Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships

Biosecurity measures are commonly used to prevent the introduction of non-native species to natural environments globally, yet the efficacy of practices is rarely tested under operational conditions. A voluntary biosecurity measure was trialled in the Norwegian high Arctic following concern that non...

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Published in:NeoBiota
Main Authors: Rumpf, Sabine B., Alsos, Inger Greve, Ware, Chris
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://edoc.unibas.ch/88425/
https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.37.22088
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spelling ftunivbasel:oai:edoc.unibas.ch:88425 2023-05-15T14:59:52+02:00 Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships Rumpf, Sabine B. Alsos, Inger Greve Ware, Chris 2018 https://edoc.unibas.ch/88425/ https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.37.22088 unknown Rumpf, Sabine B. and Alsos, Inger Greve and Ware, Chris. (2018) Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships. NEOBIOTA (37). pp. 37-49. doi:10.3897/neobiota.37.22088 info:isi/000426814500003 urn:ISSN:1619-0033 urn:ISSN:1314-2488 info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Article PeerReviewed 2018 ftunivbasel https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.37.22088 2023-03-05T07:29:51Z Biosecurity measures are commonly used to prevent the introduction of non-native species to natural environments globally, yet the efficacy of practices is rarely tested under operational conditions. A voluntary biosecurity measure was trialled in the Norwegian high Arctic following concern that non-native species might be transferred to the region on the footwear of travellers. Passengers aboard an expedition cruise ship disinfected their footwear with the broad spectrum disinfectant Virkon S prior to and in-between landing at sites around the remote Svalbard archipelago. The authors evaluated the efficacy of simply stepping through a disinfectant foot bath, which is the most common practice of footwear disinfection aboard expedition cruise ships in the Arctic. This was compared to a more time consuming and little-used method involving drying disinfected footwear, as proposed by other studies. The two practices were evaluated by measuring microbial growth on paired footwear samples before and after disinfection under both conditions. Step-through disinfection did not substantially reduce microbial growth on the footwear. Allowing disinfected footwear to dry, however, reduced the microbial burden significantly to lower levels. Thus, the currently adopted procedures used aboard ships are ineffective at removing microbial burden and are only effective when footwear is given more time to dry than currently granted under operational conditions. These findings underscore results from empirical research performed elsewhere and suggest the need to better relay this information to practitioners. It is suggested that footwear should minimally be wiped dry after step-through disinfection as a reasonable compromise between biosecurity and practicability. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Svalbard University of Basel: edoc Arctic Svalbard Svalbard Archipelago NeoBiota 37 37 49
institution Open Polar
collection University of Basel: edoc
op_collection_id ftunivbasel
language unknown
description Biosecurity measures are commonly used to prevent the introduction of non-native species to natural environments globally, yet the efficacy of practices is rarely tested under operational conditions. A voluntary biosecurity measure was trialled in the Norwegian high Arctic following concern that non-native species might be transferred to the region on the footwear of travellers. Passengers aboard an expedition cruise ship disinfected their footwear with the broad spectrum disinfectant Virkon S prior to and in-between landing at sites around the remote Svalbard archipelago. The authors evaluated the efficacy of simply stepping through a disinfectant foot bath, which is the most common practice of footwear disinfection aboard expedition cruise ships in the Arctic. This was compared to a more time consuming and little-used method involving drying disinfected footwear, as proposed by other studies. The two practices were evaluated by measuring microbial growth on paired footwear samples before and after disinfection under both conditions. Step-through disinfection did not substantially reduce microbial growth on the footwear. Allowing disinfected footwear to dry, however, reduced the microbial burden significantly to lower levels. Thus, the currently adopted procedures used aboard ships are ineffective at removing microbial burden and are only effective when footwear is given more time to dry than currently granted under operational conditions. These findings underscore results from empirical research performed elsewhere and suggest the need to better relay this information to practitioners. It is suggested that footwear should minimally be wiped dry after step-through disinfection as a reasonable compromise between biosecurity and practicability.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Rumpf, Sabine B.
Alsos, Inger Greve
Ware, Chris
spellingShingle Rumpf, Sabine B.
Alsos, Inger Greve
Ware, Chris
Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships
author_facet Rumpf, Sabine B.
Alsos, Inger Greve
Ware, Chris
author_sort Rumpf, Sabine B.
title Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships
title_short Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships
title_full Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships
title_fullStr Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships
title_full_unstemmed Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships
title_sort prevention of microbial species introductions to the arctic:the efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships
publishDate 2018
url https://edoc.unibas.ch/88425/
https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.37.22088
geographic Arctic
Svalbard
Svalbard Archipelago
geographic_facet Arctic
Svalbard
Svalbard Archipelago
genre Arctic
Svalbard
genre_facet Arctic
Svalbard
op_relation Rumpf, Sabine B. and Alsos, Inger Greve and Ware, Chris. (2018) Prevention of microbial species introductions to the Arctic:The efficacy of footwear disinfection measures on cruise ships. NEOBIOTA (37). pp. 37-49.
doi:10.3897/neobiota.37.22088
info:isi/000426814500003
urn:ISSN:1619-0033
urn:ISSN:1314-2488
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.37.22088
container_title NeoBiota
container_volume 37
container_start_page 37
op_container_end_page 49
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