Many of our customers ask us how the exotic leather trade is regulated. Alligator, python, lizard and other reptile species are protected by various organizations:
CITES and CSG
The key organizations involved in protecting reptile species are CITES and CSG. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) is an international set of guidelines adopted by 170+ national governments, aiming "to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival." CITES partners with the participating sovereign governments to implement these guidelines domestically at their own behest. The CITES agreement acts as the lowest common denominator; however, each participant can elect to impose even more stringent standards on their trading partners if they so choose.
CITES works with the IUCN-SSC Crocodile Specialist Group (CSG), a worldwide network of biologists, wildlife managers, government officials, independent researchers, non- government (NGO) representatives, farmers, traders, tanners, fashion leaders, and private companies involved in the conservation of the world's 23 species of alligators, crocodiles, caimans and gharials. The CSG network of experts advises governments and wildlife management agencies, evaluates the conservation needs of crocodilian populations, initiates research projects, conducts surveys of wild populations, provides technical information and training and initiates conservation programs.
One of the best examples of their contribution to protecting the species is their work with the American alligator. In 1967, the alligator was put on the endangered species list. By 1971, when the CSG began, all 23 species of crocodilian were endangered or threatened. In an effort to restore the animal and the industry, researchers at Rockefeller Refuge in Louisiana developed a revolutionary program of alligator farming/ranching that removes eggs from the wild, incubates and hatches them, and then, two years later, returns between 14% and 17% of those hatchlings to the wild. Upon return, they are between three and six feet in length, healthy, and capable of defending themselves in the marsh. As a result, the percentage of returns (i.e. 14%) is greater than the survival rate for eggs left in the marsh.
Due to the success of this "conservation through utilization" program, the alligator was removed from the endangered species list in 1987. This program also set an example that inspired similar sweeping changes in the crocodile locales across the globe as managed and enforced through CITES. So much so that by 1996, one-third of all crocodile species were sufficiently abundant to support well-regulated annual harvests and one-third of the species were no longer in danger of extinction but are not harvested. No other group of vertebrate animals has undergone such a dramatic improvement in its conservation status.
You can see more about these influential organizations at: