[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR12.26]



[Page 269-274]

 

                        TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

 

   CHAPTER I--BUREAU OF CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF 

              HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

 

PART 12_SPECIAL CLASSES OF MERCHANDISE--Table of Contents

 

Sec.  12.26  Importations of wild animals, fish, amphibians, reptiles, 

mollusks, and crustaceans; prohibited and endangered and threatened 

species; designated ports of entry; permits required.



    (a)(1) The importation into the United States, the Commonwealth of 

Puerto Rico, and the territories and possessions of the United States of 

live specimens of:

    (i) Any species of the so-called ``flying fox'' or fruit bat of the 

genus Pteropus;

    (ii) Any species of mongoose or meerkat of the genera Atilax, 

Cynictis, Helogale, Herpestes, Ichneumia, Mungos, and Suricata;

    (iii) Any species of European rabbit the genus Oryctolagus;

    (iv) Any species of Indian wild dog, red dog, or dhole of the genus 

Cuon;

    (v) Any species of multimammate rat or mouse of the genus Mastomys;

    (vi) Any live specimens or egg of the species of so-called ``pink 

starling'' or ``rosy pastor'' Sturnus roseus;

    (vii) The species of dioch (including the subspecies black-fronted, 

red-billed, or Sudan dioch) Quelea quelea;

    (viii) Any species of Java sparrow, Padda oryzivora;

    (ix) The species of red-whiskered bulbul, Pycnonotus jocosus;

    (x) Any live fish or viable eggs of the family Clariidae;



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    (xi) Any other species of wild mammals, wild birds, fish (including 

mollusks and crustacea), amphibians, reptiles, or the offspring or eggs 

of any of the foregoing which the Secretary of the Interior may 

prescribe by regulations to be injurious to human beings, to the 

interest of agriculture, horticulture, forestry, or to wildlife or the 

wildlife resources of the United States, is prohibited, except as may be 

authorized by the issuance of a permit by the Director, U.S. Fish and 

Wildlife Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, Washington, DC 20240, 

or his authorized representative. If any such prohibited specimen is 

imported, or if any specie or subspecie of other live or dead fish or 

wildlife, including any parts, products, or eggs thereof, appearing on 

the Endangered Species List published by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife 

Service, is imported, Customs release of the prohibited specimen or 

endangered fish or wildlife shall be refused unless there has been 

issued and presented in connection with entry a proper U.S. Fish and 

Wildlife Service permit authorizing the import transaction. In the 

absence of such permit, injurious specimens prohibited entry shall be 

required to be immediately exported or destroyed. Changes in injurious 

species and endangered species or subspecies which are prohibited or 

restricted importation may be published from time to time in 50 CFR part 

13--Importation of Wildlife or Eggs Thereof or in part 17--Conservation 

of Endangered Species and Other Fish or Wildlife. Unreleased species or 

subspecies of live or dead endangered fish or wildlife, including parts, 

products, or eggs thereof, shall remain under detention subject to 

seizure and delivery to an appropriate regional director or other agent 

of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for disposition as appropriate 

pursuant to 50 CFR part 17.

    (2) Fish and eggs of salmonids of the fish family Salmonidae are 

prohibited entry into the United States for any purpose unless such 

importations are by direct shipment, accompanied by the signed 

certification of a qualified fish pathologist in substantially the form 

as prescribed in 50 CFR 13.7. The following are excepted from the 

certification requirements:

    (i) Salmon landed in North America and brought into the United 

States for processing or sale;

    (ii) Any salmonid caught in the wild in North America under a sport 

or a commercial fishing license; and

    (iii) Fish or eggs of the family Salmonidae when processed or 

prepared in accordance with 50 CFR 13.7(c), or otherwise exempted from 

the requirement of certification.

    (3) Regulations (50 CFR part 17) require the importer or his agent 

to file a Declaration for the Importation of Fish or Wildlife, unless it 

is an import transaction exempted from the requirement by 50 CFR part 13 

or part 17. Such declaration on U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Form 3-

177, available to importers through Customs ports of entry, shall be 

filed with the appropriate Customs officer at the port of entry 

conducting the actual Customs clearance and release of the declared 

fish, wild mammal, or bird, amphibian, reptile, mollusk, crustacean, or 

dead body or egg thereof. The declaration on Form 3-177 shall show the 

common and scientific names, number, and country of origin of all 

species or subspecies declared, designate and identify any species 

listed on the U.S. List of Endangered Foreign Fish and Wildlife, 50 CFR 

part 17, appendix A, and indicate whether any species is subject to laws 

and regulations in any foreign country regarding its taking, 

transportation, or sale. See paragraph (g) of this section for special 

documentation requirements.

