Trade in Endangered Species Order 2014
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Checklist of the Mammals of Indonesia
CHECKLIST OF THE MAMMALS OF INDONESIA Scientific, English, Indonesia Name and Distribution Area Table in Indonesia Including CITES, IUCN and Indonesian Category for Conservation i ii CHECKLIST OF THE MAMMALS OF INDONESIA Scientific, English, Indonesia Name and Distribution Area Table in Indonesia Including CITES, IUCN and Indonesian Category for Conservation By Ibnu Maryanto Maharadatunkamsi Anang Setiawan Achmadi Sigit Wiantoro Eko Sulistyadi Masaaki Yoneda Agustinus Suyanto Jito Sugardjito RESEARCH CENTER FOR BIOLOGY INDONESIAN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCES (LIPI) iii © 2019 RESEARCH CENTER FOR BIOLOGY, INDONESIAN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCES (LIPI) Cataloging in Publication Data. CHECKLIST OF THE MAMMALS OF INDONESIA: Scientific, English, Indonesia Name and Distribution Area Table in Indonesia Including CITES, IUCN and Indonesian Category for Conservation/ Ibnu Maryanto, Maharadatunkamsi, Anang Setiawan Achmadi, Sigit Wiantoro, Eko Sulistyadi, Masaaki Yoneda, Agustinus Suyanto, & Jito Sugardjito. ix+ 66 pp; 21 x 29,7 cm ISBN: 978-979-579-108-9 1. Checklist of mammals 2. Indonesia Cover Desain : Eko Harsono Photo : I. Maryanto Third Edition : December 2019 Published by: RESEARCH CENTER FOR BIOLOGY, INDONESIAN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCES (LIPI). Jl Raya Jakarta-Bogor, Km 46, Cibinong, Bogor, Jawa Barat 16911 Telp: 021-87907604/87907636; Fax: 021-87907612 Email: [email protected] . iv PREFACE TO THIRD EDITION This book is a third edition of checklist of the Mammals of Indonesia. The new edition provides remarkable information in several ways compare to the first and second editions, the remarks column contain the abbreviation of the specific island distributions, synonym and specific location. Thus, in this edition we are also corrected the distribution of some species including some new additional species in accordance with the discovery of new species in Indonesia. -
Nasus Externus Und Cavum Nasi Beim Männlichen Adulten Hirscheber (Babyrousa Sp.)
Aus dem Department für Pathobiologie der Veterinärmedizinischen Universität Wien Institut für Anatomie und Histologie (Vorstand: Univ.-Prof. Dr.rer.nat. Armin Saalmüller) Nasus externus und Cavum nasi beim männlichen adulten Hirscheber (Babyrousa sp.) Eine morphologische Fallstudie Diplomarbeit zur Erlangung der Würde einer Magistra Medicinae Veterinariae der Veterinärmedizinischen Universität Wien vorgelegt von Lena Hamacher Wien, im März 2011 BETREUER: Univ.-Prof.Dr.med.vet. Gerald Weissengruber Department für Pathobiologie der Veterinärmedizinischen Universität Wien GUTACHTER: Ao.Prof.Dr. Sibylle Kneissl 2 Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Einleitung & Fragestellung ....................................................................................................... 4 1.1 Allgemeines über den Hirscheber ................................................................................... 4 1.2. Literaturübersicht ................................................................................................................ 7 1.3 Fragestellung ........................................................................................................................... 9 2. Tiere, Material und Methodik ............................................................................................... 10 2.1. Tiere & Material ................................................................................................................. 10 2.2 Methodik ............................................................................................................................... -
3 Translation from Norwegian Regulation on the Import
