CELEX: 62005CC0060
Language: en
Date: 2006-02-16
Title: Opinion of Mr Advocate General Geelhoed delivered on 16 February 2006. # WWF Italia and Others v Regione Lombardia. # Reference for a preliminary ruling: Tribunale amministrativo regionale per la Lombardia - Italy. # Conservation of wild birds - Directive 79/409/EEC - Derogations from the system of protection. # Case C-60/05.

OPINION OF ADVOCATE GENERAL
      GEELHOED
      delivered on 16 February 2006 1(1)
      
      Case C-60/05
      WWF Italia
      Gruppo Ornitologico Lombardo (GOL)
      Lega per l’abolizione della caccia (LAC)
      Lega antivivisezionista (LAV)
      v
      Regione Lombardia
      with the intervention of
      Associazione migratoristi italiani
      (Reference for a preliminary ruling from the Tribunale amministrativo regionale per la Lombardia (Italy))
      (Conservation of wild birds – Protected species – Birds of the finch and brambling species)I –  Introduction
      1.        The questions referred by the Tribunale amministrativo regionale per la Lombardia (Regional Administrative Court, Lombardy)
         concern Article 9 of Council Directive 79/409/EEC of 2 April 1979 on the conservation of wild birds (‘the Birds Directive’
         or ‘the Directive’). (2) The referring court seeks to ascertain under what conditions the regions can exercise the derogation granted to Member States
         by Article 9(1)(c) of the Birds Directive.
      
      II –  Applicable law
      A –    Directive 79/409
      2.        The Birds Directive is based on the finding that certain species of wild birds naturally occurring in the European territory
         of the Member States to which the EC Treaty applies are declining in number, which ‘represents a serious threat to the conservation
         of the natural environment, particularly because of the biological balances threatened thereby’ (second recital in the preamble).
         Effective bird protection is seen as ‘typically a trans-frontier environment problem entailing common responsibilities’ (third
         recital). Conservation is aimed at ‘the long-term protection and management of natural resources as an integral part of the
         heritage of the peoples of Europe’ and ‘the maintenance and adjustment of the natural balances between species as far as is
         reasonably possible’ (eighth recital).
      
      3.        In order to establish effective protection, the Directive incorporates three kinds of provisions. Firstly, it contains a general
         ban on the killing, capturing, disturbing, keeping and marketing of birds, as well as on the destroying, damaging and removing
         of their nests and eggs (Articles 5 and 6(1)). Secondly, with respect to the species of birds listed in the annexes, the Directive
         provides for an exception to the abovementioned general ban. Thus, the species listed in Annex III may be marketed and those
         listed in Annex II may be hunted, subject to the observance of certain conditions and restrictions (Article 6(2) to (4) and
         Article 7). This means that the general ban remains in force for bird species not mentioned in the annexes or when the conditions
         or restrictions laid down in the aforementioned articles are not observed. Thirdly, under Article 9 of the Directive, Member
         States may derogate from the abovementioned general ban and from the provisions concerning, in particular, marketing and hunting.
         
      
      4.        Under Article 9(1) of the Directive, where there is no other satisfactory solution, Member States may derogate from the provisions
         of Articles 5, 6, 7 and 8 for the following reasons:
      
      ‘(a)  –        in the interests of public health and safety,
      –      in the interests of air safety,
      –      to prevent serious damage to crops, livestock, forests, fisheries and water,
      –      for the protection of flora and fauna;
      (b)      for the purposes of research and teaching, of repopulation, of reintroduction and for the breeding necessary for these purposes;
      (c)      to permit, under strictly supervised conditions and on a selective basis, the capture, keeping or other judicious use of certain
         birds in small numbers.’
      
      5.        Article 9(2) provides that the derogations must specify:
      
      ‘–     the species which are subject to the derogations,
      –        the means, arrangements or methods authorised for capture or killing,
      –        the conditions of risk and the circumstances of time and place under which such derogations may be granted,
      –        the authority empowered to declare that the required conditions obtain and to decide what means, arrangements or methods may
         be used, within what limits and by whom,
      
      –        the controls which will be carried out.’
      6.        Under Article 9(3), Member States are required to send the Commission an annual report on the implementation of this article.
         The Commission ‘shall at all times ensure that the consequences of these derogations are not incompatible with this Directive’
         and ‘shall take appropriate steps to this end’ (Article 9(4)).
      
