ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Science

Soil transported by marine freight, laden with harmful pests and diseases: Study

Invasive alien species, which are sometimes introduced unintentionally by human activities, can outcompete and overwhelm native flora and fauna, driving species to extinction and altering ecosystem equilibrium. Understanding why they settle in new areas and how they got there in the first place is critical if we are to reduce their devastating impacts. Unfortunately, there hasn't been enough research done on this, and the answers may not always be obvious.

ANI Oct 20, 2023 23:11 IST googleads

Representative Image (Image source: Pexels)

Sofia [Bulgaria], October 20 (ANI): Invasive alien species, which are sometimes introduced unintentionally by human activities, can outcompete and overwhelm native flora and fauna, driving species to extinction and altering ecosystem equilibrium.
Understanding why they settle in new areas and how they got there in the first place is critical if we are to reduce their devastating impacts. Unfortunately, there hasn't been enough research done on this, and the answers may not always be obvious.
A research team from AgResearch and Better Border Biosecurity (B3) investigated the biological risk posed by soil on the external surfaces of sea freight such as shipping containers or used machinery at seaports in New Zealand.
With their work, the researchers hope to facilitate the assessment of relative biosecurity risks between different introduction pathways and contribute to the development of more efficient measures against them.
The team found soil on most types of sea freight, irrespective of origin, with all soil likely to vector microbes, including plant pathogens. The amount of soil recovered from a single sea container was 5.3 kg, while the overall mean weight collected from sea freight was 417g, with most of the soil found on the underside of sea freight.
"While the presence of soil is perhaps not surprising, the presence of live bacteria, fungi, worms, seeds and insects associated with the soil was of greater concern. Various regulated biosecurity organisms were recovered from the samples, including plant-parasitic worms, seeds, insects and spiders that were not recorded as being present in New Zealand," says Mark McNeill of AgResearch, who led the study.
"Not only does the spread of exotic species through these networks represent significant environmental, economic and social costs to natural and agricultural environments if invasive alien species were to establish, a loss of biodiversity is also an expected consequence of invasive alien species establishment. For islands, the implications can be significant, as they have high levels of endemism and invasive alien species establishment can lead to the extinction of species as well as biodiversity declines," the researchers write in their paper, which was published in the open-access journal NeoBiota.
Compared to a previous study on contaminated footwear carried in luggage by international airline passengers, the number and diversity in soil on sea freight was smaller than soil transported in more protected environments (e.g., footwear in luggage). This showed that biosecurity risk can vary with pathway.
However, prioritising one soil pathway over another according to the risks they present, and differentially allocating resources is problematic, because the relative risk is dynamic, dictated by factors such as new pests or diseases entering the respective pathways.
Even so, the researchers suggest that contaminated sea freight is an important introduction pathway for exotic species. The establishment of such species can be prevented by cleaning containers prior to departure, inspection at the border, and further cleaning where required. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Science

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Researchers at the University of Bristol discovered that ancient frog ancestors survived the biggest mass extinction of species by eating on freshwater prey that evaded terrestrial predators.

Read More
Science

Strand Life Sciences launches portal for rare disease diagnosis

Strand Life Sciences launches portal for rare disease diagnosis

Marking Rare Disease Day, Strand Life Sciences, a subsidiary of Reliance Industries and a leading genomics research company, has launched the StrandOmics Portal, an innovative digital platform designed to assist doctors in diagnosing rare diseases more efficiently.

Read More
Science

Study reveals impact of animals as architects of Earth

Study reveals impact of animals as architects of Earth

A new study led by Professor Gemma Harvey from Queen Mary University of London has revealed how hundreds of species shape the landscapes we depend on, from termite mounds visible from space to beavers creating wetlands and hippos carving drainage systems.

Read More
Science

Study finds novel approach to treat neurological diseases

Study finds novel approach to treat neurological diseases

The matter of what causes complicated neurological disorders like Alzheimer's or multiple sclerosis continues to perplex scientists and doctors, with unknowns impeding early diagnosis and successful treatment.

Read More
Science

Study discovers how special immune cells stop metastatic cancer

Study discovers how special immune cells stop metastatic cancer

The majority of cancer deaths are caused by metastatic disease, which occurs when cancer spreads from the primary tumour to other areas of the body. and researchers understand how cancer cells escape the primary location to seed new tumours, it is unclear why some cancer cells produce new tumours decades later and others do not.

Read More
Science

Study: New imaging method accurately detects kidney cancer

Study: New imaging method accurately detects kidney cancer

A recent study conducted by UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers found that new, non-invasive imaging technology can detect clear-cell renal cell carcinoma, the most common kind of kidney cancer.

Read More
Science

Study finds how cancer develops when immune system fails

 Study finds how cancer develops when immune system fails

It has been suggested that the immune system is unable to eradicate invasive tumour cells by referring to cancer as "a wound that does not heal."

Read More
Science

Alzheimer’s medication slow down cognitive decline in dementia

Alzheimer’s medication slow down cognitive decline in dementia

Similar to Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases, dementia with Lewy bodies is a form of dementia for which research on long-term therapies is limited.

Read More
Science

Rare diseases highlight connections between metabolism, immunity

Rare diseases highlight connections between metabolism, immunity

A new study suggested that inherited immune and metabolism disorders are more similar than previously believed. The results provide fresh information that may help patients with these illnesses receive better care by highlighting a novel collection of metabolic genes that are critical for immune system T cell activity.

Read More
Science

Plastic pollution, seawater flooding effect on coastal plants

Plastic pollution, seawater flooding effect on coastal plants

Two of the planet's most urgent environmental stressors have the potential to affect the development and reproductive production of plants found along the world's coasts, according to new research.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.