Ballast Water Management in Ports: Monitoring, Early Warning and Response Measures to Prevent Biodiversity Loss and Risks to Human Health

Author:

Kraus Romina1

Affiliation:

1. Center for Marine Research, Ruđer Bošković Institute, Giordano Paliaga 5, 52210 Rovinj, Croatia

Abstract

Ballast water is recognised as successfully transporting non-native (potentially) invasive alien species and other harmful organisms (human pathogens and toxic phytoplankton) from one region to another. Global warming enables the successful adaptation of non-native species in new areas. The early detection of harmful species increases the likelihood that the response will be effective and cause less damage to biodiversity, ecosystems, economies and human health. Scientific evidence strongly points to the importance of prevention. In this context, this refers to continuous port monitoring, carried out with the aim of detecting harmful species soon after their introduction. The objectives of rapid detection are (a) early warning and prevention of further spread of harmful species through ballast water or natural circulation, and (b) a timely response through eradication or other appropriate strategies to reduce the number or spatial extent of introduced species. This paper provides guidance for the development of ballast water management in ports based on a literature review. Available and new methods for identifying marine species and best practises in port monitoring for the early detection of harmful species, as well as early warning and response measures following the introduction of species in ports, are presented and discussed.

Funder

IPA Adriatic Cross-Border Cooperation Programme—strategic project Ballast Water Management System for Adriatic Sea Protection

European Structural and Investment Funds (ESI)—The European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) project Development of system for control and protection of ports from introduction of alien species

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference193 articles.

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3. IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) (2023, July 04). Invasive Alien Species and Climate Change, IUCN Issues Brief, November 2017. Available online: https://www.iucn.org/sites/dev/files/ias_and_climate_change_issues_brief_final.pdf.

4. Global invasions of marine and estuarine habitats by non-indigenous species: Mechanisms, extent, and consequences;Ruiz;Am. Zool.,1997

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