    (4) Federal agencies, subject to requirements in paragraph (a)(2) of 

this section, may import solely for their own use live wildlife except 

migratory birds, or their eggs, without a permit from the U.S. Fish and 

Wildlife Service, upon filing the declaration on Form 3-177. Importation 

of bald or golden eagles, or their eggs is prohibited.

    (5) Customs entry for consumption or bonded warehousing of fish and 

wildlife, as defined in 50 CFR 17.2 (e) and (f), intended for 

importation into the United States, or admission into a foreign trade 

zone, shall be filed at a port of entry among those designated for 

Customs entry in 50 CFR part 17, appendix B. However, Customs entry for



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consumption or bonded warehousing of shipments subject to emergency 

diversion or otherwise authorized under regulations or by permit issued 

by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service pursuant to 50 CFR part 17, 

appendices B and C, may be filed for examination and release at the 

ports of entry so named or permitted, but no consumption or bonded 

warehouse entry shall be filed or accepted at an undesignated port for 

any endangered specie or subspecie permitted importation pursuant to 50 

CFR 17.12 except in the case of an emergency diversion of live 

endangered fish or wildlife accepted for such entry in accordance with 

item 2(b) of 50 CFR part 17, appendix B. Importations of fish and 

wildlife subject to regulations of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 

which arrive from abroad at any place in the United States not 

designated as an authorized port for Customs entry, unless occurring 

under conditions or circumstances in which Customs entry for consumption 

or bonded warehousing and final clearance has been authorized by U.S. 

Fish and Wildlife Service regulations or permit, may be entered only for 

immediate transportation without appraisement for movement under Customs 

bond to one of the designated ports of entry. Customs entry, release, 

and delivery of any shipment of shellfish and fishery products defined 

in 50 CFR 17.2(j) imported for commercial purposes is authorized at any 

port of entry, except insofar as such items include any species or 

subspecies which appears on the Endangered Species List in 50 CFR part 

17, appendix A.

    (b) Permits are required for the importation of wild animals and 

birds as follows:

    (1) Wild birds protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (16 U.S.C. 

703 through 711) and the regulations promulgated thereunder (50 CFR part 

10), may be imported from foreign countries for scientific, propagating, 

or other limited purposes only under permits issued by the U.S. Fish and 

Wildlife Service, United States Department of the Interior, Washington, 

DC, 20240. State game departments, municipal game farms or parks, and 

public museums, zoological parks or societies, and scientific or 

educational institutions may import migratory birds without a permit. 

Such migratory birds, when imported from Mexico, must be accompanied by 

Mexican export permits (50 CFR 16.3 and 16.5).

    (2) Game mammals (antelopes, mountain sheep, deer, bears, peccaries, 

squirrels, rabbits, and hares), protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty 

Act (16 U.S.C. 703 through 711), dead or alive, or their parts or 

products, must be accompanied by Mexican export permits (50 CFR 15.3) 

when imported from Mexico.

    (3) Wild ruminants (all animals which chew the cud, such as cattle, 

buffaloes, sheep, goats, deer, antelopes, camels, llamas, and giraffes) 

and swine (various varieties of wild hogs), except from Canada and 

certain northern States of Mexico may be imported only under a permit 

from the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Veterinary 

Services, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, DC 20250. 

Such permits must be obtained before the animals are shipped from the 

country of exportation. All wild ruminants and swine must be inspected 

at designated ports of entry by veterinarians of the Animal and Plant 

Health Inspection Service, Veterinary Services, United States Department 

of Agriculture.

    (4) Psittacine birds, which include all birds commonly known as 

parrots, Amazons, African grays, cockatoos, macaws, parrotlets, beebees, 

parakeets, lovebirds, lories, lorikeets, and all other birds of the 

order Psittaciformes, when destined for a zoological park or medical 

research institution without having had prior confinement and treatment 

abroad at an approved treatment center, and psittacine birds taken out 

of the United States but inadmissible under paragraph (c) of this 

section, may be imported when accompanied by a permit issued by the 

Surgeon General. Application for such a permit may be made to the Chief, 

Foreign Quarantine Program, National Communicable Disease Center, U.S. 