Translation from Norwegian Regulation on the import, export, re-export and transfer or possession of threatened species of wild flora and fauna (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, CITES) Commended by Royal Decree of xx xx 2016 on the authority of the Act of 19 June 2009 no. 100 relating to the Management of Nature Diversity, section 26; the Act of 15 June 2001 no. 79 relating to Environmental Protection on Svalbard, section 26, second paragraph: and the Act of 27 February 1930 no. 2 relating to Jan Mayen, section 2, third paragraph. Commended by Ministry of Climate and Environment. Chapter 1 - Purpose and scope 1. Purpose The purpose of this Regulation is to conserve natural wild species which are, or may become, threatened with extinction as the result of trade. 2. Objective scope This Regulation concerns the import, export and re-export of specimens, alive or dead, of animal and plant species cited in Annex 1. Re-export shall mean export of any specimen that has previously been introduced into the Regulation area. This Regulation also concerns domestic transfer and possession of specimens, alive or dead, of animal and plant species cited in Annex 1. The first and second subparagraphs also concern parts of products that are prepared from or declared as prepared from such species. Hunting trophies are also considered to be dead specimens/ products. Hunting trophy means the whole or recognisable parts of animals, either raw, processed or produced. The first, second and third subparagraphs also concern hybrids. Hybrid means the re-crossing of specimens of species regulated under CITES as far back as the fourth generation, with specimens of species not regulated under CITES. -
F3999f15-C572-46Ad-Bbbe
THE STATUTES OF THE REPUBLIC OF SINGAPORE ENDANGERED SPECIES (IMPORT AND EXPORT) ACT (CHAPTER 92A) (Original Enactment: Act 5 of 2006) REVISED EDITION 2008 (1st January 2008) Prepared and Published by THE LAW REVISION COMMISSION UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF THE REVISED EDITION OF THE LAWS ACT (CHAPTER 275) Informal Consolidation – version in force from 22/6/2021 CHAPTER 92A 2008 Ed. Endangered Species (Import and Export) Act ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS PART I PRELIMINARY Section 1. Short title 2. Interpretation 3. Appointment of Director-General and authorised officers PART II CONTROL OF IMPORT, EXPORT, ETC., OF SCHEDULED SPECIES 4. Restriction on import, export, etc., of scheduled species 5. Control of scheduled species in transit 6. Defence to offence under section 4 or 5 7. Issue of permit 8. Cancellation of permit PART III ENFORCEMENT POWERS AND PROCEEDINGS 9. Power of inspection 10. Power to investigate and require information 11. Power of entry, search and seizure 12. Powers ancillary to inspections and searches 13. Power to require scheduled species to be marked, etc. 14. Power of arrest 15. Forfeiture 16. Obstruction 17. Penalty for false declarations, etc. 18. General penalty 19. Abetment of offences 20. Offences by bodies corporate, etc. 1 Informal Consolidation – version in force from 22/6/2021 Endangered Species (Import and 2008 Ed. Export) CAP. 92A 2 PART IV MISCELLANEOUS Section 21. Advisory Committee 22. Fees, etc., payable to Board 23. Board not liable for damage caused to goods or property as result of search, etc. 24. Jurisdiction of court, etc. 25. Composition of offences 26. Exemption 27. Service of documents 28. -
Trade in Endangered Species Order 2011
Reprint as at 14 September 2014 Trade in Endangered Species Order 2011 (SR 2011/369) Trade in Endangered Species Order 2011: revoked, on 14 September 2014, by clause 4 of the Trade in Endangered Species Order 2014 (LI 2014/259). Jerry Mateparae, Governor-General Order in Council At Wellington this 10th day of October 2011 Present: His Excellency the Governor-General in Council Pursuant to section 53 of the Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989, His Excellency the Governor-General, acting on the advice and with the consent of the Executive Council, makes the following order. Contents Page 1 Title 2 2 Commencement 2 Note Changes authorised by subpart 2 of Part 2 of the Legislation Act 2012 have been made in this official reprint. Note 4 at the end of this reprint provides a list of the amendments incorporated. This order is administered by the Department of Conservation. 1 Reprinted as at cl 1 Trade in Endangered Species Order 2011 14 September 2014 3 New Schedules 1, 2, and 3 substituted in Trade in 2 Endangered Species Act 1989 4 Revocation 2 Schedule 3 New Schedules 1, 2, and 3 substituted in Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 Order 1 Title This order is the Trade in Endangered Species Order 2011. 2 Commencement This order comes into force on the 28th day after the date of its notification in the Gazette. 3 New Schedules 1, 2, and 3 substituted in Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 The Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 is amended by revoking Schedules 1, 2, and 3 and substituting the schedules set out in the Schedule of this order. -
