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Agricultural producers engage in plant biosecurity activities across the four phases of preparedness, response, mitigation, and recovery, collaborating with various stakeholders to ensure effective containment and control of biosecurity events. Recovery involves a concerted effort to restore normal operations, including destroying diseased plants, cleaning facilities, obtaining subsidies, and restoring land. Learn more about producers' recovery efforts in plant biosecurity management.
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A review ofProducers’ Recovery Activities The Four Phases of Plant Biosecurity Management
Agricultural producers must be engaged in numerous plant biosecurity activities . . . Preparedness Response Mitigation Recovery
. . . and work with numerous other individuals in every phase of the model. Agricultural producers Other producers and local community groups Extension Service,local government & businesses NPDN (Regional Diagnostic Network) State Government AHPIS (Federal Government)
Recovery . . . . . . is a lengthy, concerted effort to return the local community to normal operations after the plant biosecurity event has been effectively contained and controlled. Preparedness Response Recovery Mitigation
Key words to remember: a lengthy, concerted effort to return to normal operations recovery
Producers’ recovery activitiesmay include: • Destroying diseased plants, vines, or trees • Cleaning affected equipment and facilities • Obtaining government subsidies • Bringing the affected land back into production
References Schoelz, J. (2003, December). What can we learn from past and current epidemics of plants? Paper presented at the Missouri Summit on Agroterrorism. University of Missouri, Columbia, MO. Biosecurity Who is Responsible? Retrieved from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville: www.utextension.utk.edu/publications/spfiles/SP604.pdf Crop Biosecurity: Are We Prepared? (APSnet, 1999). Retrieved from the American Phytopatholgical Societyhttp://www.apsnet.org/online/feature/BioSecurity/ Top.html