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Bush tucker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Food used as sustenance by Indigenous Australians
Not to be confused withBushmeat.

Bush tucker
Bush tucker inAlice Springs
Country or regionAustralia
Ethnic groupIndigenous Australians

Bush tucker, also calledbush food, is any food native to Australia and historically eaten byIndigenous Australians andTorres Strait Islander peoples, but it can also describe any nativeflora, fauna, or fungi used for culinary or medicinal purposes, regardless of the continent or culture. Animal native foods includekangaroo,emu,witchetty grubs andcrocodile, and plant foods include fruits such asquandong,kutjera, spices such aslemon myrtle and vegetables such aswarrigal greens and various native yams.

Traditional Indigenous Australians' use of bushfoods has been severely affected by thecolonisation of Australia beginning in 1788 and subsequent settlement by non-Indigenous peoples. The introduction of non-native organisms, together with the loss of and destruction of traditional lands and habitats, has resulted in reduced access to native foods by Aboriginal people.

Since the 1970s, there has been recognition of the nutritional and gourmet value of native foods by non-Indigenous Australians, and thebushfood industry has grown enormously. Kangaroo meat has been available in supermarkets since the 1980s, and many other foods are sold in restaurants or packaged as gourmet foods, which has led to expansion of commercial cultivation of native food crops.

History

[edit]
Collecting bush tucker nearYuendumu

Aboriginal Australians have eaten native animal and plant foods for the estimated 60,000 years of human habitation on the Australian continent, using various traditional methods of processing and cooking.[1] An estimated 4,999 species of native food were used by Aboriginal peoples. With much of it unsafe or unpalatable raw, food was processed by cooking on open fires, boiling in bark containers, pounding vegetables and seeds, or hanging bags in running water.[2]

Colonisation

[edit]
Billardiera scandens

Bush tucker provided a source of nutrition to the non-indigenous colonial settlers, often supplementing meagre rations. However, bushfoods were often considered to be inferior by colonists unfamiliar with Australia, generally preferring familiar foods from their homelands.[3][4][5]

Especially in the more densely colonised areas of south-eastern Australia, the introduction of non-native foods to Aboriginal people resulted in an almost complete abandonment of native foods by them.[2] This impact on traditional foods was further accentuated by the loss of traditional lands, which has resulted in reduced access to native foods by Aboriginal people, and destruction of native habitat for agriculture.[2]

The 19th century English botanistJoseph Dalton Hooker, writing of Australian plants, remarked that although bushtucker is "eatable," it is not "fit to eat". In 1889, botanistJoseph Maiden reiterated this sentiment with the comment on native food plants being "nothing to boast of as eatables."[6] The firstmonograph to be published on theflora of Australia reported the lack of edible plants on the first page, where it presentedBillardiera scandens as, "... almost the only wild eatable fruit of the country".[7]

Modern use

[edit]
Further information:History of the bushfood industry

Apart from themacadamia nut, with the first small-scale commercial plantation being planted in Australia in the 1880s, no native food plants were produced commercially until the 1990s. The macadamia was the only Australian native plant food developed and cropped on a large scale.[2]Hawaii, however, was where the macadamia was commercially developed to its greatest extent.[8]

From the 1970s, non-Indigenous Australians began to recognise previously overlooked native Australian foods. Textbooks such asWildfoods in Australia (1981) by botanistsAlan andJoan Cribb[9] were popular. In the late 1970s, horticulturists started to assess native food-plants for commercial use and cultivation.

In 1980,South Australia legalised the sale ofkangaroo meat for human consumption,[10] and it is now commonly found in supermarkets and prized for its nutritional value as alean meat.[2] Analysis shows that a variety of bushfoods are exceptionally nutritious.[10] In the mid-1980s, several Sydney restaurants began using native Australian ingredients in recipes more familiar to non-Indigenous tastes, providing the first opportunity for bushfoods to be tried by non-Indigenous Australians on agourmet level.

