Approval of a Foreign Breeding Facility Under the Wild Bird Conservation Act (WBCA) - fws 2025

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The Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act directs the Secretary of the Interior to undertake research and conservation activities, in coordination with other Federal, State, international and private organizations, to fulfill responsibilities to conserve migratory nongame birds under existing authorities.
The Wild Bird Conservation Act requires that all trade in wild birds involving the United States is biologically sustainable and to the benefit of the species and limits or prohibits imports of exotic birds when not beneficial to the species.
The MBTA protects migratory birds by governing the taking, killing, possession, transportation, and importation of such birds, their eggs, parts, or nests.
The Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 (16 U.S.C. 703-712) implements four international conservation treaties that the U.S. entered into with Canada in 1916, Mexico in 1936, Japan in 1972, and Russia in 1976. It is intended to ensure the sustainability of populations of all protected migratory bird species.
Among other measures, the Act places a one-year moratorium on the importation of any exotic bird of a species that is listed in any appendix to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora[ii].
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Title I: Wild Exotic Bird Conservation - Wild Bird Conservation Act of 1992 - States that the purpose of this title is to promote exotic bird conservation by: (1) assisting country of origin conservation programs; (2) ensuring that all trade in such species involving the United States is biologically sustainable and
First, it violates federal and state laws, such as the Migratory Bird Act, to possess any wild native American bird for any length of time without proper permits. Second, even with expert care and feeding, people simply cannot provide baby birds with most of the skills they need to negotiate the natural world.

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