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PA Bulletin, Doc. No. 13-1325

RULES AND REGULATIONS

Title 17—CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES

DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES

[ 17 PA. CODE CH. 45 ]

Conservation of Pennsylvania Native Wild Plants

[43 Pa.B. 4077]
[Saturday, July 20, 2013]

 The Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (Department) adopts amendments to Chapter 45 (relating to conservation of Pennsylvania native wild plants). The final-form rulemaking moves the beginning of the ginseng harvest season from August 1 to September 1 in § 45.69 (relating to vulnerable plant harvest seasons and conditions). In addition, in describing mature ginseng plants, the final-form rulemaking corrects reference to ''seeds'' by replacing this term with ''berries.''

A. Effective Date

 This final-form rulemaking will be effective upon publication in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

B. Contact Persons

 For further information, contact Rebecca H. Bowen, Chief, Ecological Services Section, Bureau of Forestry, Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, P. O. Box 8552, Harrisburg, PA 17105-8552, (717) 787-3444. Persons with a disability may use (800) 654-5984 (TTY).

 This final-form rulemaking is posted on the Department's web site at http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/forestry/plants/vulnerableplants/ginseng/index.htm.

C. Statutory Authority

 This final-form rulemaking is made under the authority of section 7 of the Wild Resource Conservation Act (WRCA) (32 P. S. § 5307) and sections 305 and 313 of the Conservation and Natural Resources Act (CNRA) (71 P. S. §§ 1340.305 and 1340.313).

 It should be noted that the Department of Environmental Resources was assigned to administer the WRCA. Subsequently, section 305(a)(9) of the CNRA transferred this authority to the Department.

D. Background and Purpose

Statutory and regulatory framework

 The WRCA was enacted in 1982 to enhance the protection of native wild plants and nongame animals in this Commonwealth. Under the WRCA, the Department established a classification system for native wild plants in Chapter 45. The classifications, such as extirpated, endangered, rare, threatened and vulnerable, are defined in § 45.2 (relating to definitions). The lists of species within each classification are in Subchapter B (relating to classified plants).

 Vulnerable plants are defined in § 45.2 as plant species ''which are in danger of population decline within this Commonwealth because of their beauty, economic value, use as a cultivar or other factors which indicate that persons may seek to remove these species from their native habitats.'' Ginseng (Panax quinquefolius) is one of the three species listed in § 45.15 (relating to Pennsylvania Vulnerable) as a vulnerable plant. Ginseng is a forest plant that is native to the eastern half of the United States and Canada. Parts of the ginseng plant, particularly its root, are valued for their therapeutic qualities and have been traded commercially, both domestically and internationally, for centuries.

 Under the WRCA, the Department is responsible for the protection and management of native wild plants. With respect to vulnerable plants, section 9 of the WRCA (32 P. S. § 5309) provides as follows:

(a) Species classified as vulnerable shall be subject to the following restrictions:
(1) The [Department] upon designation of vulnerable species shall establish regulations over the digging, harvesting, sale and exploitation of said species.
(2) The regulations shall:
(i) consider the distribution, abundance, economic value, growing and reproduction cycle;
(ii) establish seasons for the digging and harvesting of plants or plant parts; and
(iii) provide for the commercial licensing of persons who buy with the intent to sell vulnerable plants within the Commonwealth or export said plants therefrom and to require the licensees to maintain records of their transactions.

 (3) The [Department] shall establish the license fee.

 Under section 9(a)(1) of the WRCA, the Department has promulgated regulations ''over the digging, harvesting, sale and exploitation'' of vulnerable plants. These regulations in Subchapter E (relating to vulnerable plants) require persons who buy, trade or barter vulnerable plants with the intent to sell them in, or export them from, this Commonwealth to obtain a commercial license from the Department. The regulations require licensees to submit to the Department records of transactions including information about the licensee's purchase of the plants, sale of the plants, county of origin of the plants, form of plants (for example, whole plant, root or seeds), year of harvest, weight of the plants, destination and date of export and whether the plants are wild or cultivated.

 In addition to covering vulnerable plants in general, the Department's regulations establish special requirements for ginseng plants. These are a result of an international trade agreement known as the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora of 1973 (CITES) signed by the United States and many other countries, administered in the United States by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). See http://www.cites.org/ and http://www.fws. gov/international/plants/american-ginseng.html. The relationship between the Department's ginseng harvesting regulation and CITES is discussed as follows.

