Non-Indigenous Animals Regulation 2006 (NSW)
This Regulation is the Non-Indigenous Animals Regulation 2006.
This Regulation commences on 1 September 2006.
This Regulation replaces the Non-Indigenous Animals Regulation 1997 which is repealed on 1 September 2006 by section 10 (2) of the Subordinate Legislation Act 1989.
In this Regulation:
(a) an animal of a species whose members ordinarily pose a significant risk of death or injury to the public (such as a tiger, lion or bear), or
(b) an animal that, because of its particular disposition, health or other condition, poses a significant risk of death or injury to the public.
(a) in connection with the sale or intended sale of the animal, or
(b) for animal research, within the meaning of the Animal Research Act 1985, or
(c) in circumstances declared by a regulation under the Exhibited Animals Protection Act 1986 not to constitute an exhibition of the animal for the purposes of that Act.
In this Regulation, a reference to an animal of a particular category is a reference to an animal that is classified by Schedule 1 as an animal of that category.
Notes included in this Regulation do not form part of this Regulation.
The following categories of animals are prescribed for the purposes of section 6 (a) of the Act:
(a) category 1a and category 1b (animals the importation and keeping of which are prohibited),
(b) category 2 (animals limited to restricted collections),
(c) category 3a and category 3b (animals permitted in other collections),
(d) category 4 (animals the importation and keeping of which are not restricted),
(e) category 5 (animals that are already widespread pests).
Categories 1a, 1b, 2, 3a and 3b are identified as controlled categories for the purposes of section 6 (b) of the Act.
Categories 1a, 1b, 2 and 3a are identified as higher-risk categories for the purposes of section 6 (c) of the Act.
Category 3b is identified as a lower-risk category for the purposes of section 6 (c) of the Act.
The categories set out in clause 4 reflect the categories adopted by the National Vertebrate Pests Committee, a subcommittee of the Natural Resource Management Standing Committee. Under the Committee’s categorisation:
(a) Category 1a consists of species categorised as being of extreme pest potential and are generally not permitted to enter Australia or be kept there.
(b) Category 1b consists of species that have not been classified as belonging to any particular category and are generally not permitted to enter Australia or be kept there.
(c) Category 2 consists of species of high pest potential or of significant conservation value.
(d) Category 3a consists of species that pose some threat to persons or domestic or native fauna and are permitted to be kept primarily for the purpose of exhibition, education, entertainment or conservation in high security institutions.
(e) Category 3b consists of species that have the potential to establish in the wild a population that would present a new threat or aggravate an existing threat and may be kept in private collections only under licence subject to special conditions.
(f) Category 4 consists of species that would be unlikely to present a threat or greatly worsen an existing threat if they escaped into the wild. Animals in this category will usually be domestic or farm animals having no pest potential.
(g) Category 5 consists of species that if they escaped into the wild would be unlikely to establish a population that would present a threat or greatly worsen an existing threat. Animals in this category will usually currently be widespread pests.
The welfare of the animal concerned, having regard to sections 11 (Keeping of animals) and 12 (Movement of animals) of the Act, is identified as a factor, in addition to those specified in section 6A (1) (a)–(d) of the Act, on which the classification of animals is to be based.
The classification of animals for the purposes of section 6 (d) of the Act is as set out in Schedule 1.
Any species of non-indigenous animal that is not listed in Schedule 1 is classified as a category 1b animal.
An animal that is classified as both a category 4 and category 5 animal:
(a) is a category 4 animal if it is one of the domestic members of that species, and
(b) is a category 5 animal if it is one of the wild (including feral) members of that species.
The scientific names of the animals referred to in Schedule 1 are based on the following publications:
(a) for all Orders of amphibians: Frost DR, Amphibian species of the world: a taxonomic and geographical reference, published in 1985 by the Association of Systematics Collections, Lawrence, Kansas, USA,
(b) for reptiles in the Orders CROCODYLIA and SPHENODONTIDA and in the Order SQUAMATA, Sub-order LACERTILIA: Sokolov VE, Dictionary of animal names in five languages: amphibians and reptiles, published in 1988 by Russky Yazyk, Moscow, Russia,
(c) for reptiles in the Order TESTUDINES: IUCN/SSC Tortoise and freshwater turtle specialist group: Tortoises and freshwater turtles: an action plan for their conservation, published in 1989 by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, Gland, Switzerland,
(d) for reptiles in the Order SQUAMATA, Sub-order SERPENTES: Mehrtens JM, Living snakes of the world, published in 1987 by the Sterling Publishing Co Inc, New York, New York, USA,
(e) for all Orders of mammals: Wilson DE and Reeder DM, Mammal species of the world: a taxonomic and geographic reference, second edition, published in 1993 by the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia, USA,
(f) for all Orders of birds: Sibley CG and Monroe BL Jr, Distribution and taxonomy of birds of the world, published in 1991 by Yale University Press, USA.
The following bodies are prescribed for the purposes of section 6A (3) of the Act:
(a) Associated Birdkeepers of Australia Incorporated,
(b) the Canary and Cage Bird Federation of Australia Incorporated,
(c) Birds Australia.