      B –    National law
      7.        Article 19 bis of Italian Law No 157/92 of 11 February 1992, introduced by Article 1 of Italian Law No 221 of 3 October 2002, transposes
         Article 9 of the Birds Directive into Italian law. The relevant provisions are summarised below.
      
      8.        Article 19 bis (1) confers on the regions the power to establish rules governing the exercise of the derogations for which the Directive
         provides. In applying these provisions, the regions are obliged to take into account the criteria and conditions of Article
         9 of the Directive, as well as the principles and purposes of Articles 1 and 2 of the Directive and the other provisions of
         Law No 157/92.
      
      9.        Article 19 bis (2) states that, where there is no other satisfactory solution, the derogations may be applied if they are based on one of
         the grounds mentioned in Article 9(1) of the Directive and if they specify the formal conditions (listed in Article 19 bis (2)).
      
      10.      Article 19 bis (3) provides that the derogations as mentioned in the first paragraph are to be applied for specified periods while making
         it mandatory for the Regions first to obtain the – non-binding – opinion of the Istituto nazionale per la fauna selvatica
         (National Institute for Wild Fauna) (INFS) or of other institutions recognised at regional level. In no case may the derogations
         relate to species of birds whose population has sharply declined.
      
      11.      Under Article 19 bis (4), the President of the Council of Ministers may, after notification of the region concerned, on the proposal of the Minister
         for Regional Affairs, having conferred with the Minister for the Environment and Town and Country Planning and consulted the
         Council of Ministers, annul regional measures in breach of Law No 157/92 or Directive 79/409.
      
      III –  Facts and proceedings
      12.      On 15 September 2003 the Regione Lombardia adopted Decision No 14250 authorising, for the 2003/04 hunting season, the hunting
         of the finch and brambling species. The association World Wild Life Fund Italia and a number of other organisations (‘the
         nature conservation groups’ or ‘applicants’) sought to have this decision annulled on the grounds that it allows the use of
         finches (3) and bramblings, (4) both protected species, as live decoys.
      
      13.      The nature conservation groups also argued that Article 19 bis of Law No 157/92 is in breach of the Birds Directive in so far as it confers on the regions the power to govern the exercise
         of the derogations for which the Directive provides, without establishing how the maximum total quota of protected species
         that can be hunted on the national territory should be set and enforced. 
      
      14.       Finally, the applicants maintain that there is no question of effective enforcement. The regions do not operate any strict
         control system that would enable them to check compliance with the requirements concerning the number of birds which may be
         taken.
      
      15.      The Tribunale amministrativo regionale per la Lombardia doubts that Article 19 bis of Law No 157/92 ensures effective application of Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive. First of all, it entrusts the determination
         of the maximum quota of birds which may be taken to the non-binding, albeit mandatory, opinion of the INFS or of other institutions
         recognised at regional level, without providing for an appropriate system for setting a binding quota for the national territory
         as a whole. Secondly, the national legislation does not provide for suitable machinery for determining the distribution between
         the regions of the specified quota of birds which may be hunted. Finally, the referring court questions whether, considering
         the time it takes, the system for verifying the compatibility of regional measures with national and Community rules fulfils
         the requirements of celerity associated with the need to avoid unlawful exploitation during the brief period (about 40 days)
         in which the derogation is in operation.
      
      16.      The Tribunale amministrativo regionale per la Lombardia has therefore stayed the proceedings and referred the following questions
         to the Court for a preliminary ruling:
      
      ‘(1)      Is Directive 79/409/EEC to be interpreted as meaning that, irrespective of the internal allocation of powers between the State
         and the regions laid down by national systems, the Member States must prepare implementing provisions governing all situations
         considered deserving of protection by the same, in particular as regards ensuring that hunting derogations do not exceed the
         small numbers laid down in Article 9(1)(c)?
      
      (2)      As regards in particular the numbers covered by hunting derogations, should Directive 79/409/EEC be interpreted as meaning
         that the national implementing provision must refer to a criterion which is determined or can be determined, and even entrusted
         to qualified technical bodies, so that the exercise of hunting derogations is governed by criteria objectively establishing
         a quantitative level which may not be exceeded at national or regional level, having regard to the various environmental conditions
         which may prevail?
      