The Archaeology of Sulawesi Current Research on the Pleistocene to the Historic Period
terra australis 48 Terra Australis reports the results of archaeological and related research within the south and east of Asia, though mainly Australia, New Guinea and Island Melanesia — lands that remained terra australis incognita to generations of prehistorians. Its subject is the settlement of the diverse environments in this isolated quarter of the globe by peoples who have maintained their discrete and traditional ways of life into the recent recorded or remembered past and at times into the observable present. List of volumes in Terra Australis Volume 1: Burrill Lake and Currarong: Coastal Sites in Southern Volume 28: New Directions in Archaeological Science. New South Wales. R.J. Lampert (1971) A. Fairbairn, S. O’Connor and B. Marwick (2008) Volume 2: Ol Tumbuna: Archaeological Excavations in the Eastern Volume 29: Islands of Inquiry: Colonisation, Seafaring and the Central Highlands, Papua New Guinea. J.P. White (1972) Archaeology of Maritime Landscapes. G. Clark, F. Leach Volume 3: New Guinea Stone Age Trade: The Geography and and S. O’Connor (2008) Ecology of Traffic in the Interior. I. Hughes (1977) Volume 30: Archaeological Science Under a Microscope: Studies in Volume 4: Recent Prehistory in Southeast Papua. B. Egloff (1979) Residue and Ancient DNA Analysis in Honour of Thomas H. Loy. M. Haslam, G. Robertson, A. Crowther, S. Nugent Volume 5: The Great Kartan Mystery. R. Lampert (1981) and L. Kirkwood (2009) Volume 6: Early Man in North Queensland: Art and Archaeology Volume 31: The Early Prehistory of Fiji. G. Clark and in the Laura Area. A. Rosenfeld, D. Horton and J. Winter A. -
No. 407/2009 Amending Council Regulation (EC)
19.5.2009 EN Official Journal of the European Union L 123/3 COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No 407/2009 of 14 May 2009 amending Council Regulation (EC) No 338/97 on the protection of species of wild fauna and flora by regulating trade therein THE COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES, Bolitoglossa dofleini, Cynops ensicauda, Echinotriton andersoni, Pachytriton labiatus, Paramesotriton spp., Sala mandra algira and Tylototriton spp. – which are currently not listed in the Annex to Regulation (EC) No 338/97 – Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European are being imported into the Community in such numbers Community, as to warrant monitoring. Those species should therefore be included in Annex D to the Annex to Regulation (EC) No 338/97. Having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 338/97 of 9 December 1996 on the protection of species of wild fauna and flora by regulating trade therein ( 1), and in particular Article 19(3) thereof, (5) At the 14th Conference of the Parties to CITES in June 2007 new nomenclatural references for animals were adopted. Some inconsistencies between the CITES Appendices and the scientific names in those nomen clatural references as regards the species Asarcornis Whereas: scutulata and Pezoporus occidentalis, the families Rheobatra chidae and Phasianidae as well as the order Scandentia were discovered. Since those inconsistencies also appear in the Annex to Regulation (EC) No 338/97, it should be (1) Regulation (EC) No 338/97 lists animal and plant species adapted accordingly. in respect of which trade is restricted or controlled. Those lists incorporate the lists set out in the Appendices to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, hereinafter ‘the CITES Convention’. -
Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017
