This Act is required by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in order that ginseng originating in Illinois can be legally exported from the United States to the principal ginseng markets in the Orient. Ginseng is listed in the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, an international treaty entered into by the United States. Enforcement of the treaty within the United States rests with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. They require the individual states to regulate harvest and commerce in ginseng in a manner that will assure that the species does not become extinct. Cultivated ginseng is included because of its similarity to wild ginseng.
I hear the postpartum underground is balls mad for witch hazel.
but the gopher tortoise itself isn't protected, its protected cause it digs large hole that king snakes live in that eat rattle snakes....
when I was stationed at Fort Stewart the "holes" were protected due to the snakes issue and you couldn't go near them.. when I got my butter bar and had to sign out the ranges, we had to take a week long "environmental class" the instructor joked, you can drive over the turtle with an M-1 just don't poop in its hole...
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