The prescribed qualifications for the purposes of section 7 (4) (g) of the Act are:
(a) that the person:
(i) keeps a collection of non-indigenous animals (not including any category 4 animals), being a collection that is, in the opinion of the Minister, a substantial collection, and has kept a collection of that kind for at least 5 years, or
(ii) is a member of an association or society that is involved in the keeping of non-indigenous animals and has been a member of such a body for at least 5 years, or
(iii) has a degree, conferred by a tertiary institution recognised by the Minister, in zoology or a related discipline, and
(b) that the person does not exhibit any animals, and
(c) that the person has no convictions for an offence under the Act or under the Exhibited Animals Protection Act 1986, the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 or the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act 1979 or any other Act relating to the keeping or welfare of animals.
The following organisations are prescribed for the purposes of section 7 (4) (h) of the Act:
(a) Associated Birdkeepers of Australia Incorporated,
(b) the Canary and Cage Bird Federation of Australia Incorporated.
The following persons are exempted from the operation of section 10 of the Act:
(a) in the case of the importation of a category 2 or category 3a animal—a person who holds an authority under the Exhibited Animals Protection Act 1986 that enables the person to exhibit the animal,
(b) in the case of the importation of a category 3b animal:
(i) a person who owns the animal, and
(ii) a person who holds an authority under the Exhibited Animals Protection Act 1986 that enables the person to exhibit the animal.
The following persons are exempted from the operation of section 11 of the Act:
(a) in the case of the keeping of a category 2 animal, a category 3a animal (except
Funambulus pennantii , commonly known as the Northern Palm-squirrel) or a category 3b animal—a person who holds an authority under the Exhibited Animals Protection Act 1986 that enables the person to exhibit the animal,(b) in the case of the keeping of
Funambulus pennantii —a person who has an animal of that species that is numerically identified by an ear tattoo or a microchip and who holds a certificate in which a veterinary practitioner (within the meaning of the Veterinary Practice Act 2003) certifies that the animal has been sterilised.
The following persons (and persons acting on their behalf) are exempted from the operation of section 12 of the Act:
(a) in the case of the movement or transportation of a category 2 or category 3a animal (except
Funambulus pennantii , commonly known as the Northern Palm-squirrel)—a person who holds an authority under the Exhibited Animals Protection Act 1986 that enables the person to exhibit the animal,(b) in the case of the movement or transportation of
Funambulus pennantii —a person who has an animal of that species that is numerically identified by an ear tattoo or a microchip and who holds a certificate in which a veterinary practitioner (within the meaning of the Veterinary Practice Act 2003) certifies that the animal has been sterilised,(c) in the case of the movement or transportation of a category 3b animal:
(i) a person who owns the animal, and
(ii) a person who holds an authority under the Exhibited Animals Protection Act 1986 that enables the person to exhibit the animal.
Any higher or tertiary educational institution is exempt from any requirement to pay a fee in relation to a permit or the grant or renewal of a licence.
An application under section 14 of the Act for the grant or renewal of a licence or under section 19 of the Act for the grant of a permit must be in writing in the form approved by the Director-General for the purposes of the relevant section and be accompanied by the supporting documentation (if any) required by the form or by the Director-General.
The prescribed fee for an application under section 14 (1) of the Act for a licence is:
(a) $500, where the application relates to category 2 or category 3a animals (whether or not it also relates to category 3b animals), or
(b) $60, where the application relates to category 3b animals only.
In this clause:
For the purposes of section 16 of the Act, the period prescribed as the period for which a licence is to be in force is the period from the day on which the licence is granted or renewed until the next licence expiry date.
The prescribed fee for an application under section 14 (1) of the Act for the renewal of a licence is:
(a) $360, where the application relates to category 2 or category 3a animals (whether or not it also relates to category 3b animals), or
(b) $100, where the application relates to category 3b animals only.
A fee payable under this clause in respect of a licence is to be discounted by:
(a) one third, if the licence period is 1 year or more but less than 2 years, or
(b) two thirds, if the licence period is less than 1 year.
An application under section 19 (1) of the Act for a permit must be accompanied by a fee of $100.
(Repealed)
The prescribed application fee for a licence is to be calculated without regard to:
(a) any category 2 or category 3a animal that is kept on premises the subject of a licence under the Exhibited Animals Protection Act 1986 held by the applicant, or
(b) any category 2 or category 3a animal that the Director-General, on the recommendation of the advisory committee, decides to disregard for the purposes of the calculation.
In considering whether to grant a licence or renewal, the Director-General must have regard to the following matters:
(a) the security and care required for the animals that are to be kept or are kept under the licence,
(b) whether the number of licences in force that relate to certain species of animals should be restricted and, if it should be restricted, whether the grant of the licence or its renewal would violate that restriction,
(c) in the case of a licence for an agent of a zoo to keep a category 3a animal, whether there is a written agreement between the agent and the institution that transfers the animal to the agent and whether the agreement contains a requirement that the agent must transfer the animal back to the institution on demand,
(d) in the case of a licence or renewal of a licence to keep an animal of the Order Primates, or
Funambulus pennantii (commonly known as the Northern Palm-squirrel):(i) the life expectancy of the animal, and
(ii) the specialised care requirements of the animal, and
(iii) the general welfare of the animal.
In considering whether to grant a renewal of a licence, the Director-General must also have regard to whether the licensee has had an animal of the species to which the application relates in the licensee’s keeping at any time during the immediately preceding 12 months.
(Repealed)
The object of this Part is to prescribe (under section 18 (1) (b) of the Act) certain requirements and standards that licensees or licensed premises must comply with.
