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Case studies on food production, policy and trade

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posted on 2019-11-15, 00:00 authored by G Wilson, M Ryder, G Fitzgerald, Michael Tausz, R Norton, G O'Leary, S Seneweera, Sabine Tausz-Posch, M Mollah, J Luck
Few native animals, other than fish and crustaceans, are used in food production by the humans who recently arrived in Australia. Even Aboriginal Australians have now become reliant on introduced species which evolved elsewhere. In part, this is due to cultural dominance, first of the British and then other western perspectives in last 200 years. It is also because introduced species generally have higher production rates following centuries of agricultural selection and recently, energy-intensive farming practices. But it need not always be that exotic species are superior, particularly in the context of climate change. Replacing cattle and sheep on the rangelands with well-Adapted species such as kangaroos and making greater use of them just as Aborigines did for 40,000 years, is a prospect worthy of further investigation. © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2013. All rights are reserved.

History

Editor

Farmar-Bowers Q; Higgins V; Millar J

Start Page

353

End Page

364

Number of Pages

12

ISBN-10

1461444837

ISBN-13

9781461444831

Publisher

Springer

Place of Publication

New York, NY

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

University of Melbourne; Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre, ACT; Australian National University; University of Adelaide; International Plant Nutrition Institute, Department of Primary Industries, Vic.

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Number of Chapters

30

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