      (3)      Does the national provision in Article 19 bis of Law No 157/92, by requiring the obligatory, but non-binding, opinion of the INFS to determine that criterion without,
         however, providing for a process for reaching agreement between the regions on the binding determination of the distribution
         for each species of the numerical limits of hunting derogations set at national level as small numbers, constitute a proper
         application of Article 9 of Directive 79/409/EEC?
      
      (4)      Is the procedure for verifying the compatibility with Community provisions of the hunting derogations authorised by the Italian
         regions under Article 19 bis of Law No 157/92, preceded by a period of notice and therefore requiring fixed periods of time, which are also necessary
         for the adoption and publication of the measure, during which the brief period of hunting derogations itself may expire, suitable
         for ensuring effective application of Directive 79/409/EEC?’
      
      IV –  Admissibility
      17.      The Regione Lombardia and the Associazione migratoristi italiani (ANUU) dispute the admissibility of the reference for a preliminary
         ruling on the grounds that the Court of Justice is being asked to rule on the validity and lawfulness of the internal distribution
         of the powers of the Italian State by which the regional structure is established at constitutional level.
      
      18.      ANUU argues that the reference for a preliminary ruling is also inadmissible because the questions put by the national court
         concern the compatibility of the Italian provisions with Article 9 of the Directive rather than the interpretation of the
         scope of Article 9.
      
      19.      From the wording of the questions submitted for a preliminary ruling, as from the order for reference, it appears that the
         national court is seeking to obtain an interpretation of Article 9 of the Directive. It is clear from the order that the national
         court considers the interpretation of the Directive necessary in order to judge whether Law No 157/92 is compatible with the
         Directive. Although, to be sure, within the context of the present procedure, the Court may not rule on the compatibility
         of national provisions with Community law, it may provide ‘the criteria for the interpretation of Community law which will
         enable the national court to solve the legal problem with which it is faced’. (5)
      
      20.      In my opinion, the present reference for a preliminary ruling is therefore admissible.
      
      V –  Substance
      A –    General background
      21.      The questions posed by the national court essentially concern the implementation of the Directive, and especially Article
         9 thereof. Thus, this case forms part of a series of cases in which the Court has ruled on the Birds Directive. (6)
      
      22.      More particularly, the case concerns the application of Article 9(1)(c) of the Birds Directive, read in conjunction with Article
         9(2), the Italian arrangements for the implementation of this provision also playing a part. The implementation and enforcement
         of Article 9 are reserved for the regions. Within this decentralised structure the following problems arise:
      
      1.      At what level should it be determined what constitutes responsible hunting of certain birds in small numbers? What criteria
         should be taken into account in determining the ‘small number’ of birds?
      
      2.      How should the ‘small number’ determined be shared out?
      3.      How can it be ensured that in the event of implementation at regional level the maximum number of birds of a particular species
         which may be hunted, as determined for the territory of the Member State as a whole, is not exceeded?
      
      4.      Is supervision of the establishment of the hunting rules by the competent authorities and compliance with the hunting licence
         conditions effectively regulated?
      
      23.      The abovementioned case-law (see point 21) developed by the Court in connection with Article 9(1)(c) of the Birds Directive
         is also an important part of the general background.
      
      B –    Article 9(1)(c) of the Birds Directive
      24.      In principle, the hunting of bird species not listed in Annex II to the Directive is prohibited under Article 5 of the Directive.
         By virtue of Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive, where there is no other satisfactory solution, Member States may derogate from,
         inter alia, Article 5 ‘to permit, under strictly supervised conditions and on a selective basis, the capture, keeping or other
         judicious use of certain birds in small numbers’.
      
      25.      In accordance with the case-law of the Court, it is possible to derogate from the prohibition on hunting bird species not
         listed in Annex II to the Directive, to which Article 7(1) refers, in particular, on the grounds mentioned in Article 9(1)(c)
         of the Directive. (7) Therefore, the hunting of wild birds for recreational purposes may constitute a judicious use authorised by Article 9(1)(c)
         of the Directive. (8)
      
      26.      Four conditions are attached to the possibility of derogating from the prohibition on hunting provided for in Article 9(1)(c),
         in conjunction with Article 9(2), of the Directive. Firstly, the Member State must restrict the derogation to cases in which
         there is no other satisfactory solution. (9) Secondly, the hunting must take place under strictly supervised conditions and on a selective basis. Thirdly, hunting may
         be authorised only if it relates to certain birds in small numbers. Fourthly, the derogation from the prohibition on hunting
         must satisfy the formal requirements set out in detail in Article 9(2), which are designed to confine the derogations to what
         is strictly necessary and to enable the Commission to apply the appropriate controls.
      