Reasonable precautions must be taken to ensure that premises where controlled category animals are kept are secure against unauthorised entry by persons, except to the extent that the Director-General otherwise approves.
Controlled category animals must be kept in an enclosure that is constructed so as to minimise the risks of:
(a) injury to the public, and
(b) injury to animal attendants exercising due care while in the enclosure, and
(c) injury to any animal in the enclosure, and
(d) escape by any animal from the enclosure.
Vegetation or other material in or near the enclosure must be removed or repositioned if it would otherwise assist an animal to escape.
The enclosure in which a digging or burrowing animal is kept must be constructed:
(a) with a subterranean floor consisting entirely of concrete, or
(b) with an enclosing fence of galvanised steel mesh, stainless steel mesh, or concrete, that extends below ground level to a depth of at least 1 metre and then (at that depth) extends horizontally within the enclosure at least 1 metre, or
(c) in such other manner as the Director-General considers offers a similar degree of resistance to escape by the animal,
and, in each case, the ground or floor of the enclosure must be covered by sufficient soil to enable the animal to dig or burrow without escaping.
A gate or door on the perimeter of an enclosure in which controlled category animals are kept must open inwards to the enclosure.
A gate, door or slide on the perimeter of an enclosure in which controlled category animals are kept must be so designed that an animal in the enclosure cannot lift the gate or door off its hinges or the slide off its tracks and cannot unfasten the device that secures the gate, door or slide.
Entry to an enclosure in which a category 3a animal is kept (other than an enclosure that is a reptile pit) must be by means of a safety entrance through successive gates, doors or slides. All of those gates, doors or slides must be kept locked by key or combination except when a person is in the enclosure.
If an entrance to an enclosure in which controlled category animals are kept (other than an enclosure that is a drive-through area) is a safety entrance through successive gates or doors, the gates or doors must open inwards to the enclosure.
A gate, door or slide referred to in this clause that is power-operated must also be capable of manual operation (both within and outside the enclosure) without risk to the operator.
The location from which a gate, door or slide referred to in this clause, or any other means of access to an enclosure, is operated must be safely accessible and allow a clear view of the gate, door, slide or other means and the immediate area of the gate, door, slide or other means of access.
If an enclosure where a dangerous animal is kept is so constructed that contact between the animal and the public outside the enclosure would be possible, a barrier must be provided that prevents that contact and that is as difficult as reasonably practicable for the public to evade.
A pit where snakes that are dangerous animals are kept must be deep enough to prevent contact between the public and the snakes.
If an enclosure is dangerous because it has an electrified fence or contains an animal that is known or suspected to be a dangerous animal, signs must be provided warning of the danger. The signs must be sufficient in size, legibility and number to give reasonable warning of the danger. They may use words, symbols or both.
If, because of subclause (1), warning signs must be provided at a drive-through area, those signs must be placed at the entrance to the area and also inside the area.
The exit from a drive-through area must be clearly marked. A reasonable number of signs must also be used to indicate the route to the exit.
If entry to a structure, or part of a structure, would present a threat to the health or safety of the public because of the condition of the structure, the entrance to the structure:
(a) must be locked to prevent such entry, and
(b) must be provided with signs giving reasonable warning to the public that entry is dangerous and prohibited.
If there is access from one enclosure to another within a drive-through area, the access must be so controlled as to prevent an animal in one enclosure from entering the other at will.
For the purposes of section 27A of the Act:
(a) each offence arising under a provision specified in Column 1 of Schedule 2 is prescribed as a penalty notice offence, and
(b) the prescribed penalty for such an offence is the amount specified in relation to the offence in Column 2 of Schedule 2.
The kind of information to be contained in a return furnished by a licensee under section 21 of the Act is the following:
(a) the numbers and species of animals kept by the licensee at the start of the period specified in the notice served on the licensee,
(b) the numbers and species of animals transferred by the licensee during that period,
(c) the names and licence numbers of the persons to whom the animals were transferred,
(d) the numbers and species of animals transferred to the licensee during that period,
(e) the names and licence numbers of the persons from whom the animals were transferred,
(f) the numbers and species of animals kept by the licensee that were born during that period,
(g) the numbers and species of animals kept by the licensee that died during that period.
A licensee must not provide information in a return under section 21 of the Act that the licensee knows is false or misleading in a material particular.
Maximum penalty: 10 penalty units.
The address prescribed for the purposes of section 28 of the Act is:
• The Director-General
Department of Primary Industries
161 Kite Street
Orange NSW 2800
Any act, matter or thing that had effect under the repealed Regulation immediately before its repeal is taken to have effect under this Regulation.
For the purposes of clauses 11 and 12 of this Regulation, a certification given by a registered veterinary surgeon (as referred to in clauses 11 and 12 of the repealed Regulation) is taken to be a certification given by a veterinary practitioner (within the meaning of the Veterinary Practice Act 2003).
