Applied Biosafety: Journal of the
American
Biological Safety Association
Volume 11, Number 2, 2006
About the Cover
*These most recent issues are only available in the Members Only Area and the Online Subscription area.
Volume 18, 2013
Volume 17, 2012
Number 1*
Number 2*
Number 3*
Number 4*
Volume 16, 2011
Number 1
Number 2*
Number 3*
Number 4*
Volume 15, 2010
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 14, 2009
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 13, 2008
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 12, 2007
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 11, 2006
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 10, 2005
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 9, 2004
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 8, 2003
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 7, 2002
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 6, 2001
Volume 5, 2000
Volume 4, 1999
Volume 3, 1998
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 2, 1997
Number 1
Number 2
Number 3
Number 4
Volume 1, 1996
Guidelines for Submissions (PDF 68KB)
Copyright Permission and Acknowledgment Form (PDF 176KB)
Download Complete Issue (PDF 2.8MB)
Articles
Some Bioterrorism Issues of Quantitative Biosafety(PDF 144KB)
Alexander Sabelnikov, Vladimir Zhukov, and Ruth Kempf
CORRECTION: Table 4, orriginally omitted from the above article.(PDF 48KB)
Vaporized Hydrogen Peroxide-based Biodecontamination of a High-Containment Laboratory Under Negative Pressure(PDF 156KB)
Jay Krishnan, Jody Berry, Greg Fey, Stefan Wagener
Biological Monitoring of Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation in a Biosafety Level 3 Laboratory(PDF 132KB)
Anthony R. Sambol and Peter C. Iwen
Safety Considerations for Handling Imported Fire Ants (Solenopsis spp.) in the Laboratory and Field(PDF 692KB)
James T. Vogt and Joseph P. Kozlovac
Special Features
Book Review - Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers-Perspectives in Medical Virology (Volume 11) by Colin R. Howard(PDF 68KB)
Reviewed by Jens H. Kuhn
Ask the Experts - Non-Compliant Biocontainment Facilities and Associated Liability(PDF 60KB)
John H. Keene
Capsule - Mumps Outbreak Update Information(PDF 68KB)
Ed Krisiunas
ABSA News
New ABSA Members for 2006(PDF 48KB)
About the Cover
Imported fire ant workers (Solenopsis spp.) are arrayed to illustrate the size range of individuals. The large ant to the right is a reproductive queen (S. D. Porter, U.S. Department of Agriculture). Imported fire ants are aggressive, effective competitors of resources, economically costly, and have been described as posing serious health threats to plants, animals, and potentially humans. For laboratory and research related safety and containment information on fire ants, see "Safety Considerations for Handling Imported Fire Ants (Solenopsis spp.) in the Laboratory and Field" by James T. Vogt, et al., on pages 88-97.