2017/22 Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017 Patsy Reddy, Governor-General Order in Council At Wellington this 20th day of February 2017 Present: The Right Hon Bill English presiding in Council This order is made under section 53 of the Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 on the advice and with the consent of the Executive Council. Contents Page 1 Title 1 2 Commencement 1 3 Meaning of Act 2 4 Schedules 1, 2, and 3 of Act replaced 2 5 Schedule 2 of Act amended 2 6 Revocation 3 Schedule 4 Schedules 1, 2, and 3 of Act replaced Order 1 Title This order is the Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017. 2 Commencement (1) Clause 5(1) comes into force on 4 April 2017. 1 cl 3 Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017 2017/22 (2) Clause 5(2) comes into force on 4 October 2017. (3) The rest of this order comes into force on the day after the date of its notifica- tion in Gazette. 3 Meaning of Act In this order, Act means the Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989. 4 Schedules 1, 2, and 3 of Act replaced Replace Schedules 1, 2, and 3 of the Act with the Schedules 1, 2, and 3 set out in the Schedule of this order. 5 Schedule 2 of Act amended (1) In Schedule 2, Part 1, of the Act, in the item relating to Class—Elasmobranchii (sharks) (as replaced by clause 4), replace the item relating to Myliobatiformes with: Myliobatiformes Myliobatidae— Manta spp Manta Rays Eagle and mobulid rays Mobula spp Devil Rays (2) In Schedule 2, Part 1, of the Act, replace the item relating to Class—Elasmo- branchii (sharks) (as replaced by clause 4 and amended by subclause -
Manual Identifikasi Dan Bio-Ekologi Spesies Kunci Di Sulawesi
Manual Identifikasi dan Manual Identifikasi dan Bio-Ekologi Spesies Kunci di Sulawesi Bio-Ekologi Spesies Kunci Satwa dan tumbuhan telah ada jauh Spesies Kunci di Identifikasi dan Bio-Ekologi Manual di sebelum manusia pertama menginjakkan Sulawesi kakinya di bumi Sulawesi. Beragam spesies telah menjalani proses evolusinya menuruti kaidah-kaidah alam, biarkan mereka melanjutkan proses evolusinya itu dan melakukan interaksi dalam komunitas dan ekosistem yang unik dan kompleks di hutan belantara Sulawesi, seunik dan serumit proses geologi pembentukan pulau itu sendiri. Biarkan anoa, babirusa, babi hutan, musang sulawesi, primata, burung serta beragam jenis tumbuhan, dan seluruh satwa kunci Sulawesi tetap memperkaya khasanah keragaman hayati di bumi Sulawesi. Kehidupan dan keberadaannya diapresiasi, seperti kita mengapresiasi diri kita sendiri. Satwa dan tumbuhan adalah bagian penting dari ekosistem, dan kehidupan manusia sangat bergantung pada ekosistem itu. Manusia adalah bagian yang tidak terpisahkan dari ekosistem, karena itu Sulawesi merusak ekosistem berarti merusak diri sendiri, dan memusnahkan spesies satwa dan tumbuhan berarti juga akan memusnahkan spesies manusia. Kehutanan PT Penerbit IPB Press ISBN : 978-623-256-169-4 Jalan Taman Kencana No. 3, Bogor 16128 Telp. 0251 - 8355 158 E-mail: [email protected] Penerbit IPB Press @IPBpress ipbpress www.ipbpress.com Abdul Haris Mustari Manual Identifikasi dan Bio-Ekologi Spesies Kunci di Sulawesi Manual Identifikasi dan Bio-Ekologi Spesies Kunci di Sulawesi Abdul Haris Mustari Penerbit IPB Press Jalan Taman Kencana, No. 3 Kota Bogor - Indonesia C.01/12.2020 Judul Buku: Manual Identifikasi dan Bio-Ekologi Spesies Kunci di Sulawesi Penulis: Abdul Haris Mustari Editor: Iwan Kurniawan Penyunting bahasa: Aditya Dwi Gumelar Desain Sampul & Penata Isi: Muhamad Ade Nurdiansyah Jumlah Halaman: 162 + 24 Halaman Romawi Edisi/Cetakan: Cetakan 1, Desember 2020 PT Penerbit IPB Press Anggota IKAPI Jalan Taman Kencana No. -
Trade in Endangered Species Order 2008
2008/39 Trade in Endangered Species Order 2008 Anand Satyanand, GovernorGeneral Order in Council At Wellington this 25th day of February 2008 Present: His Excellency the GovernorGeneral in Council Pursuant to section 53 of the Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989, His Excellency the GovernorGeneral, acting on the advice and with the consent of the Executive Council, makes the following order. Contents Page 1 Title 2 2 Commencement 2 3 New Schedules 1, 2, and 3 substituted in Trade in 2 Endangered Species Act 1989 4 Revocation 2 Schedule 3 New Schedules 1, 2, and 3 substituted in Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 1 cl 1 Trade in Endangered Species Order 2008 2008/39 Order 1 Title This order is the Trade in Endangered Species Order 2008. 