Following popular TV programs on "bush tucker", a surge in interest in the late 1980s saw the publication of books likeBushfood: Aboriginal Food and Herbal Medicine by Jennifer Isaacs,The Bushfood Handbook andUniquely Australian byVic Cherikoff, andWild Food Plants of Australia byTim Low.[10]

An advantage of growing the native foods is that they are well adapted to Australia's environment, in particular at the extreme ends, and are ecologically sound.[2] Bush-tucker ingredients were initially harvested from the wild, but cultivated sources have become increasingly important to provide sustainable supplies for a growing market, with some Aboriginal communities also involved in the supply chain. However, despite the industry being founded on Aboriginal knowledge of the plants, Aboriginal participation in the commercial sale of bush tucker is currently still marginal, and mostly at the supply end of value chains. Organisations are working to increase Aboriginal participation in the bush-tucker market. Gourmet-styleprocessed food anddried food have been developed for the domestic and export markets.[citation needed]

The term "bushfood" is one of several terms describing native Australian food, evolving from the older-style "bush tucker" which was used in the 1970s and 1980s.[citation needed]

In the 21st century, many restaurants are serving emu, crocodile,yabbies and locally sourcedeels, and using native plant spices for flavour. Producers have sprung up across the country to serve the new markets, includingTasmanian pepper, Victorian eel farms andSouth Australian plantations of quandongs, bush tomatoes, and native citrus.[2]

In 2020, researchers at theUniversity of Queensland were researching a fruit native toArnhem Land in theNorthern Territory,Buchanania obovata, known as the green plum. Eaten for more than 53,000 years but previously little-known among non-Indigenous people, the scientists learnt about the plum from people at the remote community ofYirrkala. It is harvested some time after theKakadu plum harvests. Nutritional analysis showed high levels ofprotein,dietary fibre and the mineralspotassium,phosphorus andmagnesium. In addition, thefolate level is among the highest of commercially available fruits. Its potential as a commercial crop for Indigenous communities is being investigated.[11]

Types of foods

[edit]
Further information:Indigenous Australian food groups andAustralian Aboriginal sweet foods

Toxic seeds, such asCycas media andMoreton Bay chestnut, are processed to remove the toxins and render them safe to eat. Many foods are also baked in the hot campfire coals, or baked for several hours in ground ovens. "Paperbark", the bark ofMelaleuca species, is widely used for wrapping food placed in ground ovens.Bush bread was made by women using many types of seeds, nuts and corns to process a flour or dough. Some animals, such as kangaroos, were cooked in their own skins, and others, such asturtles, were cooked in their own shells.[1]

Kangaroo is quite common and can be found in Australian supermarkets, often cheaper than beef. Other animals, for example, jimba (sheep), emu,goanna andwitchetty grubs, are eaten by Aboriginal Australians. Fish andshellfish are culinary features of the Australian coastal communities.

Examples of Australian native plant foods include the fruits quandong, kutjera,muntries,riberry,Davidson's plum, andfinger lime. Native spices include lemon myrtle,mountain pepper, and thekakadu plum. Various native yams are valued as food, and a popular leafy vegetable iswarrigal greens. Nuts includebunya nut and the most identifiable bush tucker plant harvested and sold in large-scale commercial quantities, the macadamia nut. Knowledge of Aboriginal uses offungi is meagre, butbeefsteak fungus andnative "bread" (a fungus also) were certainly eaten.

Native Australian food-plants listed by culinary province and plant part

[edit]

Australian bush tucker plants can be divided into several distinct and large regional culinary provinces. Some species listed grow across several climatic boundaries.

Adansonia gregoriiboab
Buchanania arborescenssparrow's mango
Citrus graciliskakadu lime
Eugenia carissoidesCedar Bay cherry
Ficus racemosacluster fig
Manilkara kaukiwongi
Melastoma affineblue tongue
Mimusops elengitanjong
Morinda citrifoliagreat morinda
Physalis minimanative gooseberry
Terminalia ferdinandianakakadu plum
Syzygium erythrocalyxJohnstone's River satinash
Syzygium fibrosumfibrous satinash
Syzygium suborbicularelady apple

Vegetables

[edit]
Dioscorea alatapurple yam
Dioscorea bulbiferaround yam
Dioscorea transversapencil yam, long yam
Eleocharis palustrisspikerush
Ipomoea aquaticawater spinach
Nelumbo nuciferalotus
Nymphaea macrospermawater lily

Nuts

[edit]
Cycas mediacycad palm seeds (requires detoxification: seeBush bread )
Semecarpus australiensisAustralian cashew
Terminalia catappasea almond

Spices

[edit]
Eucalyptus staigerianalemon ironbark
Melaleuca leucadendraweeping paperbark
Melaleuca viridiflorakitcha-kontoo
Ocimum tenuiflorumnative basil

Outback Australia

[edit]

Arid and semi-arid zones of the low rainfall interior.

