Saving What Remains



CITES

CITES was established in 1973 to restrict the trade of endangered plant and animal species. There are 124 signatory countries, each of which is responsible for carrying out the rules of the convention in its own country and for helping other country members enforce the treaty There are three appendixes:

Appendix 1: includes species, sub-species, and populations threatened with extinction that are affected by trade. Commercial trade is these species is prohibited.

Appendix 2: Includes species, subspecies, and populations that may become threatened with extinction if trade is not strictly controlled. Trade requires an export permit issued by the proper authorities of the export country

Appendix 3: Includes species, subspecies, and populations subject to regulation within individual countries. Commercial trade is subject to export permits

CITES Delegates Vote to Shield Endangered Species - 2002 Update on CITES

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Solutions Introduction
Sustainable Forest Products
Large-scale Forest Products
Medicinal Drugs
Logging
Logging (con't)
Oil
Conservation Priorities
Reserve Size & Valuation
Organization
Intergovernmental Institutions
Communication, Education
Indigenous people
- - - -
References (1)
References (3)
References (5)

Sustainable Dev - Agriculture
Eco-tourism
Foods & Genetic Diversity
Medicinal Drugs & Pesticides
Logging (con't)
Cattle
Increasing Productivity
Types of Reserves
Funding
Developing nations
NGOs
International Organizations
Conclusion
- - - -
References (2)
References (4)
References (6)

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Copyright Rhett Butler 1994-2005