Update: I have been looking into this further, searching for literature citations regarding tool sterilization in the forestry/ plant health care fields. I actually haven't come up with much surprisingly. Also tried contacting the authors of the Palm paper above but no response as of yet.
In the meantime, the following citation might be interesting:
Bacterial Spores Survive Treatment with Commercial Sterilants and Disinfectants Jose-Luis Sagripanti* and Aylin Bonifacino Appl Environ Microbiol. 1999 Sep; 65(9): 4255–4260.
See it at:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC99773/
Basically a lot of the topical "disinfection" compounds don't actually work all that well.
Please:
disinfection does not equal sterilization.
If you're trying to get rid of bacteria (non encapsulating ones) and fungal mycelia OK perhaps, but spores (and tough guy bacteria) are a different ballgame. The earlier references (above in this thread) from CDC and from Barbicide refer to a hierarchy of organisms and the difficulty in reaching a sterile condition.
I also have questions about the flaming of the tools. 40 seconds flaming to achieve zero or close to zero CFU (colony forming units) really doesn't say what the temperature of the tool was (I would suggest this is possible to measure using an IR sensing instrument). This matters in a climate like we have here (I am writing you from the Great White North - north of the 49th parallel). I would want to know I am achieving a certain temperature (short of red hot - steel temper eliminating).
I actually still think this arborists' tool sterilization area needs more hard butt science work thrown at it. There is a lot of colloquial information which seems to be floating around. This includes things like the reference (above) to chainsaws (hand held and of course the pole saws (hydraulic or electric like the Oregon ones).
Consideration also maybe needs to be given to the choice of tool we use when working on infected wood - i.e. try and stay with easily sterilizable hand tools and away from powered tools (and perhaps chippers which may spread spores etc. all over the place). There's actually lots to think about here! Science needed.
I'd also like to throw out a challenge to the handsaw and scabbard manufacturers like Fanno/ Silky/ Weaver, etc. Can you make us handsaws that say have a quick detachable handles so the metal blade bit can be heated/ cooked without fear for the plastic/ wooden handle or can be stuck in a bucket of sterilant. It would be possible to place a bunch of blades into the "heater" (another new invention) or the chemical bucket and get the required residence time for sterilization. Heating verified by IR readout - knowing is better than guessing. Snap on another blade and you're good to go in the meantime. Another thought goes to the saw scabbards - I've often looked down at the Silky scabbard velcro-strapped to my leg and wondered what baddies could be hiding in the sawdust and goo in there? Can we make one that's easier to clean/ sterilize? Is some super Mumford inventive-ness needed?