland) and its update: An Update and Supplement to the CITES Aloe & Pachypodium Checklist [J. M. Lüthy (2007), CITES Management Authority of Switzerland, Bern, Switzerland] as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Aloe and Pachypodium. |
ORCHIDACEAE |
|
Laelia, Phalaenopsis, Pleione and Sophronitis (Volume 1, 1995) and Cymbidium, Dendrobium, Disa, Dracula and Encyclia (Volume 2, 1997), and Aerangis, Angraecum, Ascocentrum, Bletilla, Brassavola, Calanthe, Catasetum, Miltonia, Miltonioides and Miltoniopsis, Renanthera, Renantherella, Rhynchostylis, Rossioglossum, Vanda and Vandopsis (Volume 3, 2001); and Aerides, Coelogyne, Comparettia and Masdevallia (Volume 4, 2006) |
CITES Orchid Checklist, (compiled by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, United Kingdom) as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Cattleya (not C. jongheana), Cypripedium, Laelia (not Laelia jongheana/Cattleya jongheana), Phalaenopsis, Pleione and Sophronitis (Volume 1, 1995) and Cymbidium, Dendrobium (not D. cruentum), Disa, Dracula and Encyclia (Volume 2, 1997), and Aerangis (not A. ellisii), Angraecum, Ascocentrum, Bletilla, Brassavola, Calanthe, Catasetum, Miltonia, Miltonioides and Miltoniopsis, Renanthera, Renantherella, Rhynchostylis, Rossioglossum, Vanda and Vandopsis (Volume 3, 2001); and Aerides, Coelogyne, Comparettia and Masdevallia (Volume 4, 2006). |
ORCHIDACEAE |
|
Paphiopedilum spp., Phragmipedium spp., Aerangis ellisii, Cattleya jongheana, Cattleya lobata, Dendrobium cruentum, Mexipedium xerophyticum, Peristeria elata and Renanthera imschootiana |
Govaerts, R., Caromel, A., Dhanda, S., Davis, F., Pavitt, A., Sinovas, P., & Vaglica, V. (2019). CITES Appendix I Orchid Checklist. Second Version, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Surrey, and UNEP-WCMC, Cambridge. This reference should be used as a guideline when making reference to the names of Paphiopedilum spp., Phragmipedium spp., Aerangis ellisii, Cattleya jongheana, Cattleya lobata, Dendrobium cruentum, Mexipedium xerophyticum, Peristeria elata and Renanthera imschootiana. This reference can be found on the website of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, UK at ‘goo.gl/M26yL8’. |
ORCHIDACEAE |
|
Bulbophyllum spp. |
CITES checklist for Bulbophyllum and allied taxa (Orchidaceae). Sieder, A., Rainer, H., Kiehn, M. (2007): Address of the authors: Department of Biogeography and Botanical Garden of the University of Vienna; Rennweg 14, A-1030 Vienna (Austria) as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Bulbophyllum. |
PALMAE |
|
Dypsis decipiens and Dypsis decaryi. |
Proposed Standard Reference for two CITES-listed palms endemic to Madagascar (CVPM 2016) based on the Catalogue of the Vascular Plants of Madagascar can be found as a pdf on the US Fish & Wildlife Service website. This is to be used as a guideline when making reference to Dypsis decipiens and Dypsis decaryi. See: http://www.fws.gov/international/ |
TAXACEAE |
|
Taxus spp. |
World Checklist and Bibliography of Conifers (A. Farjon, 2001) as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Taxus. |
ZYGOPHYLLACEAE |
|
Guaiacum spp. |
Lista de especies, nomenclatura y distribución en el genero Guaiacum. Davila Aranda. P. & Schippmann, U. (2006): Medicinal Plant Conservation 12:50 as a guideline when making reference to the names of species of Guaiacum. |
ANNEX IX
1. Codes for the indication in permits and certificates of the purpose of a transaction, referred to in Article 5(5)
B |
Breeding in captivity or artificial propagation |
E |
Educational |
G |
Botanical gardens |
H |
Hunting trophies |
L |
Law enforcement/judicial/forensic |
M |
Medical (including bio-medical research) |
N |
Reintroduction or introduction into the wild |
P |
Personal |
Q |
Travelling exhibitions (sample collection, circus, menagerie, plant exhibition, orchestra or museums exhibition that is used for commercial display for the public) |
S |
Scientific |
T |
Commercial |
Z |
Zoos |
2. Codes for the indication in permits and certificates of the source of specimens, referred to in Article 5(6)
W |
Specimens taken from the wild |
R |
Specimens of animals reared in a controlled environment, taken as eggs or juveniles from the wild, where they would otherwise have had a very low probability of surviving to adulthood |
