Strengthening CITES implementation in Central America and the Caribbean

​Articles III and IV of the CITES Convention state that Parties shall only export Appendix II listed species when they are satisfied that such export will not be detrimental to the survival of that species. A key aspect of this process is the creation of non-detriment findings (NDFs), which are ...

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Additional Info

Field Value
Source https://resources.unep-wcmc.org/products/WCMC_RT024
Author UNEP-WCMC
Maintainer UNEP-WCMC
Last Updated March 9, 2023, 14:17 (UTC)
Created March 9, 2023, 12:16 (UTC)
GUID unep-wcmc-rsrc-report-wcmc_rt024
Issued 2023-03-09T01:00:15.186Z
Language en
Modified 2023-03-09T01:00:15.186Z
Publisher email info@unep-wcmc.org
Publisher name UNEP-WCMC
Theme Report
avg_rating 1
citation UNEP-WCMC. (2019). Strengthening CITES implementation in Central America and the Caribbean: Species reviews. Cambridge (UK): UNEP-WCMC. https://doi.org/10.34892/WG9Z-KM57
data_type webpage
date_published 2019-04-30
icon_url https://resources.unep-wcmc.org/assets/icons/document-placeholder-e938f98deb4879afb3aeb922f66a9def5d814e683ac7f4f20614478110eae22f.svg
license copyright
num_views 0
short_description This report contains in-depth reviews of the biology, conservation status and management of three taxa that were identified by CITES Parties in Central America and the Caribbean as priority species where more information was required to produce robust non-detriment findings – Honduras rosewood (Dalbergia stevensonii), queen conch (Stombus gigas) and hammerhead sharks (Sphyrna spp.).