Development of Biological Risk Assessment Protocols for Evaluating the Risks of In-Water Cleaning of Hull-Fouling Organisms

Author:

Hyun Bonggil1,Jang Pung-Guk1ORCID,Jang Min-Chul1,Kang Jung-Hoon23ORCID,Kim Ju-Hyoung4ORCID,Ki Jang-Seu5ORCID,Choi Dong Han6ORCID,Yu Ok Hwan6ORCID,Seo Jin-Young1,Lee Woo-Jin1,Shin Kyoungsoon1

Affiliation:

1. Ballast Water Research Center, Korea Institute of Ocean Science & Technology, Geoje 53201, Republic of Korea

2. Ecological Risk Research Department, Korea Institute of Ocean Science & Technology, Geoje 53201, Republic of Korea

3. Department of Ocean Science, Korea National University of Science and Technology, Daejeon 34113, Republic of Korea

4. Department of Aquaculture and Aquatic Science, Kunsan National University, Gunsan 54150, Republic of Korea

5. Department of Biotechnology, College of Convergence Engineering, Sangmyung University, Seoul 03016, Republic of Korea

6. Ocean Climate Response & Ecosystem Research Department, Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology, Busan 49111, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Herein, we evaluate the scientific basis for managing hull fouling of ships entering Korean ports, diagnose biological risks that may occur when in-water cleaning (IWC) systems remove hull fouling, and present a protocol for evaluating these risks (the Korean Infection Modes and Effects Analysis; K-IMEA). Protocol development included the selection of core elements and scenario design for IWC and the evaluation of regrowth experiments. The K-IMEA index was designed by considering the inoculation pathway of attaching organisms in all processes to ships that enter a port for in-water cleaning. A number of risk indices were defined: R1—Introduction/Establishment of alien species before in-water cleaning; R2—Establishment of alien species escaped during in-water cleaning; R3—Introduction/Establishment of alien species after in-water cleaning; and R4—Establishment of alien species in effluent water. K-IMEA regrowth experiments (R2 and R4) using the in-water cleaning effluent showed that the attachment and regrowth of prokaryotes, microalgae, and macroalgae were successfully detected. In particular, prokaryotes were observed in samples filtered through a 5 μm mesh of the in-water cleaning effluent, even at a low fouling rating (Levels 1–2). These experiments suggest a necessity to consider a secondary treatment method in addition to the primary filtration method for the treatment of in-water cleaning effluents.

Funder

Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries, Republic of Korea

Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference21 articles.

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3. James, P., and Hayden, B. (2000). The Potential for the Introduction of Exotic Species by Vessel Hull Fouling: A Preliminary Study, NIWA. NIWA Client Report 2000, WLG00/51 No. 16.

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