Fruits

[edit]
Desert quandong
Bush tomatoes
Capparis spp.native caper,caperbush
Capparis mitcheliiwild orange
Capparis spinosa
subsp.nummularia
wild passionfruit
Carissa lanceolatabush plum, conkerberry
Citrus glaucadesert lime
Enchylaena tomentosaruby saltbush
Ficus platypodadesert fig
Marsdenia australisdoubah, bush banana
Owenia acidulaemu apple
Santalum acuminatumquandong, desert or sweet quandong
Santalum murrayanumbitter quandong
Solanum centraleakudjura, Australian desert raisin, bush tomato
Solanum cleistogarnumbush tomato
Solanum ellipticumbush tomato

Vegetables

[edit]
Calandrinia balonensisparakeelya
Ipomoea costatabush potato
Vigna lanceolatapencil yams
Lepidium spp.peppercresses
Portulaca intraterranealarge pigweed

Seeds

[edit]
Acacia aneuramulga
Acacia colei
Acacia coriaceadogwood
Acacia holosericeastrap wattle
Acacia kempeanawitchetty bush
Acacia murrayana
Acacia pycnantha
Acacia retinodes
Acacia tetragonophylladead finish seed
Acacia victoriaegundabluey, prickly wattle
Brachychiton populneuskurrajong
Panicum decompositumnative millet
Portulaca oleraceapigweed
Triodia spp.commonly known as spinifex

Spices

[edit]
Eucalyptus polybracteablue-leaved mallee

Insects in gall

[edit]

Eastern Australia

[edit]

Subtropical rainforests of New South Wales to the wet tropics of Northern Queensland.

Fruit

[edit]
Lemon aspen
Finger lime
Acronychia acidulalemon aspen
Acronychia oblongifoliawhite aspen
Antidesma buniusHerbet River cherry
Archirhodomyrtus becklerirose myrtle
Austromyrtus dulcismidyim
Carpobrotus glaucescenspigface
Citrus australasicafinger lime
Citrus australisdooja
Davidsonia jerseyanaNew South Wales Davidson's plum
Davidsonia johnsoniismooth davidsonia
Davidsonia pruriensNorth Queensland Davidson's plum
Diploglottis campbelliismall-leaf tamarind
Eupomatia laurinabolwarra
Ficus coronatasandpaper fig
Melodorum leichhardtiizig zag vine
Pandanus tectoriusHala fruit
Pleiogynium timorienseBurdekin plum
Podocarpus elatusIllawarra plum
Planchonella australisblack apple
Rubus moluccanusbroad-leaf bramble
Rubus probusAtherton raspberry
Rubus rosifoliusrose-leaf bramble
Syzygium australebrush cherry
Syzygium luehmanniiriberry
Syzygium paniculatummagenta lilly pilly
Ximenia americanayellow plum

Vegetable

[edit]
Apium prostratumsea celery
Commelina cyaneascurvy weed
Geitonoplesium cymosumscrambling lily
Tetragonia tetragonoideswarrigal greens
Trachymene incisawild parsnip
Urtica incisascrub nettle

Spices

[edit]
Lemon myrtle
Alpinia caeruleanative ginger
Backhousia citriodoralemon myrtle
Backhousia myrtifoliacinnamon myrtle
Backhousia anisataaniseed myrtle
Leptospermum liversidgeilemon tea-tree
Prostanthera incisacut-leaf mintbush, native thyme
Smilax glyciphyllasweet sarsaparilla
Syzygium anisatumaniseed myrtle
Tasmannia stipitataDorrigo pepper (leaf and pepperberry)

Nut

[edit]
Araucaria bidwilliibunya nut
Athertonia diversifoliaAtherton almond
Macadamia integrifoliamacadamia nut
Macadamia tetraphyllabush nut
Sterculia quadrifidapeanut tree

Temperate Australia

[edit]

Warm and cool temperate zones of southern Australia, includingTasmania,South Australia,Victoria and the highlands of New South Wales.

