富庶种植作为提高偏远干旱地区灌木粮食和灌木药用植物生产的手段——综述与现状报告

IF 1.5 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Learning Communities-International Journal of Learning in Social Contexts Pub Date : 2016-04-01 DOI:10.18793/LCJ2016.19.05
L. Lee, K. Courtenay
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引用次数: 6

摘要

在偏远的土著居民和托雷斯海峡岛民社区建立园艺企业的尝试很少取得持续的成功。提出了各种原因- -技术和商业专门知识不足、规划和协商不足、当地对产品的需求有限和到外部市场的距离很远、不利于农业的恶劣季节条件、有限的灌溉用水、相互竞争的社区利益以及在艰苦条件下工作的繁重性质。本文提出了进一步的原因,并探索了一种新的方法来替代园艺。浓缩种植是一种策略,涉及在自然且基本未受干扰的景观中建立用于食品,医药或其他用途的植物。在丛林环境中建立丛林食物和药用植物的富集种植补充了野生收获,但作为农业耕作方法的一种替代方法,它容纳了对土著居民收集丛林食物和传统药物有价值的重要社会和文化互动,同时也产生了收入来源。通过对澳大利亚现有有限的出版信息和文件的审查,在全球范围内审查了富集种植的使用,并探讨了其在偏远土著社区的丛林食品和传统药物生产中的应用。
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Enrichment plantings as a means of enhanced bush food and bush medicine plant production in remote arid regions – a review and status report
Attempts to establish horticultural businesses in remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities have seldom experienced sustained success. Various reasons have been proposed – inadequate technical and business expertise, insufficient planning and consultation, limited local demand for products and long distances to external markets, harsh seasonal conditions adverse to farming, limited irrigation water availability, competing community interests, and the laborious nature of the work under arduous conditions. This paper proposes a further reason and explores a new approach as an alternative to horticulture. Enrichment planting is a strategy involving the establishment of plants for food, medicine or other uses, in a landscape that is otherwise natural and largely undisturbed. The establishment of enrichment plantings of bush food and medicinal plants in bushland settings complements wild harvest, and yet as an alternative to the agricultural farming approach, it accommodates the important social and cultural interactions of value to Aboriginal people in collecting bush food and traditional medicines, while also generating a source of income. Through a review of the limited published information available and documentation of the current status in Australia, the use of enrichment planting is examined in the global context and its application to bush food and traditional medicine production for remote Aboriginal communities is explored.
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