Thank you Nicholas for that information. Do you have a CBW by any chance? It is my understanding that CBW's do not apply to domestic animals. Only applies to animals from outside the U.S. Such as Radiated Tortoises, etc.
I do a lot of exporting of Appendix II turtles. I have to obtain a CITES permit for each export. It is my understanding if an animal is listed as Appendix I a CITES permit is required to ship across any state line. This is something my Attorney and I discuss frequently. The USFWS makes it hard for me to obtain the CITES permits. I think they make it difficult so people will smuggle so they can try to catch some of them. They always make a big deal out of any smuggler getting caught. My Attorney and I feel it is with the purpose to make turtles Appendix I. Not many in the U.S. do not have the kind of documentation to obtain a CITES permit to ship across a state line. It would kill turtle breeding as we know it. It could easily be done with a sweep of their pen. Just my opinion. Richard
I used to have a CBW for radiata, but when I moved from MO to FL, the CBW became defunct and my interest in the species became less strong, so I never elected to re-apply. On top of that, FL is rich with radiata availability, so I could do intrastate deals with radiata if desired (no need for a CBW anymore for me).
CITES (the I in CITES more specifically) still refers to international movement/trade rather than intranational movement/trade. A Burmese star (platynota) is CITES App I and can be shipped from any US state to any other US state without CITES or a CBW. The CBW system and the CITES system are independent of each other, but sometimes the species covered by those have overlap (radiata) and other times not (platynota).
A CBW applies to any animal which is allowed to be owned that is also officially listed on the ESA (and there are also animals on the ESA which cannot be privately owned). There are species that are native/domestic to the US that are ESA-listed and a CBW would be necessary for interstate commerce. Not transport if one was moving personal animals from one state to another, but in any form of commercial dealing/transaction. If I had a legally obtained and owned bog, I could move it from one legal state of residence to another legal state of residence without a CBW. Likewise, if I had a legally obtained and owned bog, I would be free to sell/buy it to/from another legal resident of my same state without a CBW (setting any state-specific permit discussion aside since that is a lower hurdle when it applies). If I had a legally obtained and owned bog and wanted to do a trade, purchase, or sale from/to/with another owner of a legally obtained and owned bog that resides in a state that was not my own state of residence, then both myself and that other owner would
both have to have CBWs with bogs listed/approved on both of our CBWs in order to legally transact in any form insofar as bogs go. There is also the option of gifting, which does not require a CBW, but - practically speaking - nobody sane will usually gift bogs and I would definitely draft a letter of record if ever I were to engage in
legitimate gifting of an ESA-listed species. Abuse of gifting to mask commercial transaction, if caught, would be followed by a reckoning none of us would want.
Legitimate gifting occurs with some frequency of $50 to $1000 animals, but for the higher-end animals like bogs,
legitimate gifting is likely a rarity if it ever happens at all. Far rarer than bogs themselves.