The Wildlife and Countryside (Registration and Ringing of Certain Captive Birds) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2004
Citation, commencement, and extent1.
(1)
These Regulations may be cited as the Wildlife and Countryside (Registration and Ringing of Certain Captive Birds) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2004 and shall come into force on 5th April 2004.
(2)
These Regulations apply in relation to England only.
Amendment2.
(a)
(b)
“(3)
The Secretary of State shall not register any bird unless he is satisfied that the bird has been ringed as required, or that the exception provided by paragraph (3) of regulation 5 applies.”;
(c)
in regulation 4 (termination of registration)—
(i)
paragraphs (1) and (1A) are omitted; and
(ii)
“(b)
when the ring obtained from the Secretary of State, or, as the case may be, the accepted CITES marking, is removed, or the writing or numbering on it, or the information stored in it, can no longer be read;”;
(d)
in regulation 5 (ringing)—
(i)
at the end of paragraph (1) add “unless the Secretary of State waives this requirement under paragraph (3)”; and
(ii)
“(3)
In any case where the Secretary of State is satisfied that the bird is marked in accordance with the specimen marking requirements of European Regulations4 implementing paragraph 7 of Article VI of CITES he may waive the requirement in paragraph (1). Where he does so, he shall provide the applicant with a certificate to such effect.”.
Section 7 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 (“the Act”) and regulations made under that section (the Wildlife and Countryside (Registration and Ringing of Certain Captive Birds) Regulations 1982, as amended by the Wildlife and Countryside (Registration and Ringing of Certain Captive Birds) (Amendment) Regulations of 1991 and 1994) provide for the registration and ringing of captive birds included in Schedule 4 to the Act.
Schedule 4 to the Act was amended by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 (Variation of Schedule 4) Order 1994 (S.I. 1994 No. 1151).
These Regulations amend the 1982 Regulations so that registration no longer ceases every three years, requiring renewal. They also allow the Secretary of State to accept a marking of a bird in accordance with European Regulations implementing the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora as an alternative to a ring provided by the Secretary of State.