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RESEARCH ARTICLE

International postal, quarantine and safety regulations

David Smith A B and Matthew Ryan A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A CAB International
Bakeham LaneEgham
Surrey TW20 9TY, UK

B Tel.: +44 1491829114
Email: d.smith@cabi.org

Microbiology Australia 40(3) 117-120 https://doi.org/10.1071/MA19032
Published: 16 September 2019

Abstract

There are numerous legislative regulations that impact on microbiology, microbial Biological Resource Centres (mBRCs) and culture collections, with which all microbiologists must comply. These affect access for collection, handling, distribution/shipping and utilisation of microbial resources. Areas where regulations are triggered are international post, quarantine and safety. The legislation and supporting documents are often difficult to find and understand, therefore the World Federation for Culture Collections (WFCC) has a long history in providing advice and guidance to help compliance with such legislation. A visit to the WFCC library (http://www.wfcc.info/wfcc_library/) will provide information on postal requirements shipping dangerous goods and on control measures in place for biosecurity to control access to dangerous pathogens. This paper will update such communications and provide relevant information on: Health and Safety (H&S); Quarantine regulations; and Postal Regulations and Safety. Other papers in this special issue will address elements that impact on distribution and use of microorganisms for example in packaging, legislation on the proliferation, distribution and misuse of dangerous pathogens, export licensing measures, the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Nagoya Protocol, ownership of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and the provision of safety information to the recipient of microorganisms. The advice is generic and users are advised to refer to their own National guidance and implementation acts to ensure they are compliant. The work was compiled from authors' efforts in their management of an mBRC and most recently contributions to the EMBRIC project (http://www.embric.eu/) in particular Deliverable 6.1 ‘Microbial pipeline from environment to active compounds' (http://www.embric.eu/deliverables).


References

[1]  Smith, D. (2012) Culture collections. Adv. Appl. Microbiol. 79, 73–118.
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[2]  Martin, D. et al. (2015) MIRRI promoting quality management systems for microbiology. EC Microbiol. 2.2: 278–287. https://www.ecronicon.com/ecmi/pdf/ECMI-02-000036.pdf

[3]  International Air Transport Association (IATA) (2019) Dangerous goods regulations (DGR). 60th edition. https://www.iata.org/publications/dgr/Pages/index.aspx

[4]  Smith, D. et al. E (2013) Public Service Collections and Biological Resource Centres of Microorganisms. In The Prokaryotes – Prokaryotic Biology and Symbiotic Associations (Rosenberg, E. et al., eds). pp. 267–304. Springer-Verlag Berlin, Heidelberg.