Tasmania

[edit]
Scientific nameCommon nameEdible part of plantUseDetailsCitation
Acacia mearnsiiBlack WattleBarkTeaBark can be soaked to make a tea, which is claimed to be good for indigestion.[12]
Kennedia prostrataRunning Postman'sFlowersGarnishsThe nectar from the flowers is edible.[12]
Lomandra longifoliaSaggFlowerGarnishYoung leaves, flowers and seeds are ideal[12]
Wahlenbergia multicaulisBushy BluebellFlowerGarnish[12]
Wahlenbergia strictaFlowerGarnish[12]
Xanthorrhoea australisGrass TreeFlowerGarnishThe nectar from the flowers is edible.[12]
Viola hederaceaWild VioletFlowerSaladThe flowers are edible and can be used in salads.[12]
Astroloma humifusumNative CranberryFruity loopsFruitThe berries can be consumed, when ripe.[12]
Astroloma pinifoliumPine HeathFruitFruitThe berries can be consumed, when ripe.[12]
Billardiera longifloraMountain Blue BerryFruitFruitEdible fruit when ripe[12]
Billardiera scandensApple DumplingsFruitFruitThe berries can be consumed, when ripe.[12]
Coprosma nitidaMountain CurrantFruitFruitThe berries can be consumed, when ripe.[12]
Coprosma quadrifidaNative CurrantFruitFruitEdible berries – raw or stewed[12]
Dianella brevicaulisShortstem FlaxlilyFruitFruitThe berries can be consumed, when ripe.[12]
Dianella revolutaSpreading FlaxlilyFruitFruitThe berries can be consumed, when ripe.[12]
Dianella tasmanicaBlue Flax LilyFruitFruitThe berries can be consumed, when ripe.[12]
Chenopodium nutans (Syn Einardia nutans, Rhagodia nutans)Climbing SaltbushFruitFruitThe fruit can be consumed, when ripe.[12]
Solanum laciniatumKangaroo AppleFruitFruitOnly the very ripe fruit is edible....Note: the green fruit is POISONOUS.[12]
Tasmannia lanceolataNative PepperFruitFruitIf the berries are dried, they can be consumed.[12]
Acmena smithiiLilly PillyFruitJam/compoteBerries can either be eaten raw or made into a jam or compote.[12]
Carpobrotus rossiiNative PigfaceFruitJam/compoteThe ripe fruit eaten raw or made into a compote.[12]
Acacia mearnsiiBlack WattleGumCondiment[12]
Eucalyptus gunniiCider GumGumCondimentThe gum is sweet and edible and was used to make afermented beverage calledway-a-linah[12][13]
Lomandra longifoliaSaggLeaf/shootSaladConsume the young leaves[12]
Phragmites australisCommon ReedLeaf/shootSalad[12]
Suaeda australisSeabliteLeaf/shootSalad[12]
Tasmannia lanceolataNative PepperLeaf/shootSaladDry the leaves before consumption.[12]
Xanthorrhoea australisGrass TreeLeaf/shootSaladThe young leaves can be consumed.[12]
Ozothamnus obcordatusNative ThymeLeaf/shootSeasoningWhen the leaves are dried, their taste resembled that of thyme. It can be used as a seasoning.[12]
Correa albaWhite CorreaLeaf/shootTeaThe leave may be used to prepare a tea.[12]
Hardenbergia violaceaSarsparilla VineLeaf/shootTeaIn order to make a tea, the leaves need to be initially boiled, then dried.[12]
Kunzea ambiguaWhite KunzeaLeaf/shootTeaA refreshing tea can be made from the dried leaves.[12]
Atriplex cinereaGrey SaltbushLeaf/shootVegetableIn order to remove some of the salt from the leaves, the leaves need to be thoroughly soaked in water. After rinsing, the leaves can be used as a type of vegetable / salad.[12]
Tetragonia implexicomaBower SpinachLeaf/shootVegetableThe leaves are edible in both a raw or cooked state.[12]
Cycnogeton procerum (formerly Triglochin procera)Water RibbonsLeaf/shootVegetableThe leaves are edible in both a raw or cooked state.[12]
Typha domingensisBulrushLeaf/shootSaladConsume the young shoots from the plant.[12]
Typha orientalisBroad-leafed BulrushLeaf/shootSaladConsume the young shoots from the plant.[12]
Arthropodium milleflorumVanilla LilyRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableThe tubers can be consumed in both a raw or roasted state.[12]
Arthropodium strictumChocolate LilyRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableThe tubers can be consumed in both a raw or roasted state. NOTE: the chocolate scented flowers are NOT edible, however.[12]
Bolboschoenus caldwelliiSea ClubsedgeRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableThe roots are edible once they have been roasted.[12]
Bulbine bulbosaGolden Rock LilyRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableThe bulb of the plant can be consumed after it has been roasted. It is particularly nutritious.[12]
Burchardia umbellataMilk MaidsRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableThe tuber of the plant can be consumed once it has been roasted.[12]
Clematis aristataTravellers JoyRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableOnce the taproot has been roasted, it is edible.[12]
Clematis microphyllaSmall Leaf ClematisRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableOnce the taproot has been roasted, it is edible.[12]
Convolvulus angustissimusPink MoonflowerRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableOnce the taproot has been roasted, it is edible.[12]
Eleocharis sphacelataTall Rush SpikeRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableThe roots are edible[12]
Geranium solanderiSouthern cranesbillRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableOnce the taproot has been roasted, it is edible.[12]
Microseris walteriYam Daisy,MurnongRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableThe tubers can be consumed in both a raw or roasted state.[12]
Phragmites australisCommon ReedRoot/tuber/bulbVegetable[12]
Xanthorrhoea australisGrass TreeRoot/tuber/bulbVegetableThe young roots are edible[12]
Typha domingensisBulrushRoot/tuber/bulbVegetable[12]
Typha orientalisBroad-leafed BulrushRoot/tuber/bulbVegetable[12]
Dodonaea viscosaNative HopSeedAlcoholSeeds can be used instead of hops to brew beer[12]
Acacia melanoxylonBlackwoodSeedNuts[12]
Acacia retinodesWirildaSeedNutsBoth the seeds and green pods can be consumed.[12]
Acacia sophoraeBoobyalla/Coast WattleSeedNutsThe seeds can be consumed in both the raw or roasted state.[12]
Brachychiton populneusKurrajong (Tas prov)SeedNutsThe seeds of this plant are particularly nutritious. The seeds can be consumed in both the raw or roasted state.[12]
Lomandra longifoliaSaggSeedNuts[12]
Phragmites australisCommon ReedSeedNuts[12]
Acacia mearnsiiBlack WattleSeedNuts[12]
Sarcocornia quinquefloraSamphire or GlasswortStemFibreConsumption of the younger stems of the plant is suggested[12]
Phragmites australisCommon ReedStemFibre[12]