Public Health Service, Atlanta, Ga. 30333, or to a Public Health Service 

quarantine station established at a port of entry in the United States.



[[Page 272]]



    (5) Ducks, geese, swans, turkeys, pigeons, doves, pheasants, grouse, 

partridges, quail, guinea fowl, and pea fowl, except from Canada, may be 

imported only under a permit from the Animal and Plant Health Inspection 

Service, Veterinary Services, United States Department of Agriculture, 

Washington, DC 20250. Such permits must be obtained before the birds are 

shipped from the country of origin. Such birds from Canada must be 

accompanied by a certificate issued by a Canadian Government 

veterinarian. All such birds must be inspected at designated ports of 

entry by veterinarians of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection 

Service, Veterinary Services, United States Department of Agriculture.

    (c) Psittacine birds as defined in paragraph (b)(4) of this section, 

not to exceed two such birds by members of a family comprising a single 

household in any 12-month period, may be imported under prescribed 

conditions (see 42 CFR 71.164(e)) without permit and without prior 

confinement and treatment, to be kept as pets by the owner, who will be 

required to comply with the Foreign Quarantine Regulations of the U.S. 

Public Health Service. Birds taken out of the United States and being 

returned may be admitted, without permit, upon full compliance with 

prescribed conditions of those regulations for admission of birds 

imported as pets. No such birds shall be released until the importer has 

complied with applicable requirements of the Public Health regulations.

    (d) Cats, dogs, and monkeys are subject to the Foreign Quarantine 

Regulations of the United States Public Health Service, Department of 

Health, Education, and Welfare, Washington, D.C. Such animals shall not 

be released until the Public Health regulations are complied with by the 

importer.

    (e) If a shipment contains migratory birds for which a permit is 

required by the Fish and Wildlife Service of the Department of the 

Interior, and such permit is not at hand when the birds arrive, an 

examination thereof shall be made at once by the port director and any 

duties estimated to be due shall be collected. A stipulation shall be 

filed with the port director within 24 hours of the entry to produce the 

necessary permit within 30 days from the date of entry, whereupon final 

liquidation shall be suspended until the permit is produced or the 30-

day period expires. The shipment may be immediately released if a bond 

is filed with the port director on Customs Form 301, containing the bond 

conditions set forth in Sec.  113.62 of this chapter, in an amount equal 

to the entered value plus estimated duties. If the bond conditions are 

violated the port director shall issue a claim for liquidated damages 

under the bond. In lieu of filing a bond the merchandise may be left in 

Customs custody at the risk and expense of the importer pending issuance 

of the permit.

    (f) If the permit referred to in paragraph (e) of this section is 

refused by the Fish and Wildlife Service, or if the permit is not 

produced within the said 30 days, the port director shall promptly 

recall the property, if delivered under bond, and shall require its 

immediate exportation at the expense of the importer or consignee.

    (g)(1) All import shipments of fish and wildlife subject to the 

regulations or permit requirements of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife 

Service, published pursuant to the Endangered Species Act of 1973, 16 

U.S.C. 1531, or other statutory authority, shall be subject to 

examination or inspection by that agency's officer serving the port of 

entry, for determination as to permissible release or such other 

disposition as he may direct. Customs officers performing examinations 

of such fish and wildlife in accordance with regulations of the U.S. 

Fish and Wildlife Service in 50 CFR part 10 and parts 13 through 17, 

shall release shipments only upon submission by the importer of evidence 

sufficient to establish compliance with those regulations, any 

applicable permit requirements, and compliance with applicable 

identification and package or container marking requirements as 

specified by 50 CFR 17.6(a) and 17.9. In case of doubt as to whether 

fish, birds, or other wildlife belong to prohibited or endangered 

species or subspecies or whether an entry permit is required, or in case 

of suspicion on the part of officers of the Customs that the species 

sought to be entered are prohibited or



[[Page 273]]



endangered species or subspecies imported under other names or 

descriptions, the importation shall be refused Customs release, and the 

importer shall be responsible for concluding arrangements acceptable to 

the regional director or other agent of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife 

Service for proper handling, custody, and care, at the importer's 

expense and risk, of the unreleased fish, birds, or other wildlife. No 

Customs disposition of the importation shall be concluded pending the 

determination by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service of the true nature 

of the species or subspecies. In case of refusal or neglect of the 

importer or consignee, or agent of either, to have the identity so 

established, final disposition of the importation shall be required as 

determined by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. In addition to U.S. 

