Sewage disposal and wildlife health in Antarctica


Autoria(s): Smith, James J.; Riddle, Martin
Contribuinte(s)

Kerry, Knowles R.

Riddle, Martin

Data(s)

29/07/2009

Resumo

Sewage and its microbiology, treatment and disposal are important to the topic of Antarctic wildlife health because disposal of untreated sewage effluent into the Antarctic marine environment is both allowed and commonplace. Human sewage contains enteric bacteria as normal flora, and has the potential to contain parasites, bacteria and viruses which may prove pathogenic to Antarctic wildlife. Treatment can reduce levels of micro-organisms in sewage effluent, but is not a requirement of the Environmental Protocol to the Antarctic Treaty (the Madrid Protocol). In contrast, the deliberate release of non-native organisms for any other reason is prohibited. Hence, disposal of sewage effluent to the marine environment is the only activity routinely undertaken in Antarctica knowing that it will likely result in the release of large numbers of potentially non-native species. When the Madrid Protocol was negotiated, the decision to allow release of untreated sewage effluent was considered the only pragmatic option, as a prohibition would have been costly, and may not have been achievable by many Antarctic operators. In addition, at that time the potential for transmission of pathogens to wildlife from sewage was not emphasised as a significant potential risk. Since then, the transmission of disease-causing agents between species is more widely recognised and it is now timely to consider the risks of continued discharge of sewage effluent in Antarctica and whether there are practical alternatives.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/28900/

Publicador

Springer

Relação

DOI:10.1007/b75715

Smith, James J. & Riddle, Martin (2009) Sewage disposal and wildlife health in Antarctica. In Kerry, Knowles R. & Riddle, Martin (Eds.) Health of Antarctic Wildlife : A Challenge for Science and Policy. Springer , Berlin Heidelberg, pp. 271-315.

Direitos

Springer

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #050204 Environmental Impact Assessment #070707 Veterinary Microbiology (excl. Virology) #050211 Wildlife and Habitat Management #060502 Infectious Agents #050206 Environmental Monitoring #060504 Microbial Ecology #110800 MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY #050103 Invasive Species Ecology #Sewage #Wastewater #Wildlife #Impact #Antarctic #Microbiology #Policy
Tipo

Book Chapter