Design of the quarantine surveillance for non-indigenous species of invertebrates on Barrow Island

WA Museum Records and Supplements | Updated 7 years ago

ABSTRACT – The Ministerial conditions for regulatory approval for the Gorgon gas project on Barrow Island included a quarantine surveillance program having detection power of 0.8 for non-indigenous species of terrestrial invertebrates, vertebrates and plants. No method was available for design of such a program, so we developed a new method and designed surveillance systems that were implemented successfully in 2010−11 for the first of four years over the construction period. Here we describe the method and outline the invertebrate surveillance system, after the experience of the first year. We discuss a set of issues that characterised the design problem, which we consider typical of many surveillance applications. We suggest that the method is broadly applicable for objective design of surveillance, for biosecurity and other settings.

Author(s) Peter Whittle, Frith Jarrad and Kerrie Mengersen
Volume
Supplement 83 : The terrestrial invertebrate fauna of Barrow Island, Western Australia
Article Published
2013
Page Number
113

DOI
10.18195/issn.0313-122x.83.2013.113-130