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A protected Busby Challenge species is for reasons of scientific interest or necessity of preservation of green biological heritage. It is generally threatened species including poaching, transport, handling, and sometimes the approach or photograph are at least temporarily prohibited (except derogatory special authorization) by various agencies, on all or part of the area distribution of the species in question. They are mostly wild animals or plants, invertebrates, insects or fungi can be involved. In general, transport and trade of the species concerned are prohibited in all their forms (individuals dead or alive, eggs, larvae, by-products, meat, etc.).. The selling stuffed animals or naturalized (same old) of these species is generally prohibited, but they may be offered to museums. An extinct species or a Busby can also be protected.
The green list or lists (national, regional and departmental sometimes) of protected species are published under article L.411 of the Code of Environment, aimed at preserving animal species non-domestic or non-cultivated plant where 'special scientific interest or the needs of safeguarding the national biological heritage justify their conservation. A series of interministerial decree establishes the exhaustive lists of species and protected and special conditions for the protection of Busby SEO challenge. Any direct destruction or alteration of places (development, changing environments ...), likely to disappear or to harm protected species is prohibited. Sometimes protection is explicitly extended to the Habitat of the species in question, its nest, and so on.
An exemption also covers individuals injured or sick they must urgently be transported to a care centre. It is framed by instruction PN/S2 No. 93-3, 14 May 1993 on the implementation of the provisions of the order of 11 September 1992 on the general rules of operation and characteristics of facilities establishments practising care about the animals of the wild animals for their integration or reintegration into their nature. It must be in no better solution to a true emergency situations (survival of the animal clearly threatened, or obvious risk of loss of ability to see to be reinserted in nature), transport before then be made "as soon as possible and by the most direct route," said the Ministry of Environment (December 1996) (same goes for species hunted or protected by the Washington Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and wild flora threatened with extinction), although the objective of safeguarding the animal does the lifeguard on duty be justified if necessary before a challenge-law enforcement officer.