WA Grower Magazine Spring 2020

Page 21

YOUR PRODUCTION

DPIRD is asking growers to become their eyes on the ground.

e m i t g n i r Sp

is the time for travel bugs

D

espite the impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on overseas and interstate travel, pathways are still open for the world’s most invasive pests to hitch a ride to Western Australia.

The Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) is reminding growers that pests capable of wiping out entire food crops and environments, such as invasive ants, beetles, bugs, moths, snails and fruit flies, are common stowaways on cargo vessels and imported machinery, and in shipping containers and packages. It may seem like a long road from Europe or remote Queensland, but these pests are expert hitchhikers, hiding in plain sight! Annually, over 18,000 vessels, 1.8 million sea cargo consignments, 41 million air cargo consignments, and 152 million international mail items arrive in Australia from overseas, and numbers are growing every year.

While Australia and WA both have strong biosecurity border controls to intercept pests, checking every ship, container and package is not practical. DPIRD is asking growers to become their eyes on the ground. Spring time is a critical time to be on the lookout if receiving imports from the Northern Hemisphere. This is when pests from that part of the world seek shelter from the cold weather, often on ships and in cargo.

If you are in receipt of machinery, equipment, boxes, pallets and packages from overseas or interstate, we need you to look for pests or signs of pests. Pests not established in WA that are of greatest concern include: red imported fire ant, brown marmorated stink bug, codling moth, khapra beetle, citrus longicorn beetle, gypsy moth, giant African snail, and Queensland fruit fly. But this list is not definitive! Be on the lookout and report any live animal or insect, egg masses and timber with holes, or plant matter, soil, or plants with signs of disease. It is not uncommon for exotic pests to arrive and be intercepted at the border, which are immediately investigated and managed by DPIRD and/or federal agencies. But once those rare few slip through the cracks, industry and public

3 PESTS not established in WA that are of greatest concern include the Queensland fruit fly.

IMPORTANT NOTE If you find something, don’t move the machinery/ container/box/package. Reseal, collect and contain any dead or live specimens, and contact DPIRD immediately. You can send a photo using the MyPestGuideTM Reporter app or email DPIRD’s Pest and Disease Information Service (PaDIS) padis@dpird.wa.gov.au. You can also make an online report at www.agric.wa.gov.au/pestsweeds-diseases/mypestguide or call PaDIS on (08) 9368 3080.

vigilance is critical to early detection, and being able to act quickly to prevent pests from gaining a permanent foothold in WA. Become an important member of the DPIRD surveillance team by getting to know pests of biosecurity concern, and actively looking and reporting anything suspicious or unusual.

Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development

WA Grower SPRING 2020

19


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Articles inside

Patterns of Success

8min
pages 110-113

Teaching kids about agriculture

7min
pages 106-109

Communicating with webinars

3min
pages 102-103

Crisis management seminar

2min
page 101

Transmission of COVID-19

2min
page 100

Labour short market

5min
pages 97-99

Staff and visitor biosecurity

5min
pages 90-91

Lifelong learning

4min
pages 92-93

Looking for labour

2min
pages 88-89

Assistance for WA growers

5min
pages 94-95

Loans to help your business

2min
page 96

Grower profile Robert Giumelli

3min
pages 86-87

Horticulture Liaison Officer

2min
page 85

T. pyri for European red mite control

3min
pages 76-78

Powdery scab in potatoes

9min
pages 64-67

Predicting lenticel damage

7min
pages 71-73

Collins Bros Orchard

5min
pages 74-75

Chair’s chat

3min
page 70

Patane Produce

5min
pages 62-63

Buy West Eat Best Campaign

2min
pages 60-61

Social media snapshot

1min
page 59

Fair Farms Certification

2min
page 51

Executive Officer’s Report

3min
page 58

Requesting an audit

3min
pages 52-53

Horticulture Career Pathways

4min
pages 54-55

VegNET RDO Update

4min
pages 56-57

Queensland fruit fly eradication

7min
pages 48-50

Buy local message

4min
pages 46-47

Frankie Galati

4min
pages 44-45

Online training and tools

2min
pages 42-43

Virus diseases of capsicums

8min
pages 28-31

Postharvest disease management

4min
pages 26-27

Soil mapping

11min
pages 32-39

Innovative bacteria treatment

3min
pages 40-41

Native flies as pollinators

4min
pages 24-25

Western Australian research on TPP

4min
pages 22-23

Spring is the time for travel bugs

2min
page 21

Water and fertiliser use efficiency

7min
pages 18-20

Precision systems technology

4min
pages 10-11

Precision ag pays off

4min
pages 12-13

vegetablesWA CEO’s Report

2min
page 6

Management of six-spotted mite

5min
pages 16-17

Carnarvon sweet corn trial

3min
pages 14-15

vegetablesWA President’s Report

5min
pages 7-9
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