Media Release
October 11, 2004
Desert knowledge identifies plants with market potential
Indigenous people from desert communities are being encouraged to use
their traditional knowledge of native plants to identify, grow and
market plants for use as food, medicine and other products for their
long-term livelihood.
The University of South Australia is a key researcher in the South
Australian study of the national Plants for People Project, which
involves working with Indigenous communities to help them establish and
manage business enterprises to commercialise native plant products, and
develop community members’ skills in areas such as plant identification,
cataloguing, classifying, propagating and growing native species.
The project is one of the areas being studied by the Desert Knowledge
Cooperative Research Centre, led by the CSIRO in Alice Springs. UniSA
and Curtin University are core partners in the Plants for People
Project, along with Tjutjunaku Worka Tjuta Inc (TWT) and the
Tapatjatjaka Community Government Council.
Associate Professor Brian Cheers, Director of UniSA’s Centre for Rural
and Regional Development at Whyalla campus, is the team leader for the
South Australian site, with other study sites in Western Australia and
the Northern Territory. Aboriginal people in the Ceduna region have
accepted the invitation to be South Australian partners through a
steering committee established through TWT at Ceduna and many of them
will be community researchers in the project.
Selected arid-land plant species from all sites with market potential
are being collected and analysed in laboratories at UniSA, Curtin
University, Charles Sturt University and the University of Western
Australia to determine their nutritional and medicinal properties.
“Our study will focus initially on nutritional, rather than medicinal,
properties of the plants. We are working with the communities involved
to enable them to document traditional knowledge of the cultural uses of
local plants so that they can use the information on the nutritional and
medicinal properties of plant species to develop a range of initiatives
for their use, including community health. Each community retains full
ownership of their knowledge and will decide which knowledge they make
available for the project,” Professor Cheers said.
“We are committed to communities producing culturally and
environmentally appropriate business development plans, and conducting
relevant skills training programs with the aim of establishing at least
one plant-based business enterprise in the Ceduna region.
“This project will enhance cross-cultural understanding and increase
recognition of Aboriginal traditional knowledge, while ensuring that
Indigenous communities own and gain the benefits of this knowledge,”
Professor Cheers said.
Activities within the program could include field studies on plant
distribution and ecology, establishing local herbariums containing
specimens of selected plants, developing appropriate technologies for
cultivating plants, laboratory evaluation for food and medicinal value,
ecological restoration, and applying the knowledge and new technologies
in health and training programs and business enterprises. One possible
project being considered is establishing a ‘native plant trail’ in the
region surrounding Ceduna.
Professor Brian Cheers is supported by UniSA team members Dr Susan
Semple (pharmacy), Ian Gentle and Colin Weetra (Spencer Gulf Rural
Health School), Joan Gibbs (natural and built environment), Dr Mary
Oliver (nursing and rural health), and Martin O’Leary (Plant
Biodiversity Centre/State Herbarium, Department of Environment and
Heritage).
The national Plants for People Project has been awarded CRC funding of
$448,130, with more than $1.5 million in-kind support from partner
organisations.
Media contact
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Geraldine Hinter office (08) 8302 0963 mobile 0417 861 832 email geraldine.hinter@unisa.edu.au