Purposes of this Final-Form Rulemaking

 Section 45.69 addresses certain activities regarding the harvest of vulnerable plants in general and ginseng in particular. This section establishes a harvest season for ginseng that runs from September 1 to November 30 and prohibits the possession of harvested green ginseng roots between April 1 and the start of harvest season. This final-form rulemaking moves the start of harvest season forward by 1 month to September 1 and, consistent with this change, prohibits possessing harvested green roots between April 1 and September 1. The amendments also correct the terminology in § 45.69(a)(2) for the ginseng berry.

Harvest date

 The intent of § 45.69(a) is to ensure the sustainability of ginseng. It takes a ginseng plant at least 5 years to mature. Ginseng seeds have the best chance of producing new plants if they come from a mature plant and are planted near the site of the harvested plant. Section 45.69(a), therefore, allows only mature plants to be harvested and requires that the seeds of these plants be planted in the immediate vicinity of the collection site. To ensure that only mature plants are harvested, § 45.69(a) puts collectors on notice of the physical characteristics of a mature ginseng plant—it has at least three leaves of five leaflets each and red berries. In addition, this section prohibits collection of the plant before the start of the harvest season as defined in the section. Therefore, to comply with the Department's ginseng harvesting requirements, a collector may harvest ginseng plants only if: 1) they have at least three leaves of five leaflets each; 2) they have red seeds (berries); 3) they are collected during harvest season; and 4) their seeds are planted in the immediate vicinity of the collection site.

 The purpose of this final-form rulemaking is to move the start date of the ginseng harvest season from August 1 to September 1. There is general agreement within both the scientific community and the ginseng industry that an August 1 start date is too early to ensure that ginseng plants that meet the description of mature plants in terms of their leaves and berries are fully mature and can safely be harvested without threatening the survival of the ginseng population.

 The harvesting of ginseng plants in ginseng-exporting states, such as this Commonwealth, is subject to special restrictions imposed by the USFWS. The USFWS's involvement is due to the regulation of the export of ginseng from the United States by CITES. The purpose of CITES is to monitor and regulate the international trade of certain plant and animal species to prevent detrimental impacts to their populations so as to ensure the continued existence of the species in their native habitat. The CITES authority in the United States is the USFWS.

 CITES requirements, as administered by the USFWS, for permitting the export of species subject to CITES are codified in 50 CFR Part 23 (relating to Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)). Section 23.68 of 50 CFR (relating to how can I trade internationally in roots of American ginseng) contains the specific requirements for the export of ginseng. The USFWS has established an export program for states that export ginseng. Under this program, on an annual basis, before the USFWS will allow export from a state, it must determine that ginseng harvested in that state is legally acquired and that export will not be detrimental to the survival of the species in that state. See 50 CFR 23.68. The USFWS will make a ''non-detriment'' finding for export of ginseng plants from a state only if it is satisfied that the state has taken measures to ensure the plants were mature when harvested. See http://www.fws.gov/international/pdf/archive/workshop-american-ginseng-cites-non-detriment-findings.pdf. The USFWS determined that the survival of ginseng plant populations could be detrimentally affected if a state allows harvesting to begin as early as August 1. Therefore, the USFWS urged the Commonwealth and the Department to adopt a later harvest season and it is specifically recommending September 1 as the start date.

 The USFWS made it clear to the Department that unless the change in harvest season is adopted soon, the USFWS will be unable to make a ''non-detriment'' finding under CITES with regard to the harvesting of ginseng in this Commonwealth. Copies of correspondence from the USFWS are available from the Bureau of Forestry. The absence of a nondetriment finding would mean that the USFWS would cease issuing export permits for ginseng harvested in this Commonwealth. See the USFWS 2012 findings report on ginseng at http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/cs/groups/public/documents/document/dcnr_20026618.pdf. Adopting the USFWS's recommendation of a September 1 harvest date brings this Commonwealth in line with nearly all of the ginseng-exporting states surrounding Pennsylvania.

 This Commonwealth was the only ginseng-exporting state with a harvest season date as early as August 1. Variations in the yearly growing seasons and growing conditions in different parts of this Commonwealth could cause ginseng berries to turn red slightly before or slightly after September 1. However, as is recognized by harvesters, dealers and botanical researchers in this Commonwealth, the clear trend in Pennsylvania and surrounding states is for berries to be red by September 1.

 It should be noted that the export of another species of plant classified in Chapter 45 as vulnerable, Golden-Seal (Hydrastis Canadensis), is also subject to regulation by CITES as administered by the USFWS. However, unlike ginseng, specific harvest season dates are not required for this species.

Correction of terminology

 Section 45.69(a)(2) formerly stated as follows regarding the harvesting of ginseng plants: ''Only mature ginseng plants with at least three leaves of five leaflets each may be harvested and only when the seeds are red.'' Emphasis added.

