Title 16ConservationRelease 119-73

§6301 Findings and purposes

Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 82— - GREAT APE CONSERVATION › § 6301

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Requires action to protect great apes because their wild populations have dropped so much that their long-term survival is in serious danger. The chimpanzee, gorilla, bonobo, orangutan, and gibbon are listed as endangered under section 1533 and under CITES Appendix I. Loss of habitat from people and logging, population fragmentation, hunting for bushmeat, live capture, disease, and growing commercial trade have all made the problem worse. Great apes also help keep tropical forests healthy, so saving them helps many other species. Solving these threats needs coordinated work by ape-range countries, the United States, other nations, and the private sector. The law’s goals are to keep healthy, living populations of great apes in the wild and to help by supporting conservation programs in the countries where apes live and by supporting the CITES Secretariat.

Full Legal Text

Title 16, §6301

Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)Congress finds that—
(1)great ape populations have declined to the point that the long-term survival of the species in the wild is in serious jeopardy;
(2)the chimpanzee, gorilla, bonobo, orangutan, and gibbon are listed as endangered species under section 1533 of this title and under Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (27 UST 1087; TIAS 8249);
(3)because the challenges facing the conservation of great apes are so immense, the resources available to date have not been sufficient to cope with the continued loss of habitat due to human encroachment and logging and the consequent diminution of great ape populations;
(4)because great apes are flagship species for the conservation of the tropical forest habitats in which they are found, conservation of great apes provides benefits to numerous other species of wildlife, including many other endangered species;
(5)among the threats to great apes, in addition to habitat loss, are population fragmentation, hunting for the bushmeat trade, live capture, and exposure to emerging or introduced diseases;
(6)great apes are important components of the ecosystems they inhabit, and studies of their wild populations have provided important biological insights;
(7)although subsistence hunting of tropical forest animals has occurred for hundreds of years at a sustainable level, the tremendous increase in the commercial trade of tropical forest species is detrimental to the future of these species; and
(8)the reduction, removal, or other effective addressing of the threats to the long-term viability of populations of great apes in the wild will require the joint commitment and effort of countries that have within their boundaries any part of the range of great apes, the United States and other countries, and the private sector.
(b)The purposes of this chapter are—
(1)to sustain viable populations of great apes in the wild; and
(2)to assist in the conservation and protection of great apes by supporting conservation programs of countries in which populations of great apes are located and by supporting the CITES Secretariat.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Short Title

Pub. L. 106–411, § 1, Nov. 1, 2000, 114 Stat. 1789, provided that: “This Act [enacting this chapter] may be cited as the ‘Great Ape Conservation Act of 2000’.”

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

16 U.S.C. § 6301

Title 16Conservation

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73