Abstract

In a world where heightened airport security is the norm, Australia and New Zealand might seem like a parallel universe. Dogs patrol airport aisles, sniffing not for illegal drugs, but for wayward fruits and vegetables. While the luggage of outgoing passengers may be X-rayed for weapons, incoming visitors have their suitcases scanned for any kind of biological material. You can be required to surrender your shoes, not because they might contain explosives, but because you neglected to clean them off after hiking in some foreign rural area. The security in question is biosecurity—protection against incoming exotic species—and at these checkpoints, no packet of garden seed is too innocent to be seized. Both countries have powerful incentives for such stringent enforcement. Although Australia and New Zealand are highly urbanized societies, their economies feature a significant agricultural sector that is exceptionally vulnerable to the ravages of invasive species. More recently, though, many observers are adding the prospect of human health issues to the toll exacted by exotics. In fact, the gauntlet found at these countries’ international airports is just the most obvious aspect of how seriously local authorities and scientists regard the issue of biosecurity. Government policies and academic institutions regularly adopt a unique focus on the way in which plants and animals cross national boundaries, a perspective that may look downright xenophobic at first glance. Nevertheless, the experience of Australia and New Zealand can provide a valuable example to parts of the world that treat their boundaries in a more casual fashion, at least from a biological point of view. Accomplishments in these countries can offer important lessons to any country that must confront the combined impact of rising volumes of international trade and shifting climate patterns.

Full Text
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