Fruit

[edit]
Acrotriche depressanative currant
Billardiera cymosasweet apple-berry
Billardiera longiflorapurple apple-berry
Billardiera scandenscommon apple-berry
Carpobrotus rossiikarkalla[14]
Exocarpus cupressiformisnative cherry
Gaultheria hispidasnow berry
Kunzea pomiferamuntries
Rubus parvifoliuspink-flowered native raspberry
Sambucus gaudichaudianawhite elderberry
Enchylaena tomentosaruby saltbush[15]

Seed

[edit]
Seeds ofAcacia longifolia
Acacia longifoliagolden rods
Acacia sophoraecoast wattle (AllAcacia seeds can be ground into a bush flour.)

Spice

[edit]
Eucalyptus divespeppermint gum
Eucalyptus olidastrawberry gum
Eucalyptus globulustasmanian blue gum
Mentha australisriver mint
Prostanthera rotundifolianative thyme
Tasmannia lanceolatamountain pepper
Tasmannia stipitataDorrigo pepper

Vegetable

[edit]
Apium insulareFlinders Island celery
Atriplex cinereagrey saltbush
Burchardia umbellatamilkmaids
Eustrephus latifoliuswombat berry
Microseris walterimurnong

Leaf

[edit]
Neptune's necklace (the beady seaweed) – the beads are pierced to get rid of the salt water before being cooked[16]
Warrigal greens – tastes like spinach, pest-resistant and spreads easily
Coast sword-sedge – the leaf bases can be eaten raw or roasted[17][18]

In media

[edit]

Malcolm Douglas was one of the first TV presenters to show how to 'live off the land' in the Australian Outback. MajorLes Hiddins, a retiredAustralian Army soldier popularised the idea of bush tucker as a food resource. He presented a TV series calledThe Bush Tucker Man[19] on theABC TV network in the late 1980s. In the series, Hiddins demonstrated his research forNORFORCE in identifying foods which might sustain or augment army forces in the northernAustralian Outback.

Starting in 2002,I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! became notorious for its "Bushtucker Trials", some of which involved eating meat-based bush tucker (such as mealworms, locusts and kangaroo testicles) to win meals for the camp.