In this clause,
(Clause 6)
Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 |
Scientific name | Common name | Category |
Cane Toad | 2 | |
Green Poison-arrow Frog | 2 | |
Blue Poison-arrow Frog | 2 | |
Dyeing Poison-arrow Frog | 2 | |
Horned-frogs | 2 | |
Clawed Toad | 2 | |
African Bullfrog | 2 | |
Romer’s Tree-frog | 2 | |
Axolotl | 4 | |
Japanese Salamander; Giant Salamander | 2 | |
Alabama Waterdog | 2 | |
Gulf Coast Waterdog | 2 | |
Neuse River Waterdog | 2 | |
Mudpuppy | 2 | |
Dwarf Waterdog | 2 | |
Japanese Newt; Red-bellied Newt | 2 | |
Black-spotted Newt | 2 | |
Striped Newt | 2 | |
Red-spotted Newt | 2 | |
Warty Newt; Crested Newt | 2 | |
Common Newt; Smooth Newt | 2 |
Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 |
Scientific name | Common name | Category |
American Alligator | 2 | |
Brown Caiman | 2 | |
Philippine Crocodile | 2 | |
Cook Strait Tuatara; Stephen Island Tuatara | 3a | |
Variable-lizards | 2 | |
Philippine Water-lizard; Sail-fin Lizard | 2 | |
Sheltopusik; Glass-lizard | 2 | |
Veiled Chameleon | 2 | |
Jackson’s Chameleon | 2 | |
Sungazer | 2 | |
Giant Plated-lizard | 2 | |
Leopard Gekko; Fat-tailed Gekko | 2 | |
Tokay | 2 | |
Cheechak; House Gekko | 2 | |
Mourning Gekko; Sad Gekko | 2 | |
Madagascar Gekko | 2 | |
Eared Caledonian-gekko | 2 | |
Cuvier’s Caledonian-gekko | 2 | |
Gila Monster | 2 | |
Double-crested Basilisk | 2 | |
Banded Fijian-iguana | 2 | |
Crested Fijian-iguana | 2 | |
Rhinoceros Iguana | 3a | |
Common Iguana; Green Iguana | 2 | |
Jewelled Lizard; Ocellated Lizard | 2 | |
Green Lizard; Emerald Lizard | 2 | |
Crocodile Skink | 2 | |
Tupinambis teguixin | Black and White Tegu | 2 |
Komodo Dragon | 3a | |
Salvadori’s Monitor; Papuan Monitor | 2 | |
Javan File-snake | 2 | |
Boa Constrictor | 2 | |
Pacific Boas | 2 | |
Emerald Tree-boa | 2 | |
Garden Tree-boa | 2 | |
Rainbow Boa | 2 | |
Anaconda | 2 | |
Yellow Anaconda | 2 | |
Boelen’s Python | 2 | |
Ringed Python | 2 | |
Blood Python; Short Python | 2 | |
Indian Python | 2 | |
Ball Python | 2 | |
Reticulated Python | 2 | |
African Python | 2 | |
Mangrove Snake | 2 | |
Cribos | 2 | |
Corn Snake; Red Rat-snake | 2 | |
Black Rat-snake | 2 | |
Four-lined Rat-snake | 2 | |
Russian Rat-snake | 2 | |
Black-tailed Rat-snake; Taiwan Rat-snake | 2 | |
King Snake | 2 | |
Grey-banded Snake | 2 | |
Milk Snake | 2 | |
Bull Snake; Pine Snake | 2 | |
Cantil | 2 | |
Northern Copperhead | 2 | |
Water Moccasin | 2 | |
Eye-lash Viper | 2 | |
Urutu | 2 | |
Eastern Diamondback | 2 | |
Western Diamondback | 2 | |
Mexican Rattlesnake | 2 | |
Rock Rattlesnake | 2 | |
Red Rattlesnake | 2 | |
Prairie Rattlesnake | 2 | |
Massasauga | 2 | |
Ringhal’s Cobra | 2 | |
Banded Seasnake | 2 | |
Egyptian Cobra | 2 | |
Forest Cobra; White-lipped Cobra | 2 | |
Mozambique Cobra | 2 | |
Indian Cobra | 2 | |
King Cobra | 2 | |
Gaboon Viper | 2 | |
Rhinoceros Viper | 2 | |
Russell’s Viper | 2 | |
Sand Adder; Sand Viper | 2 | |
Common Snapping-turtle; Common Snapper | 2 | |
Alligator Snapping-turtle; Alligator Snapper | 2 | |
Chinese Three-keeled Turtle | 2 | |
Yellow-margined Box-turtle | 2 | |
Malayan Box-turtle | 2 | |
Chinese Three-striped Box-turtle | 2 | |
Spiny Turtle; Spiny Terrapin | 2 | |
Caspian Turtle | 2 | |
Painted Wood-turtle; Mexican Wood-turtle | 2 | |
Painted Turtle | 2 | |
Spotted Turtle | 2 | |
Wood Turtle | 2 | |
Pacific Pond-turtle; Western Pond-turtle | 2 | |
Common Map-turtle | 2 | |
False Map-turtle; Eastern Map-turtle | 2 | |
Texas Map-turtle | 2 | |
Common Cooter; Florida Slider | 2 | |
Common Box-turtle | 2 | |
Common Slider; Yellow-bellied Slider | 2 | |
