Migratory Bird Conservation Act of 1929
Migratory Bird Conservation Act of 1929
Marc A. Le Forestier
Excerpt from the Migratory Bird Conservation Act
For the acquisition, including the location, examination, and survey, of suitable areas of land, water, or land and water, for use as migratory bird reservations, and necessary
expenses incident thereto, and for the administration, maintenance, and development of such areas and other preserves, reservations, or breeding grounds frequented by migratory birds and under the administration of the Secretary of the Interior, including the construction of dams, dikes, ditches, flumes, spillways, buildings, and other necessary improvements, and for the elimination of the loss of migratory birds from alkali poisoning, oil pollution of waters, or other causes, for cooperation with local authorities in wildlife conservation, for investigations and publications relating to North American birds, for personal services, printing, engraving, and issuance of circulars, posters, and other necessary matter and for the enforcement of the provisions of this subchapter, there are hereby authorized to be appropriated, in addition to all other amounts authorized by law to be appropriated, $200,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1940, and for each fiscal year thereafter.
By the end of the nineteenth century, the wildlife conservation movement was beginning to develop support within American government. In 1900 Congress passed the first federal wildlife protection law, the Lacey Act, which made it a federal crime to transport wildlife across a state border if it had been taken in violation of state law. During the next thirty years such organizations as the National Audubon Society and the Wildlife Management Institute were formed to advance the objectives of the conservation movement. It is no coincidence that as the last of the passenger pigeons (Ectopistes migratorius ) died in the Cincinnati Zoological Gardens in 1914, migratory birds became an early focus of the federal government's special attention. The extinction of game bird species also mobilized hunters and the sporting arms and ammunition industries, who convinced Congress to pass conservation laws that would assist states in protecting wildlife populations for sport.
The Migratory Bird Conservation Act of 1929 (45 Stat. 1222) exemplifies this cooperative federal-state approach. Migratory birds had already been placed under federal protection in 1913, and in 1916 they were the subject of a treaty between the United States and Great Britain (for Canada). This treaty, together with state and federal laws directed at the practice of plume hunting, would help reverse the decline in migratory bird populations. The Migratory Bird Conservation Act was designed to provide sanctuaries in which these birds could live.
The principal sponsor of the Migratory Bird Conservation Act was Senator Peter Norbeck, Republican from South Dakota. The act first emerged, in concept, in Senator Norbeck's 1923 proposal known as the "game refuge bill," which would have established a joint federal-state system of shorebird sanctuaries financed by federal hunting license fees. Conservationists, however, were alarmed that the bill would establish these game refuges as "public shooting grounds." Norbeck rewrote the proposal, eliminating the hunting provisions and providing that refuge funds would be appropriated directly from the federal treasury.
The act also established the Migratory Bird Conservation Commission to approve the purchase or rental of areas of land or water as sanctuaries for migratory birds and water fowl, upon the recommendation of the secretary of the Department of the Interior. Such acquisitions may be completed only after consultation with affected local and state governments, and are financed by the Migratory Bird Conservation Fund, also established by the act. The
fund also provides resources for maintenance of the acquired lands, the preservation of habitat, and for any other related expenses.
When it became clear that the $7.8 million dollars originally appropriated under the Migratory Bird Conservation Act would be insufficient to accomplish its purposes, Congress enacted the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act of 1934, which required all hunters to attach stamps to their state hunting licenses, providing additional funds for the creation of sanctuaries. In 1937 the Pittman-Robertson Bill imposed an excise tax on guns and shells to extract more funds from hunters for the benefit of wildlife. Together, these acts have constituted the most effective wildlife conservation scheme on record.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Gibbons, Felton. Neighbors to the Birds: A History of Birdwatching in America. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1988.
Lund, Thomas A. American Wildlife Law. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1980.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
ADVA Optical networkinG deploys 100,000 ethernet access ports to BT Group; Six-year relationship results in one of the world's largest installed bases of advanced Ethernet connectivity.
M2 Presswire; 9/18/2007; 700+ words
; ...Munich, Germany.-- ADVA Optical Networking today announced...communications providers. ADVA Optical Networking's Ethernet access...countries. BT Group's principal activities include networked IT services...networks. Since 2001, ADVA Optical Networking has played a key...
|
|
ADVA Optical Networking appoints christian Unterberger chief Sales officer; Seasoned industry professional to join executive management team; focus on strengthening global sales team.