In early 2003, the first cooking show featuring authentic Australian foods and calledDining Downunder was produced byVic Cherikoff and Bailey Park Productions ofToronto, Canada. This was followed by theSpecial Broadcasting Service (SBS) production ofMessage Stick with Aboriginal chef,Mark Olive.[20]

In 2008,Ray Mears made asurvival television series calledRay Mears Goes Walkabout, which focused on the history of survival in Australia with a focus on bush tucker.[21]

In the TV survival seriesSurvivorman, host and narratorLes Stroud spent time in the Australian outback. After successfully finding and eating awitchetty grub raw he found many more and cooked them, stating they were much better cooked.[22] After cooking in hot embers of his fire, he removed the head and the hind of the grub and squeezed out thick yellow liquid before eating.

TheSBS documentary seriesFood Safari featured bush tucker in an episode that went to air in 2013.[2][23]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^abHiddins, Les (2003).Bush Tucker Field Guide. Australia: Explore Australia Publishing. pp. x.ISBN 1741170281.
  2. ^abcdefgh"About Native Australian food".Food. 1 July 2008. Retrieved1 June 2020.
  3. ^Newton, John (2016).The Oldest Foods on Earth. Sydney, Australia: NewSouth Publishing.ISBN 9781742234373.
  4. ^O'Brien, Charmaine (2016).The Colonial Kitchen. USA: Rowman & Littlefield.ISBN 9781442249813.
  5. ^Newling, Jacqui (2015).Eat Your History, Stories and Recipes from Australian Kitchens. Sydney, Australia: Sydney Living Museums and NewSouth Publishing.ISBN 9781742234687.
  6. ^Maiden, J.H.,The Useful Native Plants of Australia, 1889, p.1
  7. ^Smith, J E (1793).Spec. Bot. New Holland.James Sowerby.AMID all the beauty and variety which the vegetable productions of New Holland display in such profusion, there has not yet been discovered a proportionable degree of usefulness to mankind, at least with respect to food.
  8. ^Shigeura, Gordon T.; Ooka, Hiroshi (April 1984).Macadamia nuts in Hawaii: History and production(PDF). Research extension series. University of Hawaii. College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources.ISSN 0271-9916. Retrieved1 June 2020.
  9. ^Cribb, A. B. (Alan Bridson); Cribb, J. W. (Joan Winifred), 1930- (1981),Wild medicine in Australia, Fontana/Collins,ISBN 978-0-00-636559-4{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^abcLow, T.,Wild Food Plants of Australia, Angus & Robertson, 1992, pp 199–202ISBN 0-207-16930-6
  11. ^Baczkowski, Halina (31 May 2020)."Native green plums from Arnhem Land found to have significant health benefits, commercial appeal".ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). Landline. Retrieved1 June 2020.On iview
  12. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavawaxayazbabbbcbdbebfbgbhbibj"Bush Foods".Wildseed Tasmania. Retrieved1 June 2020.
  13. ^Varela, Cristian; Sundstrom, Joanna; Cuijvers, Kathleen; Jiranek, Vladimir; Borneman, Anthony (December 2020)."Discovering the indigenous microbial communities associated with the natural fermentation of sap from the cider gumEucalyptus gunnii".Scientific Reports.10 (1): 14716.Bibcode:2020NatSR..1014716V.doi:10.1038/s41598-020-71663-x.PMC 7477236.PMID 32895409.S2CID 221536063.
  14. ^"Edible Pigface Australian - Sustainable Gardening Australia".Sustainable Gardening Australia.
  15. ^"Enchylaena tomentosa - Ruby Saltbush - Nurseries Online". 10 July 2016.
  16. ^"Neptune's necklace - Seaweed (Hormosira banksii)". 8 April 2023.
  17. ^"Coastal Sword Sedge"(PDF).sercul.org.au. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 26 March 2017. Retrieved24 October 2018.
  18. ^"Coast Sword-sedge |Lepidosperma gladiatum".scnaturesearch.com.au. Retrieved24 October 2018.
  19. ^"Homepage".Bush Tucker Man. Retrieved7 September 2022.
  20. ^"Cooking with culture: How Mark Olive found fame in food".NITV. 20 November 2019. Retrieved7 September 2022.
  21. ^Ray Mears Goes Walkabout (Documentary), 1 January 2008, retrieved7 September 2022
  22. ^sperkins-pom (21 November 2012)."Les Stroud on Eating for Survival".Outside Online. Retrieved7 September 2022.
  23. ^"Food Safari – A Look At Bush Tucker".SBS Food. 4 March 2013. Retrieved1 June 2020.

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