Australia's biosecurity
Exotic plant pests and diseases can damage our agriculture industries, food production and natural environment. Some could change our way of life. Thanks to our biosecurity system, Australia is free from many of the world’s most damaging plant pests and diseases.
The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry manages our biosecurity system together with state and territory governments, industry and the community. We work with scientists, farmers and industry to protect Australian agriculture and improve biosecurity outcomes.
Find out more about the biosecurity system in this short video:
Biosecurity protects Australia from pests and diseases that could impact on our industries, environment, plants, animals and communities.
It helps keep pests and diseases out, but it also helps manage their impact if they do arrive here. This is a big job, one that is growing and becoming more challenging every day. Pests and diseases are spreading all around the world.
Over the next decade, more cargo and mail will arrive in Australia than ever before, and this could bring more pests and diseases to our doorstep.
We are taking steps to manage these growing pest and disease risks by:
- strengthening our defences at the border
- using innovations, new technologies and science
- working with importers, farmers and the community, our near neighbours and other countries
- managing pests and diseases before they arrive in Australia, and
- increasing penalties for those who do the wrong thing when travelling to Australia or importing goods.
These steps will help us build a stronger biosecurity system that has many layers of defence.
A strong, smart biosecurity system is all that stands between Australia and the significant growing biosecurity risks we face.
Learn more about biosecurity and what you can do to help at biosecurity.gov.au.
We invite you to explore the resources on this page.
Plant pests
The department manages our biosecurity system. We prevent, respond to and monitor plant pests and diseases that threaten our agricultural industries, economy and environment.
Discover our list of National Priority Plant Pests (NPPPs) and read our plant disease factsheets:
Download
Australia’s National Priority Plant Pest (NPPP) List (PDF 997 KB)
Australia’s National Priority Plant Pest (NPPP) List (DOCX 1.87 MB)
Asian citrus psyllid (Diaphorina citri) DAFF (PDF 333 KB)
Asian citrus psyllid (Diaphorina citri) DAFF (DOCX 304 KB)
Bacterial leaf scorch (Xylella fastidiosa) DAFF (PDF 423 KB)
Bacterial leaf scorch (Xylella fastidiosa) DAFF (DOCX 578 KB)
Botrytis leaf blight (Botrytis squamosa) (PDF 392 KB)
Botrytis leaf blight (Botrytis squamosa) (DOCX 565 KB)
Citrus canker (Xanthomonas citri) (PDF 425 KB)
Citrus canker (Xanthomonas citri) (DOCX 400 KB)
Fire blight (Erwinia amylovora) (PDF 392 KB)
Fire blight (Erwinia amylovora) (DOCX 549 KB)
Fusarium wilt of banana (Fusarium odoratissimum) (PDF 399 KB)
Fusarium wilt of banana (Fusarium odoratissimum) (DOCX 1.87 MB)
Glassy winged sharpshooter (Homalodisca vitripennis)(PDF 641 KB)
Glassy winged sharpshooter (Homalodisca vitripennis) (DOCX 560 KB)
Huanglongbing (Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus, Ca. L. africanus and Ca. L. americanus) (PDF 306 KB)
Huanglongbing (Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus, Ca. L. africanus and Ca. L. americanus) (DOCX 274 KB)
Karnal bunt of wheat (Tilletia indica) (PDF 289 KB)
Karnal bunt of wheat (Tilletia indica) (DOCX 310 KB)
Rice blast disease (Magnaporthe oryzae) (PDF 304 KB)
Rice blast disease (Magnaporthe oryzae) (DOCX 327 KB)
Sunflower downy mildew (Plasmopara halstedii) (PDF 353 KB)
Sunflower downy mildew (Plasmopara halstedii)2 (DOCX 344 KB)
Taro leaf blight (Phytophthora colocasiae) (PDF 384 KB)
Taro leaf blight (Phytophthora colocasiae) (DOCX 608 KB)
If you have difficulty accessing these files, visit web accessibility for assistance.
Find out about how to import plant products for research purposes.