      27.      The second condition will be fulfilled if the national legislation guarantees that the hunting is carried on selectively and
         under strict supervision. (10) This means that the authorities competent to apply the derogation must provide for intensive supervision so that offenders
         run a serious risk of being caught and punished.
      
      28.      To satisfy the third condition, the national regulations must ensure that bird species not listed in Annex II are hunted only
         in small numbers and that the population of the species concerned is maintained at a satisfactory level. 
      
      29.      If this condition is not satisfied, the use of wild birds for recreational hunting cannot, in any event, be considered judicious
         and, accordingly, acceptable for the purposes of the 11th recital in the preamble to the Directive. From Article 2, read in
         conjunction with the 11th recital of the Directive, it follows that the ‘small numbers’ criterion is not an absolute one but
         rather refers to the maintenance of the total population and to the reproductive situation of the species concerned. (11)
      
      30.      In its ‘Second report on the application of Directive 79/409/EEC on the conservation of wild birds’, published in 1993, (12) the Commission developed a method of determining what may be deemed to be a small number for the purposes of Article 9(1)(c).
         The maintenance or stability of a particular population depends on the reproductive situation and the total annual mortality
         rate due to natural causes and – for species that can be hunted – to hunting using ordinary methods. If for a given balance
         between reproduction and annual mortality the population level remains broadly stable, the exceptional authorisation of a
         special method of capture for ‘small numbers’ may not upset that balance.
      
      31.      In the report in question, on the basis of ornithological studies, the Commission concluded that for species which may not
         be hunted a sample of less than 1% of the usual annual mortality rate within a population may still be regarded as a small
         number within the meaning of Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive. If this upper limit is respected, there should be no threat
         to the stability of the species. (13)
      
      32.      Finally, in accordance with Article 9(2) of the Directive, the measures authorising hunting on the basis of Article 9(1)(c)
         must specify:
      
      –        the species which are subject to the derogations;
      –        the means, arrangements or methods authorised for capture or killing; 
      –        the conditions of risk and the circumstances of time and place under which such derogations may be granted;
      –        the authority empowered to declare that the required conditions obtain and to decide what means, arrangements or methods may
         be used, within what limits and by whom; and 
      
      –         the controls which will be carried out. (14)
      
      33.      In the light of these considerations, I shall now proceed to answer the questions posed.
      
      34.      In passing, I note that the ‘small numbers’ authorised in the present case appear to be at odds with the margins that follow
         from Article 9 of the Directive.
      
      35.      According to the hunting regulations adopted by the Regione Lombardia for finches and bramblings, in each season 360 000 finches
         and 32 000 bramblings may be captured. If these figures are compared with the criterion that the Commission considers justified
         for the application of the derogation under Article 9(1)(c) of the Birds Directive – that is to say, a maximum of 1% of the
         annual mortality rate among the population concerned – then the annual mortality rate among finches and bramblings passing
         through the Regione Lombardia should amount to 36 million and 3.2 million, respectively. Assuming that 30% of the population
         dies every year – a realistic assumption for small migratory bird species – that would mean populations of 120 million finches
         and 10.7 million bramblings for the Regione Lombardia alone.
      
      C –    First question
      36.      In posing its first question, the referring court seeks to ascertain whether the national provisions that transpose the Directive
         should govern all situations considered deserving of protection by the same. The national court poses this question in particular
         with respect to one of the conditions laid down in Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive, namely, that the capture, keeping or
         other judicious use of certain birds should be restricted to small numbers. 
      
      37.      Although Article 249 EC provides that a directive is to be binding, as to the result to be achieved, upon each Member State
         to which it is addressed but is to leave to the national authorities the choice of form and methods, this does not mean that
         the implementation process is left entirely to the discretion of the Member States.
      
