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Foot-and-mouth disease
Everyone who enters a farm has a role to play in maintaining strong biosecurity practices. This is essential not only for protecting your flock or herd, but for safeguarding Australia’s broader livestock industries.
Depending on the type and scale of the enterprise, producers may host a range of contractors and visitors. While biosecurity efforts often focus on preventing disease transmission between animals, people entering the property can also pose significant risks. These include livestock transporters, shearers, agents and veterinarians, as well as those involved in non-animal tasks, such as fencing contractors and electricians.
Biosecurity for contractors and visitors requires proactive management. Diseases, pests, and weeds can easily spread between properties via individuals who haven’t followed proper hygiene protocols. Even one-off visitors can introduce harmful agents through contaminated footwear, vehicles, or equipment.
Types of people who may visit your farm and practical strategies to help you uphold biosecurity best-practice during their visit are listed below.
Contractors and visitors who contact animals
These roles involve direct contact with livestock and include:
These visitors present a high biosecurity risk as they move frequently between various farms and handle animals directly. Each contractor should identify the diseases or pests that they may encounter and how they spread, and consider the precautions needed as they move between flocks/herds and different properties. They should:
Contractors and visitors who will likely not contact stock
These include:
Since these contractors don’t work with animals, they may not realise they can carry biosecurity risks. It’s important to inform them of their role in maintaining the biosecurity standards on your farm. To manage these risks:
Be sure to remind these contractors that biosecurity applies to all areas of the farm. Even though their work doesn’t involve animals, they’re still at risk of encountering disease agents and pests that have settled on the ground or infrastructure.
Occasional visitors
These may include:
Even if their visits are infrequent or brief, these individuals often travel between multiple properties and can unknowingly spread disease or pests. To reduce risk:
Biosecurity is a shared responsibility. Whether someone is handling livestock, installing infrastructure, or simply visiting for a short time, their actions can impact the health of your animals and the integrity of your farm.
By identifying the types of people who enter your property and implementing practical biosecurity measures, you can significantly reduce the risk of disease and pest transmission both to your farm and within Australia’s agricultural sector.
Learn more
For more information on managing people, vehicles and equipment on your farm, visit People, vehicles & equipment.
If you don’t already have your own biosecurity plan, use the Farm Biosecurity Action Planner.