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Is your field day a biosecurity risk?

Field day in Queensland.
Photo: Kim McIntyre

Field days provide valuable opportunities for growers, agricultural professionals and extension workers to learn about the latest farming technology, different seed varieties and techniques to boost production.

The events are a hive of activity, with people and vehicles moving around and creating opportunities for hitchhiking pests and diseases to spread.

Key biosecurity risks for field days include:

  • introducing an unwanted pest or disease to the field site;
  • visitors taking a pest or disease back to their property; and
  • a pest or disease spreading throughout the district or further.

Managing these risks can be simple, safeguarding all involved in hosting and attending field days.

Top 10 biosecurity tips for field days

  1. Include a biosecurity message in publicity flyers. For example: ‘In the interest of farm biosecurity, please ensure all footwear and vehicles are free of soil’.
  2. Ensure all vehicles are parked in a designated area. This can help to contain the spread of a new pest and make monitoring for new pests and weeds much easier.
  3. Consider using a bus for transport to field sites to reduce the risks associated with vehicle movement.
  4. Set up boot scrapers and a foot bath at site access points.
  5. Have hand-washing facilities and sanitiser available for use.
  6. Register all attendees. This can help to trace the origin and spread of new pests and diseases that might occur as a result of the field day.
  7. Ensure the field site has biosecurity signage. Signs can remind attendees of the importance of biosecurity and requirements at the site.
  8. Remember that caterers, trade or industry representatives, and hired staff erecting marquees should also comply with field day hygiene guidelines.
  9. Monitor the car park and the sites visited for signs of any new diseases, pests or weeds for up to a year after the event. New pests can take a while to show up and your obligation to the site should not end with the field day.
  10. Remind attendees of the risks and encourage good farm biosecurity practice. This can include advice for attendance at future field days, as well as information on good farm biosecurity practice.

There are several risks involved if farm biosecurity is not considered, such as introducing a new pest to an area with associated control and management issues, which could possibly become a long-term problem.

Biosecurity is everyone’s responsibility, which means organisers, growers and visitors are obliged to minimise biosecurity risks to ensure the future of Australia’s grains industry.

The Grains Farm Biosecurity Program (GFBP) has developed a fact sheet to explain how to prevent field days and on-site trials from becoming occasions to spread pests and weeds.

The GFBP is an initiative to improve the management of and preparedness for biosecurity risks in the grains industry at the farm and industry levels. Visit the GFBP website for more information, latest news and helpful resources about grains farm biosecurity.

If you see anything unusual, please report it to the Exotic Plant Pest Hotline on 1800 084 881.

For more information on how to implement farm biosecurity practices on your property, contact one of the grains biosecurity officers in your region.

StateGrains biosecurity officerPhoneEmail
New South WalesKate Glastonbury0417 687 307kate.glastonbury@dpi.nsw.gov.au
QueenslandKym McIntyre0429 727 690kym.mcintyre@daf.qld.gov.au
South AustraliaShafiya Hussein0437 723 295shafiya.hussein@sa.gov.au
VictoriaJim Moran0418 377 930jim.moran@agriculture.vic.gov.au
Western AustraliaJeff Russell0447 851 801jeff.russell@dpird.wa.gov.au
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