2 Commencement This order comes into force on the 28th day after the date of its notification in the Gazette. 3 New Schedules 1, 2, and 3 substituted in Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 The Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 is amended by revoking Schedules 1, 2, and 3 and substituting the schedules set out in the Schedule of this order. 4 Revocation The Trade in Endangered Species Order 2005 (SR 2005/93) is revoked. 2 2008/39 Schedule cl 3 New Schedules 1, 2, and 3 substituted in Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 Schedule 1 s 3(1) Species endangered by trade T rade The classes, families, and species listed in this schedule are arranged in descending order by class then in alphabetical order by order, family, and species. -
Shape Changes and the Babirusa of Sulawesi
5 Cave art, art and geometric morphometrics: Shape changes and the babirusa of Sulawesi Susan Hayes and Gert van den Bergh Abstract There is considerable evidence that the babirusa of Sulawesi and its neighbouring islands has long attracted human attention. This is probably in part due to the male babirusa appearing as a bizarre compound of two familiar ungulates (babi = ‘pig’, rusa = ‘deer’) in that the male’s upper canines resemble deer antlers. In October 2014, Aubert et al. announced in Nature that a cave art depiction in Leang Timpuseng, Maros, interpreted by the authors to depict a female babirusa, was created at least 35,400 years ago and is therefore of comparable antiquity to the oldest recorded Late Pleistocene cave art of Europe. Using geometric morphometrics, we compare the Leang Timpuseng cave art to profile photographs and illustrations depicting the babirusa and the endemic Sulawesi warty pig, including historical illustrations produced by Europeans during the period ~AD 1740–1860. Our analysis indicates that geometric morphometrics can be applied to meaningfully analyse naturalistic cave art. However, because of the relatively small sample size and that the male babirusa dominates both historical and contemporary illustrations, the results are only indicative. These are that the Leang Timpuseng cave art is more likely to be depicting a female, and that this depiction differs markedly from historical and contemporary illustrations in that it shows a morphologically female suid as independently active. With regards to which animal is depicted, the results suggest the Leang Timpuseng cave art is possibly either an illustration of a female hairy/golden babirusa, which has not yet been proven to have a range extending to Sulawesi, or the extinct Babyrousa bolabatuensis, which is part of the existing Sulawesi fossil record and has been noted to be similar in tooth size to the hairy/golden babirusa. -
Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017
Reprint as at 9 January 2020 Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017 (LI 2017/22) Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017: revoked, on 9 January 2020, by clause 6 of the Trade in Endangered Species Order 2019 (LI 2019/313). Patsy Reddy, Governor-General Order in Council At Wellington this 20th day of February 2017 Present: The Right Hon Bill English presiding in Council This order is made under section 53 of the Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989 on the advice and with the consent of the Executive Council. Contents Page 1 Title 2 2 Commencement 2 3 Meaning of Act 2 4 Schedules 1, 2, and 3 of Act replaced 2 5 Schedule 2 of Act amended 2 6 Revocation 3 Schedule 4 Schedules 1, 2, and 3 of Act replaced Note Changes authorised by subpart 2 of Part 2 of the Legislation Act 2012 have been made in this official reprint. Note 4 at the end of this reprint provides a list of the amendments incorporated. This order is administered by the Department of Conservation. 1 Reprinted as at cl 1 Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017 9 January 2020 Order 1 Title This order is the Trade in Endangered Species Order 2017. 2 Commencement (1) Clause 5(1) comes into force on 4 April 2017. (2) Clause 5(2) comes into force on 4 October 2017. (3) The rest of this order comes into force on the day after the date of its notifica- tion in Gazette. 3 Meaning of Act In this order, Act means the Trade in Endangered Species Act 1989.