Publications by authors named "Torben Brydges"

A number of ballast water compliance monitoring devices (CMDs) have been made commercially available to verify the efficacy of ballast water management systems by quantifying the living organisms for both plankton size classes (≥50 μm and ≥10-<50 μm). This study aimed to examine whether new CMDs can provide a reliable indication of compliance regarding Regulation D-2 and to evaluate their performance for indicative analysis of organisms by assessing their accuracy (comparison to microscopy) and precision (comparison within measurement). Challenge fresh water samples were collected in four locations of Lake Ontario, Canada, whereas marine challenge water samples were collected around the Bay of Fundy, New Brunswick, Canada.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ballast water is a key way that invasive aquatic species enter new environments, prompting regulations for ships to install ballast water management systems (BWMS) by 2024.
  • A study of ballast water from 29 ships revealed that nearly half of the samples had zooplankton levels that exceeded acceptable limits, despite BWMS being used.
  • However, BWMS show improvement over past methods in reducing high-risk invasive species introductions, and increased compliance may come as crews become more familiar with these systems.
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To verify ships' compliance with ballast water regulations, samples may be collected and tested for viable organisms. This task is completed using a sample probe, which is placed in the ballast discharge pipe through a sample port (a flanged opening). To collect representative samples, the placement of the sample port and the size of the sample probe must be appropriate for the shipboard piping arrangement and ballast water flows.

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