      38.      Firstly, for correct implementation the substantive content of the directive must be absorbed into national law in sufficiently
         clear and precise terms within the time schedule set in the directive. (15) With respect to the transposition of the Birds Directive, the Court has stated that the criteria which the Member States
         must meet in order to derogate from the prohibitions laid down in the Directive must be reproduced in specific national provisions,
         since a faithful transposition becomes particularly important in a case where the management of the common heritage is entrusted
         to the Member States in their respective territories. (16)
      
      39.      Secondly, Member States are required to create a legal and administrative framework for the proper application and enforcement
         of the national provisions incorporating the standards contained in the directive. This involves designating authorities competent
         for applying these provisions, ensuring that these authorities are endowed with adequate powers, creating facilities for monitoring
         compliance with these provisions, providing guarantees for legal protection, ensuring the availability of legal remedies,
         laying down sanctions in case of offences against these provisions and establishing enforcement structures in relation to
         offences.
      
      40.      Finally, the objectives of the directive must be secured by the full and active application by the competent national authorities
         of the national provisions transposing the directive into national law and the credible enforcement of these provisions where
         they are infringed. (17) In the Marks & Spencer judgment, the Court noted that ‘the adoption of national measures correctly implementing a directive does not exhaust the
         effects of the directive. Member States remain bound actually to ensure full application of the directive even after the adoption
         of those measures’. The Court ruled that individuals are therefore entitled to rely before national courts, against the State,
         on the provisions of a directive which appear, so far as their subject-matter is concerned, to be unconditional and sufficiently
         precise ‘whenever the full application of the directive is not in fact secured, that is to say, not only where the directive
         has not been implemented or has been implemented incorrectly, but also where the national measures correctly implementing
         the directive are not being applied in such a way as to achieve the result sought by it’. (18)
      
      41.      In the present case, the second requirement for correct implementation is not met.
      
      42.      Under Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive, subject to the conditions set out therein, Member States may, by way of derogation,
         authorise the hunting of protected species to which a hunting ban applies. One of these conditions is that the national rules
         must ensure that bird species not listed in Annex II are hunted only in small numbers and that the population of the species
         concerned is maintained at a satisfactory level.
      
      43.      Article 19 bis (1) of Law No 157/92 empowers the regions to apply this special derogation. Naturally, as the responsible public authorities,
         the regions must take the criteria and conditions of Article 9(1) and (2) of the Directive into account.
      
      44.      In my opinion, the assignment of this task to the competent regional authorities alone fails to provide for the proper implementation
         of the Directive, since the Italian legislature has not thereby ensured that the numbers of birds of the species in question
         whose capture is allowed by each of the competent regional authorities acting individually amount, in total, to less than
         the ‘small numbers’ authorised by Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive.
      
      45.      Because the Italian legislation implementing the Directive lacks a mechanism for determining the total permissible numbers
         of the species in question that can be captured on Italian territory and there are no arrangements to ensure that the competent
         regions do not collectively exceed the maxima, adequate implementation within the national legal order is not secured. In
         other respects, this determination does nothing to detract from the discretion enjoyed by Member States with regard to their
         internal arrangements for the implementation of the Directive and the enforcement of the relevant rules.
      
      46.      I therefore propose that the first question be answered as follows: Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive requires Member States
         to ensure, when implementing this provision, that in the process of applying the derogation contained therein the catches
         deemed permissible do not exceed the maxima implied by the expression ‘in small numbers’. Even if implementation is entrusted
         to decentralised provincial authorities, Member States remain obliged to secure the intended result of Article 9(1)(c) of
         the Directive.
      
      D –    Second question
      47.      By its second question, the national court seeks to discover whether the national provisions transposing the Directive should
         refer to a criterion which is or can be determined and on the basis of which the small number of birds that may be hunted
         can be established.
      
      48.      From the 11th recital in the preamble to the Directive, it follows that the ‘small numbers’ criterion is not an absolute one
         but is related to the population level of the species concerned, its reproductive rate in the Community as a whole and the
         total annual mortality rate.
      
      49.      Article 2 of the Directive requires the Member States to take the requisite measures to maintain the population of all bird
         species at a level, or to adapt it to a level, which corresponds in particular to ecological, scientific and cultural requirements,
         while taking account of economic and recreational requirements.
      
      50.      It follows that national rules must ensure that in determining the ‘small number’ Member States take into consideration the
         population level of the species concerned, its reproductive rate in the Community as a whole and the total annual mortality
         rate, so that the population of the species is maintained at a satisfactory level.
      
