Galaxy harassment has been proposed as a physical process that
morphologically transforms low surface density disc galaxies into dwarf
elliptical galaxies in clusters. It has been used to link the observed very
different morphology of distant cluster galaxies (relatively more blue galaxies
with 'disturbed' morphologies) with the relatively large numbers of dwarf
elliptical galaxies found in nearby clusters. One prediction of the harassment
model is that the remnant galaxies should lie on low surface brightness tidal
streams or arcs. We demonstrate in this paper that we have an analysis method
that is sensitive to the detection of arcs down to a surface brightness of 29 B
mag/arcsec^2 and then use this method to search for arcs around 46 Virgo
cluster dwarf elliptical galaxies. We find no evidence for tidal streams or
arcs and consequently no evidence for galaxy harassment as a viable explanation
for the relatively large numbers of dwarf galaxies found in the Virgo cluster.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA