The Convention on the Conservation
of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats
The
Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural
Habitats (the
Bern Convention) was adopted in
Bern, Switzerland in 1979, and came into force in 1982. The
principal aims of the Convention are to ensure conservation and
protection of wild plant and animal species and their natural
habitats (listed in Appendices I and II of the Convention), to
increase cooperation between contracting parties, and
to regulate the exploitation of those species (including
migratory species) listed in Appendix 3. To this end the Convention
imposes legal obligations on contracting parties, protecting over
500 wild plant species and more than 1000 wild animal
species.
To implement the Bern Convention in Europe, the European
Community adopted Council Directive 79/409/EEC on the Conservation
of Wild Birds (the EC Birds Directive) in 1979, and Council
Directive 92/43/EEC on the Conservation of Natural Habitats and of
Wild Fauna and Flora (the EC Habitats Directive) in 1992. Among
other things the Directives provide for the establishment of a
European network of protected areas (Natura 2000), to tackle the
continuing losses of European biodiversity on land, at the coast
and in the sea to human activities.
The UK ratified the Bern Convention in 1982. The Convention
was implemented in UK law by the Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981
and as amended). As the inspiration for the EC Birds and Habitats
Directives, the Convention had an influence on the Conservation
(Natural Habitats &c.) Regulations (1994), and the Conservation
(Natural Habitats, etc.) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1995, which
were introduced to implement those parts of the Habitats Directive
not already covered in national legislation.
JNCC provides scientific and technical advice to the
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) on the
operation, development and implementation of the Convention and its
relationships with other European work.