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Date: | Sun, 28 Oct 2007 11:30:26 -0700 |
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Hi All,
Re sampling:
"It should be noted that inspection based on sampling always involves a
degree of error. The acceptance of
some degree of risk that the pests are present is inherent in the use of
sampling procedures for inspection.
Inspection using statistically based sampling methods can provide confidence
that the incidence of a pest is
below a certain level, but it can never prove that a pest is truly absent
from a consignment."
from
http://www.aphis.usda.gov/import_export/plants/plant_exports/downloads/draft_ispm_sampling_consignments.pdf
The bottom line question is, "What options you have once the missed pathogen
inevitably slips through?" If you have a reasonable probability
of success in eradicating it once it enters, then sampling and imports make
sense. On the other hand, if it is likely that once the pathogen
enters, that it will be quickly disseminated throughout the commercial bee
population, then there is no chance of stuffing it back into
the box, and we will then have to deal with pathogen in perpetuity. As far
as the pathogens that we are speaking of--viruses, tropilaelaps, etc--once
individual slips through, it is unlikely that we will ever be able to
contain them.
Randy Oliver
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