Fish and Wildlife Service Form 3-177, required to be filed as prescribed 

in 50 CFR 17.4 upon entry of importations of fish and wildlife, entrants 

shall present appropriate foreign export permits, other acceptable 

foreign documentary evidence of lawful taking, transportation, or sale, 

or appropriate American consular certificates upon importation of fish 

and wildlife species or subspecies subject to such documentation 

requirements of 50 CFR 17.4 (c) and (d).

    (2) Any antique article imported under Sec.  10.53(g) of this 

chapter shall be entered at one of the following ports:



Boston, Massachusetts

New York, New York

Baltimore, Maryland, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Miami, Florida, San Juan, Puerto Rico

New Orleans, Louisiana

Houston, Texas

Los Angeles, California

San Francisco, California

Anchorage, Alaska, Honolulu, Hawaii

O'Hare International Airport, Chicago, Illinois



    (h) All invoices of animals and birds shall specify the species 

covered thereby and the number of each species. In the event of the 

return to the port director of any importation under the bond given 

under paragraph (e) of this section, if the number and species of birds 

does not correspond with the description stated in the invoice and if no 

satisfactory explanation of any discrepancy is furnished, a claim for 

liquidated damages shall be issued under the bond.

    (i) The privilege of entry for immediate transportation granted by 

section 552, Tariff Act of 1930, shall not be allowed for importations 

of fish, birds, or other wildlife which are confirmed at the port of 

first arrival or discharge to be injurious prohibited species, or which 

require permits issued prior to importation, or which are subject to 

quarantine regulations or inspection at the ports of first arrival or 

discharge or other specified place of veterinary inspection. However, 

entry for immediate transportation properly is allowed for any 

importation of fish, birds, or other wildlife which at the place of 

first arrival or discharge is not confirmed to be an injurious 

prohibited specie and which, following compliance with any applicable 

quarantine regulations or required veterinary inspection, is being 

transported by means of an in-bond movement to a port of entry 

designated in 50 CFR part 17, appendix B, for Customs entry (see 

paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section). Ports of designated entry, 

inspection, quarantine, and related enforcement procedures covering 

certain animals and poultry and certain animal and poultry products 

imported into the United States are regulated by requirements and 

standards prescribed in regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture, 

Department of Agriculture (see 9 CFR parts 92-96; 19 CFR 12.8 and 

12.24).

    (j) Wild animals and birds shall be imported under humane and 

healthful conditions, due regard being given to the accommodations and 

facilities necessary for the species transported.

    (k) When any Customs officer has good reason to believe that wild 

animals or birds have been imported under inhumane or unhealthful 

conditions in violation of 18 U.S.C. 42, an immediate investigation 

shall be made to ascertain whether they have in fact been transported 

under such conditions. The investigation shall determine the provisions 

made on the vessel or other conveyance for the accommodation of the 

animals or birds, the suitability of the boxes, cages, stalls, etc., the 

space, ventilation, and protection from the elements accorded the 

animals or



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birds, the facilities for cleaning, feeding, watering, bedding, and such 

other services as may be required for the species imported. The 

investigation shall also determine, the physical condition of such 

animals or birds and the ratio of dead, crippled, diseased, or starving 

animals or birds. If necessary, officers of the Animal and Plant Health 

Inspection Service, Veterinary Services, or Fish and Wildlife Service, 

or other officers or experts, may be called upon to assist customs 

officers in the matter.

    (l) Unless the port director is satisfied that the provisions of 18 

U.S.C. 42 have not been violated, he shall report the matter to the 

United States attorney for appropriate action.



[28 FR 14710, Dec. 31, 1963]



    Editorial Note: For Federal Register citations affecting Sec.  

12.26, see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the 

Finding Aids section of the printed volume and on GPO Access.