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People, Sheep and Nature Conservation: The Tasmanian Experience
 
 
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People, Sheep and Nature Conservation: The Tasmanian Experience [Paperback]

Jamie Kirkpatrick (Author), Kerry Bridle (Author)

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Book Description

0643093729 978-0643093720 May 31, 2007
With almost half a million people and more than six times as many sheep, Tasmania has a rich history of wool production. In the drier parts of the island, graziers raise sheep partly using the native vegetation on their extensive runs.

People, Sheep and Nature Conservation explores this use of the run country and the interaction of graziers, sheep and nature. Other topics covered include how graziers manage the runs for profit, how they feel about nature and manage their properties for conservation, how sheep interact with native animals and plants on the runs, and the implications of the ongoing loss of run country to clearance and inundation.

In an unusual combination of history, geography, social science, ecological science and policy analysis, this entertaining and well-illustrated book uses the vivid words of the graziers, historical sources and the results of contemporary research to provide some insight into these issues.

Although a Tasmanian story, it will resonate more widely, as the integration of production and nature conservation within complex societies, cultures and economies is an outcome desired on a global scale.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
tussock present, several graziers, grazing charts, ratio between the centre, one grazier, two graziers, cell grazing, rural remnants, prickly box, devil population, spring spelling, native vegetation remnants, many graziers, private remnants, few graziers, urban remnants, kangaroo grass, tree dieback, drought reserve, wallaby grass, forester kangaroos, paddock trees, exotic cover, moist country, urea blocks
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Jamie Kirkpatrick, Central Plateau, Tom Gibson Nature Reserve, Kerry Bridle, Liaweenee Moor, Australian Government, Saxon Merinos, Black War, Louisa Anne Meredith, Campbell Town, Macquarie River, New Zealand, Van Diemen's Land, Epping Forest, Lands Department, University of Tasmania, Barney Gatenby, Camerons Lagoon, Major Cameron, North-Facing Slopes Program, Risdon Cove, Simon Cubit, Threatened Species Protection Act
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