Yellow Mud-turtle | 2 | |
Common Mud-turtle | 2 | |
Mexican Musk-turtle; Mexican Mud-turtle | 2 | |
Loggerhead Musk-turtle; Musk Turtle | 2 | |
Aldabra Tortoise; Aldabra Giant Tortoise | 3a | |
Bowsprit Tortoise | 3a | |
Chaco Tortoise | 2 | |
Indian Star-tortoise | 3a | |
Galapagos Tortoise | 3a | |
Leopard Tortoise | 3a | |
Radiated Tortoise | 3a | |
Spurred Tortoise | 3a | |
Desert Tortoise | 3a | |
Elongated Tortoise | 3a | |
Bell’s Hingeback-tortoise | 3a | |
Asian Brown-tortoise | 3a | |
Spur-thighed Tortoise | 3a | |
Hermann’s Tortoise; Greek Tortoise | 3a | |
Horsfield’s Tortoise | 2 | |
Florida Softshell-turtle | 2 | |
Chinese Softshell-turtle | 2 | |
Matamata | 2 | |
Twist-necked Turtle | 2 |
Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 |
Scientific name | Common name | Category |
Blackbuck | 3b | |
Addra Gazelle | 2 | |
Grant’s Gazelle | 2 | |
American Bison; Buffalo | 3b | |
Domestic Yak | 2 | |
Banteng | 3b | |
Domestic Cattle | 4 | |
Nilgai | 3a | |
Domestic Water Buffalo | 3b | |
Congo Buffalo | 2 | |
Common Eland | 3a | |
Lowland Nyala | 2 | |
Bongo | 2 | |
Sitatunga | 2 | |
Greater Kudu | 2 | |
Barbary Sheep | 2 | |
Domestic Goat | 4 &5 | |
Himalayan Tahr | 2 | |
Domestic Sheep | 4 | |
Chamois | 2 | |
Addax | 2 | |
Sable Antelope | 2 | |
Scimitar Oryx | 3a | |
Gemsbok | 2 | |
Arabian Oryx | 3a | |
Waterbuck | 2 | |
Kafue Lechwe | 2 | |
Dromedary; Arabian Camel | 3b | |
Domestic Llama; Llama | 4 | |
Guanicoe | 3b | |
Domestic Alpaca; Alpaca | 4 | |
Vicugna | 3b | |
Spotted Deer; Chital | 4 | |
Hog Deer | 4 | |
Red Deer; Wapiti; Elk | 4 | |
Rusa Deer; Timor Deer | 4 | |
Sambar | 4 | |
Fallow Deer | 4 | |
Indian Muntjak | 3b | |
White-tailed Deer | 2 | |
Giraffe | 3a | |
Pygmy Hippopotamus | 3a | |
Common Hippopotamus | 3a | |
Wild Boar | 5 | |
Domestic Pig | 4 &5 | |
Collared Pecari | 2 | |
Coyote | 2 | |
Wolf | 2 | |
Domestic Dog | 4 &5 | |
Black-backed Jackal | 2 | |
Maned Wolf | 2 | |
Dhole; Red Dog | 2 | |
Hunting Dog; African Hunting Dog | 2 | |
Raccoon Dog; Raccoon-dog | 2 | |
Red Fox; European Red Fox | 5 | |
Fennec Fox | 2 | |
Cheetah | 3a | |
Caracal | 2 | |
Asian Golden Cat | 2 | |
Jungle Cat | 2 | |
Domestic Cat | 4 &5 | |
Puma | 3a | |
Jaguaroundi | 2 | |
Ocelot | 2 | |
Margay | 2 | |
Serval | 2 | |
Eurasian Lynx | 2 | |
Bobcat | 2 | |
Geoffroy’s Cat | 2 | |
Pallas’s Cat | 2 | |
Leopard Cat | 2 | |
Fishing Cat | 3a | |
Clouded Leopard | 3a | |
Lion | 3a | |
Jaguar | 3a | |
Leopard | 3a | |
Tiger | 3a | |
Snow Leopard | 3a | |
Dwarf Mongoose | 2 | |
Slender-tailed Meerkat | 2 | |
Spotted Hyaena | 2 | |
Striped Hyaena | 2 | |
Small-clawed Otter | 2 | |
North American Otter | 2 | |
Smooth-coated Otter | 2 | |
Eurasian Badger; Old World Badger | 2 | |
Striped Skunk | 2 | |
Tayra | 2 | |
Ferret | 4 | |
Californian Sea-lion | 3a | |
Harbour Seal | 3a | |
Kinkajou | 2 | |
Coati | 2 | |
Common Raccoon | 2 | |
Red Panda; Lesser Panda | 2 | |
Sun Bear | 3a | |
American Black Bear | 3a | |
Brown Bear | 3a | |
Polar Bear | 3a | |
Asiatic Black Bear | 3a | |
Binturong | 2 | |
Three-striped Palm-civet; Small-toothed Palm-civet | 2 | |
Rusty-spotted Genet | 2 | |
New Guinea Quoll | 2 | |
Doria’s Tree-kangaroo | 2 | |
Goodfellow’s Tree-kangaroo | 2 | |
Matschie’s Tree-kangaroo | 2 | |
Grey Dorcopsis | 2 | |
Sugar Glider | 2 | |
Ground Cuscus | 2 | |
European Hedgehog | 2 | |
European Hare | 5 | |
European Rabbit | 4 &5 | |
Long-beaked Echidna; Long-nosed Echidna | 2 | |
Donkey | 4 | |
Common Zebra; Burchell’s Zebra | 2 | |
Domestic Horse | 4 | |
Przewalski’s Horse | 2 | |
Grevy’s Zebra | 2 | |
Onager | 2 | |
