Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/79159
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Type: Book chapter
Title: Case studies on food production, policy and trade
Author: Wilson, G.
Ryder, M.
Fitzgerald, G.
Tausz, M.
Norton, R.
O'Leary, G.
Seneweera, S.
Tausz-Posch, S.
Mollah, M.
Luck, J.
Hollaway, G.
Citation: Food Security in Australia: Challenges and Prospects for the Future, 2013 / Farmar Bowers, Q., Higgins, V., Millar, J. (ed./s), pp.353-364
Publisher: Springer
Publisher Place: United States
Issue Date: 2013
ISBN: 1461444837
9781461444831
Editor: Farmar Bowers, Q.
Higgins, V.
Millar, J.
Statement of
Responsibility: 
George Wilson, Maarten Ryder, Glenn Fitzgerald, Michael Tausz, Robert Norton, Garry O'Leary, Saman Seneweera, Sabine Tausz-Posch, Mahabubur Mollah, Jo Luck and Grant Hollaway
Abstract: 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.
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4614-4484-8_24
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-4484-8_24
Appears in Collections:Agriculture, Food and Wine publications
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