Remaking wetlands: a tale of rice, ducks and floods in the Murrumbidgee River region - a podcast by Jan Oosthoek

from 2012-12-05T01:26

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Before the arrival of Europeans and their agriculture, Australian ducks only had to compete with other native birds and animals, as well as Aboriginal hunters. However, the introduction of water intensive agricultural activity by Europeans changed all this and in particular rice cultivation has altered most river systems in Australia, and as a result the habitat for ducks.


The guest on this episode of the Exploring Environmental History podcast is Emily OGorman, an Associate Research Fellow at the Australian Centre for Cultural Environmental Research of the University of Wollongong. She is an expert on Australian flooding and river history and examines on this podcast the ways in which ducks as well as people negotiated the changing water landscapes of the Murrumbidgee River caused by the creation of rice paddies.


Music credits: Forecast by cdk, Where You Are Now by Zapac.

Further episodes of Exploring Environmental History

Further podcasts by Jan Oosthoek

Website of Jan Oosthoek