White Rhinoceros | 3a | |
Black Rhinoceros | 3a | |
Indian Rhinoceros | 2 | |
Malayan Tapir | 2 | |
Brazilian Tapir | 2 | |
Common Marmoset | 2 | |
Pygmy Marmoset | 2 | |
Golden Lion-tamarin | 2 | |
Saddle-backed Tamarin; Weddell’s Tamarin | 2 | |
Emperor Tamarin | 2 | |
Red-bellied Tamarin; White-lipped Tamarin | 2 | |
Red-handed Tamarin; Golden-handed Tamarin | 2 | |
Moustached Tamarin | 2 | |
Cotton-top Tamarin | 2 | |
Northern Night-monkey; Northern Grey-necked Owl-monkey | 2 | |
Long-haired Spider-monkey; White-bellied Spider-monkey | 3a | |
Brown-headed Spider-monkey | 3a | |
Black-handed Spider-monkey | 3a | |
Black Spider-monkey | 3a | |
Brown Pale-fronted Capuchin; White-fronted Capuchin | 2 | |
Black-capped Capuchin; Tufted Capuchin | 2 | |
Bolivian Squirrel-monkey | 2 | |
Common Squirrel-monkey | 2 | |
Diana Monkey | 2 | |
Blue Monkey | 2 | |
De Brazza’s Monkey | 2 | |
Lesser Spot-nosed Guenon | 2 | |
Savannah Monkey Vervet; Green Monkey; Grivet | 2 | |
Patas Monkey | 2 | |
Black Mangabey; Crested Mangabey; White-cheeked Mangabey | 2 | |
Bear Macaque; Stump-tailed Macaque | 3a | |
Crab-eating Macaque; Long-tailed Macaque | 3a | |
Japanese Macaque | 3a | |
Moor Macaque; Celebes Moor-macaque | 3a | |
Rhesus Macaque | 3a | |
Pig-tailed Macaque; Pigtail Macaque | 3a | |
Celebes Ape; Celebes Black Macaque; Crested Macaque | 3a | |
Bonnet Macaque | 3a | |
Liontail Macaque; Lion-tailed Macaque | 3a | |
Mandrill | 2 | |
Talapoin | 2 | |
Baboon; Hamadryas Baboon; Olive Baboon; Yellow Baboon; Guinea Baboon; Chacma Baboon | 2 | |
Gelada; Gelada Baboon | 2 | |
Eastern Black-and-white Colobus; Abyssinian Guereza; Guereza | 2 | |
Entellus Langur; Hanuman Langur | 2 | |
Silvered Leaf-monkey; Silvered Langur | 2 | |
Dusky Leaf-monkey | 2 | |
Purple-faced Leaf-monkey | 2 | |
Northern Lesser Bushbaby | 2 | |
Thick-tailed Greater Bushbaby | 2 | |
Gorilla | 3a | |
Chimpanzee | 3a | |
Orang-hutan; Orang-utan | 3a | |
Dark-handed Gibbon; Agile Gibbon | 2 | |
Black Gibbon; Crested Gibbon | 2 | |
Hoolock Gibbon; White-browed Gibbon | 2 | |
Kloss’s Gibbon | 2 | |
White-handed Gibbon; Common Gibbon | 2 | |
White-cheeked Gibbon | 2 | |
Javan Gibbon; Silvery Gibbon | 2 | |
Bornean Gibbon; Muller’s Gibbon | 2 | |
Siamang | 2 | |
Brown Lemur | 2 | |
Black Lemur | 2 | |
Mongoose Lemur | 2 | |
Ring-tailed Lemur | 2 | |
Ruffed Lemur | 2 | |
Slender Loris | 2 | |
Slow Loris | 2 | |
Asian Elephant; Asiatic Elephant | 3a | |
African Elephant | 3a | |
American Beaver | 2 | |
Domestic Guinea-pig | 4 | |
Patagonian Cavy | 2 | |
Green Agouti | 2 | |
Brazilian Agouti | 2 | |
Capybara | 2 | |
African Porcupine | 2 | |
Indian Crested Porcupine | 2 | |
House Mouse | 4 &5 | |
Brown Rat | 4 &5 | |
Black Rat | 4 &5 | |
Spring Hare | 2 | |
Giant Squirrels | 2 | |
Black-tailed Prairie-dog | 2 | |
Northern Palm-squirrel | 2 | |
Chipmunks | 2 | |
Common Tree-shrew | 2 | |
Aardvark | 2 | |
Hairy Armadillo | 2 | |
Long-nosed Armadillo | 2 | |
Two-toed Sloth; Hoffmann’s Sloth | 3a | |
Giant Anteater | 3a |
Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 |
Scientific name | Common name | Category |
Mandarin Duck | 4 | |
Wood Duck | 4 | |
Egyptian Goose | 4 | |
Mallard and all strains of domestic duck | 4 | |
Greylag and all domestic strains of geese | 4 | |
Chinese Goose; Swan Goose | 4 | |
New Zealand Scaup | 4 | |
Canada Goose | 4 | |
Muscovy Duck | 4 | |
Mute Swan | 4 | |
Ruddy Shelduck | 4 | |
Paradise Shelduck | 4 | |
Andean Condor | 4 | |
Chilean Flamingo | 4 | |
Greater Flamingo | 4 | |
Nicobar Pigeon | 4 | |
Rock Pigeon; Common Pigeon | 4 | |
Talpacoti; Ruddy Ground-dove | 4 | |
