Source
Law for the Protection of Nature.
Passed June 26, 1935.
Today, as in the past, nature in forests and fields represents the longing, joy, and recreation of the German people.
The native landscape has changed fundamentally compared to earlier times, its vegetation has changed in many cases due to intensive agriculture and forestry, one-sided land consolidation and coniferous wood culture. Along with their natural habitats, a species-rich fauna that enlivens forests and fields has disappeared.
This development was often an economic necessity; today the idealistic, but also economic damage of such transformation of the German landscape is clearly evident.
The “conservation of natural monuments” that emerged around the turn of the century could only be partially successful because essential political and ideological preconditions were missing; only the transformation of the German people created the preconditions for effective nature conservation.
The German government considers it its duty to ensure that even the poorest of the people receive their share of German natural beauty. It has therefore passed the following Law for the Protection of Nature, which is hereby promulgated:
I. Section
Scope of the Law
§ 1 Object of Nature Conservation
The purpose of the Law for
the Protection of Nature is the protection and care of native nature
in all its manifestations. Nature conservation within the meaning of
this law shall extend to:
(a) plants and nongame
animals,
(b) natural monuments and their surroundings,
(c)
nature reserves,
(d) other parts of the landscape in the open
countryside,
whose preservation is in the general interest
because of their rarity, beauty, peculiarity or because of their
scientific, native, forestry or hunting significance.
§ 2 Plants and Animals
The protection of plants and nongame
animals extends to the preservation of rare or endangered plant and
animal species and to the prevention of abusive appropriation and
exploitation of plants and plant parts or animals (e.g., through
trade in ornamental brushwood, trade or barter in dry plants, mass
catching and industrial exploitation of butterflies or other
ornamental forms of fauna).
§ 3 Natural Monuments
Natural monuments within the meaning
of this law are individual creations of nature whose preservation is
in the public interest because of their scientific, historical,
local, and folkloric significance or because of their other
peculiarities (e.g., rocks, geological outcrops, hiking boulders,
glacier tracks, springs, watercourses, waterfalls, old or rare
trees).
§ 4 Nature Reserves
(1) Nature reserves within the meaning
of this law are specifically delineated districts in which a special
protection of nature in its entirety (earth-historically significant
forms of the landscape, natural plant associations, natural
communities of fauna) or in individual parts thereof (bird
sanctuaries, shrublands, plant sanctuaries, etc.) is in the public
interest for scientific, historical, local and folkloric reasons or
because of their scenic beauty or character.
(2) National or
state-owned districts of outstanding size and importance (national
nature reserves – § 18) may be claimed in whole or in part
exclusively for nature conservation purposes.
§ 5 Other Parts of the Landscape
Other parts of the
landscape in the open countryside which do not meet the requirements
of §§ 3 and 4 but contribute to the ornamentation and enlivenment of
the landscape or deserve preservation in the interest of wildlife,
especially songbirds and small game hunting (e.g., trees, groups of
trees and shrubs, groves, avenues, hedgerows, hedgerows and other
hedges, as well as parks and cemeteries) may also be subject to the
protection of this law. Protection may also extend to preserving the
landscape from disfiguring encroachment.
§ 6 Restrictions
The protection of nature shall not affect
areas used exclusively or primarily for the purposes of
the military,
important public roads,
maritime and
inland navigation or
vital economic enterprises
shall not be impaired in their use.
[…]
Source: Reichsgesetzblatt Nr. 68, Berlin, July 1, 1935, pp. 821–22. Available online at: http://alex.onb.ac.at/cgicontent/alex?aid=dra&datum=19350004&seite=00000821