      51.      Therefore the answer to the second question must be that the Directive requires the national provisions transposing the Directive
         to ensure that in determining the ‘small number’ consideration is given to the population level of the species concerned,
         its reproductive rate in the Community as a whole and the total annual mortality rate, so that the maintenance of the population
         of the species concerned at a satisfactory level can be guaranteed.
      
      E –    Third question
      52.      The third and fourth questions referred for a preliminary ruling concern the compatibility of a national measure with Community
         law. Although it is true that the Court may not, within the context of the present procedure, rule on the compatibility of
         national provisions with Community law, it may ‘provide the criteria for the interpretation of Community law which will enable
         the national court to solve the legal problem with which it is faced’. (19)
      
      53.      Therefore it must be assumed that in posing the third question the national court essentially seeks to ascertain whether Article
         9(1)(c) of the Directive should be interpreted as requiring a procedure for enabling the regions to reach a binding agreement
         on how the quota should be shared out.
      
      54.      In the order for reference, the national court points out that under Article 19 bis (3) of Italian Law No 157/92 the regions are required to consult the INFS or another recognised scientific institution before
         their hunting regulations under Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive are put into effect.
      
      55.      However, this is insufficient to ensure that the conditions of the Directive will be met, since the opinion of the INFS is
         non-binding.
      
      56.      In point 46 above, I noted that Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive includes an obligation on Member States, in implementing
         this provision, to ensure that in the process of applying the derogation contained therein the catches deemed permissible
         do not exceed the maxima implied by the expression ‘in small numbers’. Even if implementation is entrusted to decentralised
         provincial authorities, Member States remain obliged to secure the intended result of Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive.
      
      57.      Whether, in securing the intended result, the legislature chooses a distribution mechanism or some other process as the procedure
         for reaching agreement is part of the discretion enjoyed by the Member States with respect to the internal arrangements for
         the implementation of the Directive. Whatever solution the legislature may choose, it must ensure that the competent regions
         do not collectively exceed the total permissible catches for the species concerned and that for the national territory as
         a whole the capture, keeping or other judicial use of particular birds remains confined to small numbers.
      
      58.      Thus, the answer to the third question should be that Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive includes an obligation on the Member
         States to ensure, in implementing this provision, that the competent regions do not collectively exceed the total permissible
         catches for the species concerned.
      
      F –    Fourth question
      59.      By its fourth question, the national court essentially seeks to ascertain whether Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive precludes
         a national enforcement procedure such as that contained in Article 19 bis of Italian Law No 157/92 which is preceded by a period of notice and requires fixed periods of time during which the brief
         period of hunting derogations itself may expire.
      
      60.      Under Article 19 bis (4) of Italian Law No 157/92, the President of the Council of Ministers may, after notification of the region concerned,
         on the proposal of the Minister for Regional Affairs, having conferred with the Minister for the Environment and Town and
         Country Planning and consulted the Council of Ministers, annul regional measures in breach of Law No 157/92 or the Directive.
      
      61.      From the case‑file it appears that in the main proceedings two objections were made to this mode of supervision:
      
      (a)      It takes no account of the possibility that, although the decisions of one or more individual regions may well be compatible
         with the Directive, in combination with the decisions of a number of other regions they may exceed the standard set out in
         Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive;
      
      (b)      The procedure outlined in Article 19 bis (4) of Italian Law No 157/92 falls short of effective supervision of compliance with the Directive because the fixed periods
         involved mean that regional decisions inconsistent with the Directive and the national implementing legislation cannot be
         annulled in time.
      
      62.      Without going explicitly into the merits of these arguments, I consider it possible to deduce from the object and purpose
         of Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive the requirements which national regulations for implementing this provision must satisfy.
         I have already made it clear, in point 46 above, that the Directive implies that the national legislation must ensure observance
         of the maximum capture limit that follows from Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive. Logically, then, it should also grant the
         power to intervene in a timely and effective manner if the resolutions of the competent regional authorities lead or threaten
         to lead to a result inconsistent with the Directive.
      
      63.      The answer to the fourth question may therefore be expressed as follows. From the obligation on the Member States, even in
         the case of decentralised implementation of Directive 79/409, to ensure observance of the maximum capture limits set in connection
         with the application of Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive it follows that the national legislation must provide for timely
         and effective supervision of the decisions of the competent regional authorities.
      