White Bibbed Ground-dove | 4 | |
Luzon Bleeding-heart Pigeon | 4 | |
Victoria Crowned-pigeon | 4 | |
New Zealand Pigeon | 4 | |
Masked Dove; Harelquin Dove; Namaqua Dove | 4 | |
Ringed Turtle Dove; Barbary Dove | 4 | |
Spotted Dove | 4 | |
Laughing Dove | 4 | |
Red Collared-dove | 4 | |
Razor-billed Curassow | 4 | |
Helmeted Guineafowl | 4 | |
Northern Bobwhite | 4 | |
California Quail | 4 | |
Chukar Partridge | 4 | |
Lady Amherst’s Pheasant | 4 | |
Golden Pheasant | 4 | |
King Quail; Chinese Painted Quail | 4 | |
Common Quail | 4 | |
Japanese Quail | 4 | |
Black Francolin | 4 | |
Red Junglefowl and all strains of domestic chicken | 4 | |
Himalayan Monal | 4 | |
Siamese Pheasant | 4 | |
Edward’s Pheasant | 4 | |
Kalij Pheasant | 4 | |
Silver Pheasant | 4 | |
Swinhoe’s Pheasant | 4 | |
Turkey | 4 | |
Indian Peafowl | 4 | |
Green Peafowl | 4 | |
Common Pheasant | 4 | |
Reeve’s Pheasant | 4 | |
Common Skylark | 4 | |
Eurasian Linnet | 4 | |
European Goldfinch | 4 | |
European Greenfinch | 4 | |
Red Siskin | 4 | |
Common Redpoll | 4 | |
Black-headed Siskin | 4 | |
Black-headed Siskin | 4 | |
Oriental Greenfinch | 4 | |
Yellow-breasted Greenfinch | 4 | |
Eurasian Siskin | 4 | |
Yellow-rumped Siskin | 4 | |
House Finch | 4 | |
Purple Finch | 4 | |
Red-crested Finch | 4 | |
Yellowhammer | 4 | |
Chaffinch | 4 | |
Red-crested Cardinal | 4 | |
Southern Yellow-rumped Seedeater | 4 | |
Canary | 4 | |
White-bellied Canary | 4 | |
White-bellied Canary x Abyssinian Yellow-rumped Seedeater | 4 | |
Yellow Canary | 4 | |
White-rumped Seedeater | 4 | |
Yellow-fronted Canary | 4 | |
European Serin | 4 | |
Abyssinian Yellow-rumped Seedeater | 4 | |
Saffron Finch | 4 | |
Cuban Grassquit | 4 | |
Jacarina; Blue-black Grassquit | 4 | |
White-rumped Shama | 4 | |
Oriental Magpie-robin | 4 | |
Eurasian Blackbird | 4 | |
Song Thrush | 4 | |
Red-headed Finch | 4 | |
Cut-throat Finch | 4 | |
Red Avadavat | 4 | |
Red Strawberry Finch | 4 | |
Green Avadavat | 4 | |
Zebra Waxbill | 4 | |
Red-headed Parrotfinch | 4 | |
Tawny-breasted Parrotfinch | 4 | |
Fiji Parrotfinch | 4 | |
Pin-tailed Parrotfinch | 4 | |
Red-throated Parrotfinch; Red faced Parrotfinch | 4 | |
Blue-faced Parrotfinch | 4 | |
Tricolored Parrotfinch | 4 | |
Blue-faced Parrotfinch x Tricolored Parrotfinch | 4 | |
St Helena Waxbill; Common Waxbill | 4 | |
Orange-cheeked Waxbill | 4 | |
Black-rumped Waxbill | 4 | |
Yellow-crowned Bishop | 4 | |
Red-shouldered Whydah, Fan-tailed Widow-bird | 4 | |
Orange Bishop Weaver | 4 | |
Red Bishop Weaver; Grenadier Weaver | 4 | |
Dybowskis Twinspot | 4 | |
Red-headed Fody | 4 | |
Madagascar Fody | 4 | |
Peters’s Twinspot | 4 | |
African Firefinch | 4 | |
Red-billed Firefinch | 4 | |
Rufous-backed Munia | 4 | |
Silverbill | 4 | |
Bengalese Mannikin | 4 | |
Grey-headed Silverbill | 4 | |
White-bellied Munia; Javan Munia | 4 | |
White-headed Munia | 4 | |
White-throated Silverbill | 4 | |
Southern Black-headed Munia | 4 | |
Chestnut Munia | 4 | |
Black-headed Munia; Black-headed Nun | 4 | |
Spice Finch; Scaly-breasted Munia | 4 | |
White-rumped Munia | 4 | |
Green-backed Twinspot | 4 | |
Java Sparrow | 4 | |
House Sparrow | 4 | |
Plain-backed Sparrow | 4 | |
Sudan Golden Sparrow | 4 | |
Eurasian Tree Sparrow | 4 | |
Yellow-winged Pytilia | 4 | |
Red-faced Aurora | 4 | |
Green-winged Pytilia; Melba Finch | 4 | |
Red-winged Pytilia; Aurora Finch | 4 | |
Blue-breasted Cordonbleu | 4 | |
Red-cheeked Cordonbleu | 4 | |
Blue-capped Cordonbleu | 4 | |
Common Grenadier | 4 | |
Purple Grenadier | 4 | |
Pin-tailed Whydah | 4 | |
Red-whiskered Bulbul | 4 | |
Common Myna | 4 | |