M2 Presswire; 9/5/2007; 700+ words
; ...Unterberger brings to ADVA Optical Networking extensive sales...industry. Prior to joining ADVA Optical Networking, Christian Unterberger...included managing the global activities of the unit. Before that...am excited to join the ADVA Optical Networking team," stated...
|
|
Optical Networks to Open Manufacturing Facility to Meet Surging Worldwide Demand for All-Optical Metro Telecommunications Networks.
Business Wire; 1/22/2000; 700+ words
; ...in the production of SONET optical transport systems and optical components. &uot...executive leadership team at Optical Networks. We are confident...leadership of our operations activities will enable us to meet all...
|
|
ADVA Optical Networking Announces New Corporate Officer and Strategic Investment in OptXCon.
Business Wire; 3/28/2000; 700+ words
; ...March 28, 2000 ADVA Optical Networking (Neuer Markt...leading global provider of optical networking solutions, today...formerly President of ADVA Optical Networking Inc., USA, and...for all sales and marketing activities in the North American market...
|
|
Fujitsu and HHI Achieve Optical Amplitude Noise Reduction Using Ultra High-Speed Optical Switch.
News Wire article from: JCN Newswires; 3/6/2008; 700+ words
; ...pump optical wave and signal optical wave are input into fiber, a new signal optical wave and idler wave are output. During the process, the optical signal power is amplified...Research and development activities at the Heinrich-Hertz...
|
|
Integrated Optical Switching Based on the Protein Bacteriorhodopsin[dagger]
Magazine article from: Photochemistry and Photobiology; 3/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...its favorable nonlinear optical properties, sensitivity...polarization, photoelectric activity, repeatability, etc...paper, we report on all-optical switching experiments carried out using an integrated optical Mach-Zehnder (M-Z...
|
|
Optical Imaging: Current Applications and Future Directions
Magazine article from: The Journal of Nuclear Medicine; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...researchers have developed optical methods for imaging a variety...protein degradation, and protease activity. Whereas optical imaging has been used primarily...there are several areas in which optical molecular imaging will translate...
|
|
Fujitsu Optical Components and Furukawa Electric to Jointly Develop Integrated Receivers for 40Gbps and 100Gbps Optical Networks.
News Wire article from: JCN Newswires; 8/19/2009; 700+ words
; ...communications networks rises, optical transmission equipment for...the same time, R&D activities related to the commercialization of next-generation 100Gbps optical networks have gained significant...components that constitute these optical transmission equipments are...
|
|
Fujitsu Optical Components and Furukawa Electric to jointly develop integrated receivers for 40/100G networks.(PARTNERSHIPS)
Newspaper article from: Fiber Optics Weekly Update; 8/21/2009; 700+ words
; ...communications networks rises, optical transmission equipment for...the same time, R&D activities related to the commercialization of next-generation 100Gbps optical networks have gained significant...components that constitute these optical transmission equipments are...
|
|
Optical Component Worldwide Strategies Market Shares and Future Forecasts Through to 2015.(Industry overview)(Report)
Newspaper article from: Biotech Week; 10/14/2009; 700+ words
; ...components are leading-edge optical modules and optical devices that support the broadband...They contribute to consumer activities, social networking, and business by providing solutions for optical network construction. A PON...
|
|
optical activity
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
optical activity the ability of asymmetric compounds to...mirror images are know as enantiomers, or optical isomers. Although differing in geometric...affects polarized light differently, optical activity can be used to identify which...
|
|
optical isomers
Book article from: A Dictionary of Biology
optical isomers See optical activity .
|
|
optical rotation
Book article from: A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition
optical rotation See optical activity .
|
|
Maksutov, Dmitry Dmitrievich
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
...general theory of aplanatic optical systems. In 1928 he obtained...was again at the Leningrad Optical Institute, where he organized...Maksutov transferred all his activities to the Pulkovo observatory...optics and on manufacturing the optical systems of a series of astronomical...
|
|
isomer
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...passed through an optical isomer it is rotated into a different plane of polarization. Optical isomers exhibit this optical activity in varying degrees. Optical isomers of a given compound are often identical in all physical properties except the...
|