The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today announced
a final rulemaking that reclassifies the Argentinian population of the
broad-snouted caiman from endangered to threatened under the Endangered
Species Act (ESA). A longstanding and successful management effort to
increase the numbers of this crocodilian species has made it possible to
reduce the restrictions on the Argentinian population (called a “distinct
population segment” (DPS) under the ESA), and include it in a special rule
which allows carefully monitored and regulated trade. Inclusion in this
special rule will enable trade in broad-snouted caiman parts and products
originating from Argentina only.
The species has been listed as endangered
throughout its range since 1976, mainly as a result of illegal harvest for its
valuable hide and an overall loss of wetland habitat. The species is found in
northeast Argentina , southeast Bolivia ,
Paraguay , and northern Uruguay .
Intensive and largely successful management efforts conducted by Argentina
to bolster the population of this species led to that country
submitting a petition to the Service in 2007 requesting a reclassification under
the ESA.
The Service has found that Argentina ’s
caiman population is widespread throughout its historic range and its nesting areas
are expanding. Broad-snouted caiman are even being seen in areas
from which they had previously disappeared. Argentina ’s intensive management
efforts and enforcement of all applicable international laws
and treaties have been successful in increasing its caiman population. The
key to this enhancement program involved the cooperation of farmers and
ranchers to gather the eggs from the nests, rear the young, and then release
them back to the wild.
In 1975, broad-snouted caiman was placed in
Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild
Fauna and Flora (CITES), effectively prohibiting international commercial
trade in the species and its parts and products. By 1997, Argentina ’s
caiman population had begun to increase due to the success of their ranching
program and was subsequently down-listed to Appendix II, allowing limited trade
in hides subject to a strict tagging and permitting program.
However, the broad-snouted caiman was prohibited
from commercial import into the United States due to its endangered status
under the ESA. The reclassification of broad-snouted caiman to
threatened will allow for limited commercial import of caiman hides and
products, aligning U.S. domestic law with the view of the international
community on trade in this population.
The status of the species in Bolivia , Brazil ,
Paraguay , Uruguay , or elsewhere, remains unchanged and these populations
will continue to be fully protected by the ESA. The population of this
species within these other countries is described as a separate DPS
which remains listed as endangered, and subsequently, there are no
provisions for trade. A species-wide down-listing cannot be considered at
this time owing to a lack of population and monitoring information from the
other range countries.
The final rulemaking describing these actions was
published in the June 25, 2013, edition of the* Federal Register. *For
additional information, go to
For photos of the species, see http://flic.kr/s/aHsjGmYecE
To learn more about the Endangered Species
program’s Branch of Foreign Species, visit:
For more info
Contact:
Claire Cassel
703-358-2357
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