Common Starling | 4 | |
Silver-eared Mesia | 4 | |
Red-billed Leiothrix | 4 | |
Fischer’s Lovebird | 4 | |
Nyasa Lovebird | 4 | |
Black-cheeked Lovebird | 4 | |
Masked Lovebird | 4 | |
Peach-faced Lovebird | 4 | |
Moluccan King-parrot | 4 | |
Blue-fronted Parrot | 4 | |
White-fronted Parrot | 4 | |
Orange-winged Parrot | 4 | |
Yellow-naped Parrot | 4 | |
Red-lored Amazon | 4 | |
Lilac-crowned Parrot | 4 | |
Cuban Parrot | 4 | |
Yellow-headed Amazon | 4 | |
Yellow-headed Parrot | 4 | |
Red-spectacled Parrot | 4 | |
Red-crowned Parrot | 4 | |
Yellow-faced Parrot | 4 | |
Hyacinth Macaw | 4 | |
Great Green Macaw | 4 | |
Blue-and-gold Macaw | 4 | |
Blue-and-gold Macaw x Green-winged Macaw | 4 | |
Yellow-collared Macaw | 4 | |
Green-winged Macaw | 4 | |
Scarlet Macaw | 4 | |
Red-bellied Macaw | 4 | |
Blue-winged Macaw | 4 | |
Military Macaw | 4 | |
Red-shouldered Macaw | 4 | |
Red-fronted Macaw | 4 | |
Chestnut-fronted Macaw | 4 | |
Blue-crowned Parakeet | 4 | |
Golden-crown Conure | 4 | |
Golden-capped Conure | 4 | |
Golden-capped Conure x Janday Conure | 4 | |
Golden Parakeet | 4 | |
Janday Conure | 4 | |
Sun Conure | 4 | |
Dusky-headed Conure | 4 | |
Barred Parakeet | 4 | |
White Cockatoo | 4 | |
Tanimbar Cockatoo | 4 | |
Salmon-crested Cockatoo | 4 | |
Yellow-crested Cockatoo | 4 | |
Black Lory | 4 | |
Black Lory x Rainbow Lorikeet | 4 | |
Cardinal Lory | 4 | |
Cardinal Lory x Rainbow Lorikeet | 4 | |
Brown Lory | 4 | |
Yellow-streaked Lory | 4 | |
Papuan Lorikeet | 4 | |
Burrowing Parakeet | 4 | |
Yellow-fronted Kakariki | 4 | |
Red-fronted Kakariki | 4 | |
Antipodes Parakeet | 4 | |
Red-fan Parrot | 4 | |
Eclectus Parrot | 4 | |
Red-sided Eclectus Parrot | 4 | |
Solomon Island Eclectus Parrot | 4 | |
Vosmaer’s Eclectus | 4 | |
Red Lory | 4 | |
Black-winged Lory | 4 | |
Red-and-blue Lory | 4 | |
Blue-streaked Lory | 4 | |
Blue-eared Lory | 4 | |
Violet-necked Lory | 4 | |
Pacific Parrotlet | 4 | |
Blue-crowned Hanging-parrot | 4 | |
Yellow-bibbed Lory | 4 | |
Purple-naped Lory | 4 | |
Chattering Lory | 4 | |
Black-capped Lory | 4 | |
Monk Parrot | 4 | |
Nanday Conure | 4 | |
Yellow-billed Lorikeet | 4 | |
Kea | 4 | |
Collared Lory | 4 | |
White-bellied Parrot | 4 | |
Black-headed Parrot | 4 | |
Bronze-winged Parrot | 4 | |
White-crowned Parrot | 4 | |
Red-fronted Parrot | 4 | |
Meyers Parrot | 4 | |
Brown-necked Parrot | 4 | |
Red-bellied Parrot | 4 | |
Senegal Parrot | 4 | |
Masked Shining-parrot | 4 | |
Red Shining-parrot | 4 | |
Dusky Lory | 4 | |
Red-breasted Parakeet | 4 | |
Malabar Parakeet | 4 | |
Plum-headed Parakeet | 4 | |
Derbyan Parakeet | 4 | |
Alexandrine Parakeet | 4 | |
Slaty-headed Parakeet | 4 | |
Indian Ring-necked Parakeet | 4 | |
Blossom-headed Parakeet | 4 | |
African Grey Parrot | 4 | |
Goldies Lorikeet | 4 | |
Blue-throated Conure | 4 | |
Fiery-shouldered Parakeet | 4 | |
Maroon-bellied Conure | 4 | |
White-eared Parakeet | 4 | |
Maroon-tailed Conure | 4 | |
Green-cheeked Parakeet | 4 | |
Pearly Parakeet | 4 | |
Painted Parakeet | 4 | |
Crimson-bellied Parakeet | 4 | |
Black-capped Parakeet | 4 | |
Thick-billed Parrot | 4 | |
Olive-headed Lorikeet | 4 | |
Rainbow Lorikeet | 4 | |
Mindanao Lorikeet | 4 | |
Ornate Lorikeet | 4 | |
Brown Kiwi | 4 | |
Greater Rhea | 4 | |
Ostrich | 4 |
(Clause 29)
Column 1 | Column 2 |
Offence | Penalty |
Section 10 (1) | $550 |
Section 10 (2) | $220 |
Section 11 (1) | $550 |
Section 11 (2) | $220 |
Section 12 (1) | $550 |
Section 12 (2) | $220 |
Section 13 (1) | $550 |
Section 13 (2) | $220 |
Section 13 (3) | $220 |
Section 21 (2) | $220 |
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