 This final-form rulemaking replaces ''seeds'' with the correct term ''berries.'' The reason for this amendment is to distinguish between seeds and berries. When a ginseng plant is mature, it has red berries. The red berries contain seeds that are ready to plant.

E. Summary of Comments and Responses

 The proposed rulemaking was published at 43 Pa.B. 1419 (March 16, 2013) with a 30-day public comment period. The Department did not make changes to the proposed rulemaking. One comment was received from the public.

Comment

 ''The proposed rulemaking is reasonable and is necessary for this Pennsylvania Vulnerable species to remain part of Pennsylvania's flora. WPC supports DCNR's effort to update the ginseng management program with this change.''

Response

 The Department acknowledges the comment and appreciates the support of this final-form rulemaking.

F. Benefits, Costs and Compliance

Benefits

 The benefit of moving the beginning date of the ginseng harvest season from August 1 to September 1 is to help sustain the populations of ginseng in this Commonwealth by allowing the plants to mature so that when their seeds are planted, new plants will grow and the ginseng population will continue to survive. In addition, it would bring this Commonwealth's harvest season in line with those of the other ginseng-exporting states, thereby discouraging poaching across state borders. Finally, and most immediately, it will allow the USFWS, under CITES, to continue to find that the export of ginseng harvested in this Commonwealth will not be detrimental to the survival of the species and thus avoid a ban on the export of ginseng from this Commonwealth.

 The correction of terminology to distinguish between ''seed'' and ''berry'' will remove confusion caused by the former language in the harvesting provisions of § 45.69 and consequently support compliance with its provisions.

Compliance costs

 This final-form rulemaking will not impose additional compliance costs on the regulated community.

Compliance Assistance Plan

 This is not applicable.

Paperwork requirements

 There will not be an increase in the amount of required paperwork.

G. Sunset Review

 Chapter 45 will be reviewed in accordance with the sunset review schedule published by the Department to determine whether the regulations effectively fulfill the goals for which they were intended.

H. Regulatory Review

 Under section 5(a) of the Regulatory Review Act (71 P. S. § 745.5(a)), on March 5, 2013, the Department submitted a copy of the notice of proposed rulemaking, published at 43 Pa.B. 1419, to IRRC and the Chairpersons of the Senate and House Environmental Resources and Energy Committees for review and comment.

 Under section 5(c) of the Regulatory Review Act, IRRC and the House and Senate Committees were provided with copies of the comments received during the public comment period, as well as other documents when requested. In preparing the final-form rulemaking, the Department has considered all comments from IRRC, the House and Senate Committees and the public.

 Under section 5.1(j.2) of the Regulatory Review Act (71 P. S. § 745.5a(j.2)), on June 19, 2013, the final-form rulemaking was deemed approved by the House and Senate Committees. Under section 5(g) of the Regulatory Review Act, the final-form rulemaking was deemed approved by IRRC effective June 19, 2013.

I. Findings

 The Board finds that:

 (1) Public notice of intention to adopt the administrative amendments adopted by this order has been given under sections 201 and 202 of the act of July 31, 1968 (P. L. 769, No. 240) (45 P. S. §§ 1201 and 1202) and the regulations thereunder, 1 Pa. Code §§ 7.1 and 7.2.

 (2) The amendments to the Department's regulations in the manner provided in this order are necessary and appropriate for the administration of the authorizing statutes.

J. Order

 The Department, acting under the authorizing statutes, orders that:

 (a) The regulations of the Department, 17 Pa. Code Chapter 45, are amended by amending § 45.69 to read as set forth at 43 Pa.B. 1419.

 (b) The Department shall submit this order and 43 Pa.B. 1419 to the Office of General Counsel and the Office of Attorney General for approval and review as to legality and form, as required by law.

 (c) The Department shall submit this order and 43 Pa.B. 1419 to IRRC and the Senate and House Environmental Resources and Energy Committees as required by the Regulatory Review Act.

 (d) The Department shall certify this order and 43 Pa.B. 1419 and deposit them with the Legislative Reference Bureau, as required by law.

 (e) This order shall take effect upon publication in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

ELLEN FERRETTI, 
Acting Secretary

 (Editor's Note: For the text of the order of the Independent Regulatory Review Commission relating to this document, see 43 Pa.B. 3857 (July 6, 2013).)

Fiscal Note: Fiscal Note 7B-6 remains valid for the final adoption of the subject regulation.

[Pa.B. Doc. No. 13-1325. Filed for public inspection July 19, 2013, 9:00 a.m.]



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