D |
Annex A animals bred in captivity for commercial purposes in operations included in the Register of the CITES Secretariat, in accordance with Resolution Conf. 12.10 (Rev. CoP15), and Annex A plants artificially propagated for commercial purposes in accordance with Chapter XIII of Regulation (EC) No 865/2006, as well as parts and derivatives thereof |
A |
Annex A plants artificially propagated for non-commercial purposes and Annexes B and C plants artificially propagated in accordance with Chapter XIII of Regulation (EC) No 865/2006, as well as parts and derivatives thereof |
C |
Animals bred in captivity in accordance with Chapter XIII of Regulation (EC) No 865/2006, as well as parts and derivatives thereof |
F |
Animals born in captivity, but for which the criteria of Chapter XIII of Regulation (EC) No 865/2006 are not met, as well as parts and derivatives thereof |
I |
Confiscated or seized specimens ( 4 ) |
O |
Pre-Convention (4) |
U |
Source unknown (must be justified) |
X |
Specimens taken in the marine environment not under the jurisdiction of any State |
Y |
Plant specimens obtained from assisted production, which are considered not to be ‘artificially propagated’ as set out in Article 56, and also not considered to be taken from the wild because they are propagated or planted in an environment with some level of human intervention for the purpose of plant production |
ANNEX X
ANIMAL SPECIES REFERRED TO IN ARTICLE 62(1)
Aves
ANSERIFORMES
Anatidae
Anas laysanensis
Anas querquedula
Aythya nyroca
Branta ruficollis
Branta sandvicensis
Oxyura leucocephala
COLUMBIFORMES
Columbidae
Columba livia
GALLIFORMES
Phasianidae
Catreus wallichii
Colinus virginianus ridgwayi
Crossoptilon crossoptilon
Crossoptilon mantchuricum
Lophophorus impejanus
Lophura edwardsi
Lophura swinhoii
Polyplectron napoleonis
Syrmaticus ellioti
Syrmaticus humiae
Syrmaticus mikado
PASSERIFORMES
Fringillidae
Carduelis cucullata
PSITTACIFORMES
Psittacidae
Cyanoramphus novaezelandiae
Psephotus dissimilis
ANNEX XI
Types of biological samples referred to in Article 18 and their use
Type of sample |
Typical size of sample |
Use of sample |
blood and its derivative components |
5 ml maximum for liquid samples or dry blood sample on a microscope slide, filter paper or swab |
biomedical research; species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis, including serology |
internal tissues (botanical or zoological), fixed |
tissues (5 mm3-25 mm3) in a fixative or histological glass slide containing a +/-5um section of fixed tissue |
Histology and electon microscopy to detect organisms and poisons; taxonomic research; biomedical research; species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis |
internal tissues (botanical or zoological), frozen |
pieces of tissues (5 mm3-25 mm3) |
biomedical research; species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis |
internal tissues (botanical or zoological), fresh (excluding ova, sperm and embryos) |
pieces of tissues (5 mm3 - 25 mm3) |
biomedical research; species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis |
external tissues including hair, skin, feathers, scales, bone, egg shell, teeth, ivory, horn, leaves, bark, seeds, fruit or flowers |
Individual samples with or without fixative for ivory: pieces of ivory approximately 3 cm x 3 cm and 1 cm thick or less depending on analysis method, in accordance with ICCWC Guidelines on methods and procedures for ivory and laboratory analysis (1) for rhino horn: small amounts of powder/shavings sealed in a tamper proof sample bottle, in accordance with the Procedure for Rhino horn DNA Sampling (2) |
species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis; age analysis; biomedical research |
buccal/cloacal/ mucus/nasal/urinary tract/rectal swabs |
small amounts of tissue or cells on a swab in a tube |
species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis, including serology; biomedical research |
cell lines and tissue cultures |
no limitation of sample size |
biomedical research; species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis; age analysis |
DNA or RNA (purified) |
up to 0.5 ml volumes per individual specimen of purified DNA or RNA |
biomedical research; species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis; age analysis |
