The Western Australian Organism List (WAOL) database allows you to search for organisms declared under the Biosecurity and Agriculture Management Act 2007 (BAM Act). It is not a complete list of all organisms in Western Australia or their attributes. Use the database to find the legal status of organisms, control requirements, declared pest species and more.
You can search scientific name, common name, phylum, class, order or family name.
A total of 13 results were found at 21:23 on 8th November 2024 when searching for Ara .
Results
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Synonyms: Armillaria bulbosa, Armillaria gallica Marxmüller & Romagnesi 1987.
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Synonyms: Agaricus melleus, Armillariella mellea, Clitocybe mellea, Lepiota mellea.
Common name: armillaria root rot.
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Common name: armillaria root rot.
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Synonyms: Agaricus gymnopodius, Agaricus socialis, Agaricus tabescens, Armillaria mellea var. tabescens, Armillaria socialis, Armillariella tabescens, Clitocybe gymnopodia, Clitocybe monadelpha, Clitocybe socialis, Clitocybe tabescens, Flammula gymnopodia, Pholiota gymnopodia.
Common name: armillaria root rot (various hosts).
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Synonyms: Ceratocystis fagacearum (Bretz) J. Hunt (1956), ChalAra quercina B.W. Henry (1944), Endoconidiophora fagacearum Bretz (1952), Thielaviopsis quercina (B.W. Henry) A.E. Paulin, T.C. Harr. & McNew (2002).
Common name: Oak wilt.
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Common name: cercospora leaf spot (persimmon).
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Synonyms: Diaporthe pAra sitica Murrill (1906), Endothia gyrosa var. pAra sitica (Murrill) Clinton (1907), Endothia pAra sitica (Murrill) P.J. Anderson & H.W. Anderson (1912), Valsonectria pAra sitica (Murrill) Rehm (1907).
Common name: chestnut blight.
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Synonyms: Fusarium subglutinans f. sp. pini J.C. Correll, T.R. Gordon, McCain, J.W. Fox, C.S. Koehler, D.L. Wood & M.E. Schultz (1991), Gibberella circinata Nirenberg & O'Donnell ex Britz, T.A. Cout., M.J. Wingf. & MAra sas 2002.
Common names: pine pitch canker, Pitch canker.
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Common names: mango malformation disease, MMD.
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Common name: brown spot (Persimmon).
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Synonyms: Cercospora fijiensis, Cercospora fijiensis var. difformis, Mycosphaerella fijiensis var. difformis, Mycosphaerella fijiensis var. fijiensis, PAra cercospora fijiensis, PAra cercospora fijiensis var. difformis, Pseudocercospora fijiensis.
Common names: sigatoka disease (banana), black sigatoka (banana).
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1)
Synonym: Phoma aspAra gi Sacc. 1878.
Common name: AspAra gus stem blight.
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12 (C1 Prohibited)
Synonym: Verticillium dahliae var. longisporum.
Common name: canola verticillium wilt.
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Legal status
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Classification
The classification of the organism.
Ranking
The taxonomy ranking of the organism.
Local government area's
LGA names and boundaries as defined by Landgate (recent to Feb 2014).
Control categories
See the legend for control category meaning.
Keeping categories
See the legend for keeping category meaning.
Presence
Whether the organism is currently found in Western Australia.
BAM Act Definitions
Legal status
Each listed organism is declared under the Biosecurity Management act with certain legal requirements:
Declared Pest, Prohibited - s12
Prohibited organisms are declared pests by virtue of section 22(1), and may only be imported and kept subject to permits. Permit conditions applicable to some species may only be appropriate or available to research organisations or similarly secure institutions.
Permitted - s11
Permitted organisms must satisfy any applicable import requirements when imported. They may be subject to an import permit if they are potential carriers of high-risk organisms.
Declared Pest - s22(2)
Declared pests must satisfy any applicable import requirements when imported, and may be subject to an import permit if they are potential carriers of high-risk organisms. They may also be subject to control and keeping requirements once within Western Australia.
Permitted, Requires Permit - r73
Regulation 73 permitted organisms may only be imported subject to an import permit. These organisms may be subject to restriction under legislation other than the Biosecurity and Agriculture Management Act 2007 . Permit conditions applicable to some species may only be appropriate or available to research organisations or similarly secure institutions.
Unlisted - s14
If you are considering importing an unlisted organism/s you will need to submit the name/s for assessment, as unlisted organisms are automatically prohibited entry into WA.
Control categories
Declared pests can be assigned to a C1, C2 or C3 control category under the Biosecurity and Agriculture Management Regulations 2013 . Prohibited organisms can be assigned to a C1 or C2 control category, the control categories are:
C1 Exclusion
Organisms which should be excluded from part or all of Western Australia.
C2 Eradication
Organisms which should be eradicated from part or all of Western Australia.
C3 Management
Organisms that should have some form of management applied that will alleviate the harmful impact of the organism, reduce the numbers or distribution of the organism or prevent or contain the spread of the organism.
Unassigned
Unassigned: Declared pests that are recognised as having a harmful impact under certain circumstances, where their subsequent control requirements are determined by a Plan or other legislative arrangements under the Act.
Keeping categories
The Biosecurity and Agriculture Management Regulations 2013 (BAM Regs) specify prohibited and restricted keeping categories for the purposes of regulating organisms declared under the BAM Act. In regards to the purposes for which they can be kept, and the entities that can keep them for that purpose. A keeping permit is the administrative tool used to assign specific conditions to the keeping of an organism.
Prohibited keeping
Can only be kept under a permit for public display and education purposes, and/or genuine scientific research, by entities approved by the state authority.
Restricted keeping
Organisms which, relative to other species, have a low risk of becoming a problem for the environment, primary industry or public safety and can be kept under a permit by private individuals.
Exempt keeping
No permit or conditions are required for keeping. There may be other requirements under BAMA such as those required for entry of livestock, pigeons and doves, or waybill requirements for stock movement. An organism in the exempt keeping category may also be regulated by other legislation such as the Wildlife Conservation Act 1950 (WCA), administered by DPaW.
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