      VI –  Conclusion
      64.      In view of the foregoing, the questions referred by the Tribunale amministrativo regionale per la Lombardia should, in my
         opinion, be answered as follows:
      
      (1)      Article 9(1)(c) of Council Directive 79/409/EEC of 2 April 1979 on the conservation of wild birds requires Member States to
         ensure, when implementing this provision, that in the process of applying the derogation contained therein the catches deemed
         permissible do not exceed the maxima implied by the expression ‘in small numbers’. Even if implementation is entrusted to
         decentralised provincial authorities, Member States remain obliged to secure the intended result of Article 9(1)(c) of the
         Directive.
      
      (2)      Directive 79/409 requires the national provisions transposing the Directive to ensure that in determining the ‘small number’
         consideration is given to the population level of the species concerned, its reproductive rate in the Community as a whole
         and the total annual mortality rate, so that the maintenance of the population of the species concerned at a satisfactory
         level can be guaranteed.
      
      (3)      Article 9(1)(c) of Directive 79/409 includes an obligation on the Member States to ensure, in implementing this provision,
         that the competent regions do not collectively exceed the total permissible catches for the species concerned.
      
      (4)      From the obligation on the Member States, even in the case of decentralised implementation of Directive 79/409, to ensure
         observance of the maximum capture limits set in connection with the application of Article 9(1)(c) of the Directive it follows
         that the national legislation must provide for timely and effective supervision of the decisions of the competent regional
         authorities.
      
      1 –	Original language:  Dutch.
      
      2 –	OJ 1979 L 103, p. 1.
      
      3 –	Scientific name: Fringilla coelebs.
      
      4 –	Scientific name: Fringilla montifringilla.
      
      5 –	See, for example, Case C-150/88 Parfümerie-Fabrik4711 [1989] ECR I-3891, paragraph 12.
      
      6 –	See, inter alia, Case 247/85 Commission v Belgium [1987] ECR 3029 and Case 262/85 Commission v Italy [1987] ECR 3073; Case C-339/87 Commission v Netherlands [1990] ECR I-851; Case C-118/94 Associazione Italiana per il WWF and Others [1996] ECR I-1223 and Case C-79/03 Commission v Spain [2004] ECR I-11619.
      
      7 –	Associazione Italiana per il WWF and Others (cited in footnote 6), paragraph 21.
      
      8 –	Case C-182/02 Ligue pour la protection des oiseaux sauvages and Others [2003] ECR I-12105, paragraph 11, and Commission v Italy (cited in footnote 6), paragraph 38.
      
      9 –	The first condition cannot be deemed to have been fulfilled if the period of capture coincides unnecessarily with periods
         in which the Directive aims to provide particular protection. Commission v Italy (cited in footnote 6), paragraph 39.
      
      10 –	Case 252/85 Commission v France [1988] ECR 2243, paragraph 28.
      
      11 –	Commission v France (cited in footnote 10), paragraph 28.
      
      12 –	COM(93) 572 final of 24 November 1993.
      
      13 –	Although this small numbers criterion is not legally binding on the Member States, it can, by reason of its acknowledged
         scientific value, be used as a basis of reference for assessing whether a Member State is meeting the requirement under Article
         9(1)(c) of the Directive that the birds concerned be hunted in small numbers. Case C-3/96 Commission v Netherlands [1998] ECR I-3031, paragraphs 69 and 70.
      
      14 –	Ligue pour la protection des oiseaux sauvages and Others (cited in footnote 8), paragraph 18.
      
      15 –	See, for example, Case C-197/96 Commission v France [1997] ECR I-1489, paragraph 15.
      
      16 –	Commission v Italy (cited in footnote 6), paragraph 9; Commission v Belgium (cited in footnote 6), paragraph 9; and Commission v Netherlands (cited in footnote 6), paragraph 28.
      
      17 –	See points 23 to 27 of my Opinion in Case C-494/01 Commission v Ireland [2005] ECR I-3331.
      
      18 –	Case C-62/00 Marks & Spencer [2002] ECR I-6325, paragraph 27.
      
      19 –	See, for example, Parfümerie-Fabrik 4711 (cited in footnote 5), paragraph 12.