Modernising our laboratories
We encourage innovation, research and investment in new technologies that will support a our diagnostic capability and a sustainable future. Watch our video explaining the department’s modern diagnostic technologies and explore our other tools.
MALDI-ToF stands for Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption, Ionisation mass optometry, with ToF standing for time of flight. Taking a sample, coating it with a chemical, shooting it with a laser, and after following the shot with a laser goes up and is detected by a very sophisticated detection mechanism that precisely measures the mass of the proteins in the sample.
This allows identification really rapidly, like sub 30 seconds for most things, and identification following that immediately. So we’re looking at something that can identify bacteria and fungi in a matter of seconds and that allows super high throughput. You can test tonnes of different samples, entire mixtures of different chemicals really rapidly. There’s nothing that compares to it in terms of a screening tool and really allows targeting of additional technologies later in the culturing bases.
We have a range of plant pathogens that could come in and adversely affect our plant production in agriculture and horticulture or the natural environment, as well as pest. But plant diseases make up about half of the top 42 pests and there are a whole lot of other ones that would significantly impact agriculture or horticulture if they arrive and establish and spread.
Over the years we’ve had a number of incursions of the citrus canker pathogen that’s a bacterium that infects the fruit and also other parts of the tree. Most of our major horticultural and field crop species have a range of pathogens that are still exotic to Australia. So banana has had some incursions of strains of the fusarium wilt fungus, and particularly one called race four that’s an outbreak that’s trying to be controlled in Queensland at the moment. There are other banana pathogens that are emerging globally. There’s one in Africa that’s a bacterium that’s causing a lot of havoc there and it would be a problem if it got into Australia as well.
Again, prior to MALDI you wouldn’t be able to get an identification within the first 24 hours of a wide variety of targets. You could possibly do one with other technologies, but you wouldn’t be able to do a wide variety of targets. So MALDI’s great capability is the fact that everything that comes off of that particular fruit of interest can be tested, screened, you’re completely confident nothing on there is of concern.
Plant pathology diagnostics generally starts with observation of symptoms, we try and decide if that looks like a virus or a bacterial or fungal infection. If it’s bacterial or fungal then we generally need to isolate the bacterium or the fungus into pure culture, and then there’ll be a range of tests to try and resolve what it is. Some of that could be just basic microscopy, some of it might be biochemical testing. Ultimately once you’ve obtained a pure culture, which could take several days, where you have to subculture it a number of times to make sure it’s just a single organism, at that point then we can do DNA sequencing. MALDI-Tof allows us to come in much earlier in that culturing process, and it may not give an exact identification at the beginning, especially if bacterial cultures or colonies are still mixed. But it has proven to be able to give us an indication of what might be there. When we play the bacteria there might be dozens of small colonies and many of them look very similar and could be different species. With MADLI-Tof, we can test all of them and decide which ones to focus on. And that’s where it really proved to be a game changer for our diagnostic workflow because we can quickly eliminate the ones that we’re not worried about and target the ones that are of greatest concern.
The database is key to the entire process. Without the database, you cannot tell whether something is a particular species or not. Luckily the commercial instrument itself comes with 10,000 fingerprints which relate to about 5000 species. So there’s duplicates obviously, but that allows for greater confidence because if you get duplicate results for the same thing, your really confident of that match. You can actually add and supplement new things to that library and we have an entire process in place, including standards that we’re working on a national level.
MALDI-Tof’s really transformed our diagnostic workflows for plant pathology and has improved the way we deliver biosecurity and regulatory outcomes.
Work with us
The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry is a great place to work. Make a valuable contribution to protecting Australia’s natural resources, developing strong agricultural industries and delivering policies and programs for a strong economy. We employ a diversity of people from a wide range of scientific disciplines, including agricultural and environmental sciences, to make a difference in protecting Australia’s biosecurity.
Download
Brochure from PIC@PEQ (PDF 440 KB)
Graduate entry program (PDF 248 KB)
Working with us (PDF 369 KB)
If you have difficulty accessing these files, visit web accessibility for assistance.