94-14504. Wild Bird Conservation Act (WBCA) of 1992; Petition for a Moratorium on Imports of Wild Birds From Guyana Into the United States  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 114 (Wednesday, June 15, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-14504]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: June 15, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
     
    
    Wild Bird Conservation Act (WBCA) of 1992; Petition for a 
    Moratorium on Imports of Wild Birds From Guyana Into the United States
    
    AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
    
    ACTION: Notice of petition receipt.
    
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    SUMMARY: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) announces the 
    receipt of a petition to impose a moratorium on the imports of wild 
    birds from Guyana into the United States under the Wild Bird 
    Conservation Act of 1992. The petition has been found to present 
    sufficient information indicating that imposing a moratorium on the 
    imports of wild birds from Guyana may be warranted under the WBCA, and 
    that the trade in wild birds from Guyana may be detrimental to species' 
    survival. Through the issuance of this notice, the Service requests 
    additional data, comments, and suggestions from the public, other 
    concerned governmental agencies, the scientific community, industry, or 
    any other interested party concerning trade in, and the status of, wild 
    bird species in Guyana.
    
    DATES: The Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) will consider comments 
    and information received by September 13, 1994 in making a final 
    decision on this petition.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments and information should be sent to: Director, U.S. 
    Fish and Wildlife Service, c/o Mr. Marshall P. Jones, Chief, Office of 
    Management Authority, 4401 N. Fairfax Dr., Room 420 C, Arlington VA 
    22203.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Susan S. Lieberman, Office of 
    Management Authority, at the above address, telephone (703) 358-2093.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On October 23, 1992, the Wild Bird 
    Conservation Act (WBCA) was signed into law. The purposes of the WBCA 
    include promoting the conservation of exotic birds by: ensuring that 
    all imports into the United States of species of exotic birds are 
    biologically sustainable and not detrimental to the species; ensuring 
    that imported birds are not subject to inhumane treatment; and 
    assisting wild bird conservation and management programs in countries 
    of origin.
        Pursuant to Section 108(a)(2)(B), ``Moratoria for species not 
    covered by Convention'' of the WBCA, the Secretary of the Interior 
    (Secretary) is authorized to establish a moratorium on the importation 
    of all species of exotic birds from a particular country, if the 
    Secretary determines that:
        1. The country has not developed and implemented a management 
    program for exotic birds in trade generally, that ensures both the 
    conservation and the humane treatment of exotic birds during capture, 
    transport, and maintenance; and
        2. The moratorium or quota is necessary for the conservation of the 
    species or is otherwise consistent with the purpose of the WBCA.
        This notice is based on various documents, including published and 
    unpublished studies, and agency documents. These documents are on file 
    in the Service's Office of Management Authority, and are available on 
    request.
        On August 30, 1993, the Animal Welfare Institute, Defenders of 
    Wildlife, and the Environmental Investigation Agency submitted a 
    petition (AWI petition) to the Department of the Interior requesting 
    that the Secretary impose a moratorium on the import of wild exotic 
    birds from Guyana under the WBCA.
        Guyana is slightly smaller in size than the state of Idaho, 
    measuring 214,970 km\2\ and 63% of this acreage is forest habitat. Its 
    rainforests contain much biodiversity and an abundance of wildlife, 
    although the number of bird species found in Guyana is presently 
    unknown (WCMC 1992). Guyana has been one of the major exporters of 
    neotropical birds (Mulliken et al. 1992).
        The majority of birds exported from Guyana have been psittacines, 
    including Amazon parrots, macaws, and a variety of conures and 
    parakeets. Between 1983 and 1989, 172,557 specimens of 31 species of 
    wild-caught psittacines were exported from Guyana (Edwards 1992). Due 
    to mortalities in capture, holding, and transport, far more were 
    removed from the wild during the same period.
        The European Community (EC) banned imports from Guyana in 1986 and 
    in response, Guyana imposed a nine-month suspension of exports in 1986-
    87. Guyana reopened bird exports in 1987 and instituted an export quota 
    system, although that quota system was not based on scientific 
    analyses. The number of birds exported in 1988 was 19,641 and in 1989 
    was 15,325 (Edwards 1992). In May of 1993, Guyana temporarily suspended 
    the export of wildlife, including birds until further notice. That 
    trade suspension is still in effect.
        The capture and trade of wild birds in Guyana is regulated by the 
    Wildlife Services Division, Department of Crops and Livestock, Ministry 
    of Agriculture, which serves as the Convention on International Trade 
    in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) Management 
    Authority for Guyana. Within this Division, the day-to-day 
    administration is the responsibility of the Assistant Chief Crops and 
    Livestock Officer who serves as head of the Wildlife Services Division. 
    The National Research Council of Guyana is the designated CITES 
    Scientific Authority, although it has been inactive and has made no 
    recommendations in the establishment of wildlife trade quotas (Edwards 
    1992). The Service is not aware of any scientific research having been 
    carried out by or in conjunction with the National Research Council of 
    Guyana.
        The Wild Birds Protection Act of 1919, as amended in 1969, is the 
    only Guyana law specific to wildlife (Edwards 1992). In 1977, Guyana 
    became a signatory to CITES, and the Wildlife Services Division 
    presently operates under an `Administrative Agreement' with the Senior 
    Minister of Agriculture to implement CITES. Actions taken by the 
    Division, including the issuance or termination of export licenses, 
    assignment of quotas, and establishment of export levies are all 
    undertaken within the framework of this Administrative Agreement 