secretions, (saliva, venom, milk, plant secretions) |
1-5 ml in vials |
production of anti-venom; biomedical research; species identification; determination of geographic origin; sex determination; individual identification; parentage testing; toxicology analysis; disease testing/diagnosis, including serology; age analysis |
(1)
https://www.unodc.org/documents/Wildlife/Guidelines_Ivory.pdf
(2)
Republic of South Africa, Department of Environmental Affairs, Procedures for Rhino horn DNA Sampling. |
ANNEX XII
Correlation Table
Regulation (EC) No 1808/2001 |
This Regulation |
Article 1 (a) and (b) |
Article 1 (1) and (2) |
Article 1 (c) |
— |
Article 1 (d), (e) and (f) |
Article 1 (3), (4) and (5) |
— |
Article 1 (6), (7) and (8) |
Article 2(1) and (2) |
Article 2(1) and (2) |
— |
Article 2(3) and (4) |
Article 2(3) and (4) |
Article 2(5) and (6) |
Article 3 |
Article 3 |
Article 4(1) and (2) |
Article 4(1) and (2) |
Article 4(3) (a) and (b) |
Article 5, first paragraph, (1) and (2) |
— |
Article 5, first paragraph, (3) |
Article 4(3) (c), (d) and (e) |
Article 5, first paragraph, (4), (5) and (6) |
Article 4(4) |
Article 6 |
Article 4(5) |
Article 7 |
Article 5 |
Article 8 |
Article 6 |
Article 9 |
Article 7(1) |
Article 10 |
Article 7(2) |
Article 11 |
Article 7(3) and (4) |
Article 12 |
Article 8(1) |
Article 13 |
Article 8(2) |
Article 14 |
Article 8(3) |
Article 15(1) and (2) |
Article 8(4) |
Article 15(3) and (4) |
Article 8(5) |
Article 16 |
Article 8(6) and (7) |
Article 17 |
— |
Article 18-19 |
Article 9 |
Article 20 |
Article 10 |
Article 21 |
Article 11 |
Article 22 |
Article 12 |
Article 23 |
Article 13 |
Article 24 |
Article 14 |
Article 25 |
Article 15 |
Article 26 |
Article 16 |
Article 27 |
Article 17 |
Article 28 |
Article 18 |
Article 29 |
— |
Articles 30-44 |
Article 19 |
Article 45 |
Article 20(1) |
Article 46 |
Article 20(2) |
Article 47 |
Article 20(3) (a) and (b) |
Article 48(1) (a) and (b) |
Article 20(3) (c) |
— |
Article 20(3) (d) and (e) |
Article 48(1) (c) and (d) |
Article 20(4) |
Article 49 |
Article 20(5) and (6) |
Article 50(1) and (2) |
Article 21 |
Article 51 |
Article 22 |
Article 52 |
Article 23 |
Article 53 |
Article 24 |
Article 54 |
Article 25 |
Article 55 |
Article 26 |
Article 56 |
Article 27(1) first and second indents and subsequent text |
Article 57(1) (a), (b) and (c) |
Article 27(2), (3) and (4) |
Article 57(2), (3) and (4) |
Article 27(5) (a) and (b) |
Article 57(5) (a) and (b) |
— |
Article 57(5) (c) and (d) |
Article 28(1), first and second indents |
Article 58(1) (a) and (b) |
Article 28(2) and (3) |
Article 58(2) and (3) |
Article 28(4) (a) and (b) |
Article 58(4) |
Article 29 |
Article 59 |
Article 30 |
Article 60 |
Article 31 |
Article 61 |
Article 32 |
Article 62 |
Article 33 |
Article 63 |
Article 34(1) |
— |
Article 34(2) (a) to (f) |
Article 64(1) (a) to (f) |
Article 34(2) (g) and (h) |
Article 64(2) |
Article 35(1) and (2) |
Article 65(1) and (2) |
Article 35(3) (a) and (b) |
Article 65(3) |
— |
Article 65(4) |
Article 36(1) |
Article 66(1), (2) and (3) |
Article 36(2) |
Article 66(4) |
Article 36(3) and (4) |
Article 66(5) and (6) |
— |
Article 66(7) |
Article 36(5) |
Article 66(8) |
Article 37 |
Article 67 |
Article 38 |
Article 68 |
Article 39 |
Article 69 |
Article 40 |
Article 70 |
Article 41 |
Article 71 |
Article 42 |
Article 74 |
Article 43 |
Article 72 |
Article 44 |
Article 73 |
Article 45 |
Article 75 |
Annex I |
Annex I |
Annex II |
Annex II |
— |
Annex III |
— |
Annex IV |
Annex III |
Annex V |
Annex IV |
Annex VI |
Annex V |
Annex VII |
Annex VI |
Annex VIII |
Annex VII |
Annex IX |
Annex VIII |
Annex X |
— |
Annex XI |
— |
Annex XII |
( 1 ) OJ L 242, 7.9.2012, p. 13.
( 1 ) OJ L 344, 7.12.1983, p. 1.
( 2 ) Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2015/57 of 15 January 2015 amending Implementing Regulation (EU) No 792/2012 as regards the rules for the design of permits, certificates and other documents provided for in Council Regulation (EC) No 338/97 on the protection of species of wild fauna and flora by regulating trade therein and in Commission Regulation (EC) No 865/2006 laying down detailed rules concerning the implementation of Council Regulation (EC) No 338/97 (OJ L 10, 16.1.2015, p. 19).
( 2 ) To be used only in conjunction with another source code.