    (Edwards 1992). Information available to the Service does not indicate 
    that Guyana has comprehensive CITES-implementing legislation.
        The export of wild birds from Guyana is regulated by a system of 
    quotas. This system was established in 1987 in response to the 1986 EC 
    ban on wildlife imports from Guyana. The EC initiated that ban on the 
    grounds that Guyana lacked a proper management program for psittacine 
    exports. The EC lifted the import ban following implementation of the 
    1987 quota system.
        The Wildlife Services Division of Guyana assigns quotas for each 
    species at levels below those which they believe may threaten wild 
    populations (Edwards 1992). Following the assignment of species' 
    quotas, the Wildlife Services Division establishes individual quotas 
    for each exporter. In the absence of any population surveys or 
    scientific data, export quotas are calculated on the basis of 
    exporters' previous trade levels (Edwards 1992). The Division has 
    reduced or eliminated the quota for certain species upon advice from 
    the CITES Secretariat. The species quotas have remained unchanged since 
    1990.
        The government of Guyana has not undertaken any field surveys of 
    wild bird species in trade (Edwards 1992) nor is the Service aware of 
    any demographic studies of wild bird populations being undertaken. In 
    the absence of such studies, there is insufficient scientific 
    information on which to base the sustainable management of wild bird 
    populations in Guyana and to determine that such trade is not 
    detrimental to the species. Lastly, export quotas that do not 
    incorporate capture quotas make no provision for mortalities during 
    capture, transport, and maintenance, with further potential detriment 
    to species in the wild.
        The AWI petition claimed that export quotas for macaws and Amazon 
    parrots were exceedingly high in the absence of scientific information. 
    These are K-selected species which are long-lived, have delayed sexual 
    maturity, and exhibit low reproductive rates in the wild. Guyana is 
    South and Central America's largest exporter of macaws and export 
    quotas for 1991 included 6,000 macaws of the following species: Blue 
    and Gold macaw (Ara ararauna), Green-winged macaw (Ara chloroptera), 
    Red-bellied macaw (Ara manilata), and Red-shouldered macaw (Ara 
    nobilis).
        In addition to psittacine exports, Guyana has been one of the 
    largest exporters of toucans to the United States. Very little 
    scientific information exists on the status of wild populations of 
    toucans, and the Service is not aware of any scientific assessment of 
    the sustainable utilization of toucans.
        No records on the domestic trade in Guyana of wild birds are 
    available (Edwards 1992) and this trade is neither monitored nor 
    regulated. Many species of macaws and toucans are used in subsistence 
    hunting by Amerindians. The effects of the domestic trade and 
    subsistence use on wild bird populations remain unknown.
        The AWI petition provided information on the alleged illegal trade 
    in psittacines from Venezuela to Guyana. Desenne and Strahl (1991) 
    reviewed the current status of psittacine populations in Venezuela and 
    concluded that the smuggling of birds illegally taken in Venezuela and 
    exported from Guyana was a conservation threat to wild parrot 
    populations in Venezuela, particularly those in the Orinoco Delta 
    region. In October of 1991, the Sociedad Conservacionista Audubon de 
    Venezuela (Venezuela Audubon Conservation Society) expressed its 
    concern to the CITES Secretariat on the illegal trade in birds from 
    Venezuela and cited recent law enforcement seizures of illegal birds by 
    the Venezuelan Fish and Wildlife Service and National Guard in the 
    Orinoco Delta.
        There appear to be no measures to ensure the humane treatment of 
    wild birds during capture, transport and maintenance in Guyana, in 
    spite of relevant CITES requirements. The AWI petition provided 
    unpublished data extracted from analyses of U.S. Department of 
    Agriculture Quarantine Forms which show that transport mortality for 
    Guyanese birds is relatively high.
        After a review of the petition and other information available to 
    it, the Service concludes that imposing a moratorium on the imports of 
    wild birds from Guyana may be warranted under the WBCA, and that the 
    trade in wild birds from Guyana may be detrimental to species' 
    survival. The information available indicates that Guyana has been 
    unable to implement a management program for wild birds in trade that 
    ensures both the conservation of the species and the humane treatment 
    of birds during capture, trade and maintenance.
        On November 16, 1993, the Service published a final rule (in 50 CFR 
    Part 15) in the Federal Register (58 FR 60524), that established the 
    prohibitions and requirements of the WBCA, and permit issuance 
    procedures for four types of permits established by the WBCA. No CITES-
    listed birds can be imported into the United States, including from 
    Guyana, unless they are accompanied by an import permit issued by the 
    Office of Management Authority of the Service, or are on an approved 
    list. The approved list has not yet been finalized. It will contain 
    exclusively captive-bred species (wherein all birds in trade are bred 
    in captivity), approved breeding facilities, and species with approved 
    management plans for wild caught birds. The Service's proposed 
    regulations for implementing these approvals were published in the 
    Federal Register, March 17, 1994 (59 FR 12784), and included criteria 
    for the approval of scientifically-based sustainable use management 
    plans, as required by the WBCA. The Service will consider all comments 
    and information received by May 16, 1994 in formulating a final 
    decision for these approvals, except for scientifically-based 
    sustainable use management plans for which the Service will consider 
    comments and information received by June 15, 1994 in formulating a 
    final decision.
        Therefore, although the importation of CITES-listed exotic bird 
    species from Guyana is currently prohibited, non-CITES-listed birds can 
    be imported into the United States from Guyana. If, at the close of the 
    comment period, information received in response to this notice and 
    other information available in the administrative record supports 
    action under Sec. 108 of the WBCA, the Service may grant the petition 
    and propose a suspension in trade in all wild exotic birds from Guyana.
    
    Public Comments Solicited
    
        The Service intends that any final decision resulting from its 
    evaluation of this petition will be as accurate and as effective as 
    possible. Therefore, any comments or data from the public, other 
    concerned governmental agencies, the scientific or conservation 
    communities, trade organizations, or any other interested party 
    concerning any aspect of the wild bird trade in Guyana are hereby 
    solicited. The Service is particularly interested in receiving 
    information on the status and any population data on the psittacines of 
    Guyana, including the Ara and Amazona species.
    
    References Cited
    
    Desenne, P. and S. Strahl. 1991. Trade and the conservation status 
    of the family Psittacidae in Venezuela. Bird Conservation 
    International, 1:153-269.
    Edwards, S. R. 1992. Wild bird trade: perceptions and management in 
    the Cooperative Republic of Guyana. In J. B. Thomsen, S. R. Edwards, 
    and T. A. Mulliken (eds.) Perceptions, Conservation and Management 
    of Wild Birds in Trade. Pp. 93-116. Traffic International.
    Mulliken, T. A., S. R. Broad, and J. B. Thomsen. 1992. The Wild Bird 
    Trade--an Overview. In J. B. Thomsen, S. R. Edwards, and T. A. 
    Mulliken (eds.) Perceptions, Conservation and Management of Wild 
    Birds in Trade. Pp. 1-42. Traffic International. Cambridge, UK.
    World Conservation Monitoring Centre (WCMC). 1992. Global 
    biodiversity: status of the earth's living resources. Chapman and 
    Hall, New York.
    
        Dated: June 1, 1994.
    Bruce Blanchard,
    Deputy Director.
    [FR Doc. 94-14504 Filed 6-14-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4310-55-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/15/1994
Department:
Interior Department
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice of petition receipt.
Document Number:
94-14504
Dates:
The Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) will consider comments and information received by September 13, 1994 in making a final decision on this petition.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: June 15, 1994