plants of the wetland

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Melbourne Water - Wetland educational videos
Plants of the Wetland
A short video with images and photos to present a variety of plants that are found in the
Edithvale-Seaford Wetland.
Speakers
Narrator – N1
Speaker 2 – S2 (Beth Gott)
N1: Melbourne Water looks after many natural and man-made wetlands across
Melbourne and plants play such an important role in these wetlands!
[on-screen text: Plants of the Wetlands]
N1: Here at the Edithvale-Seaford wetlands, Beth talks about the plants and particularly,
how they were used by aboriginal people.
[on-screen text: Beth Gott, Monash University Honorary Research Fellow]
S2: Plants, of course, are those other living things that we share with this planet!
Because they grow well when they have plenty of water, you will find a wide variety of
plants in wetlands.
N1: Not only do they ensure a healthy environment with all their different species, but
plants also work to filter the water in a wetland, and provide habitat and food for all the
animals that live there.
S2: There are at least 87 different plants in this wetlands which have records of
aboriginal use. The wetlands provided plants that they could use for food, and for fibre,
and also for medicine.
[on-screen text: Water Ribbons (Triglochin procerum)]
This, for example is one of the plants that provided tubers for people to eat. Most of
these were cooked in an earth oven.
[on-screen text: Pigface (Disphyma crassifolium)]
Pigface always grows around the edges of swamps. People used the leaves of pigface
because they’re salty, to eat with meat. Also when the flowers dry up, you get nice sweet
fruits.
[on-screen text: Basket sedge (Carex tereticaulis)]
This plant is also found around the Carrum Carrum swamp. It would certainly have been
used by the local women for baskets. But if you try to break it, you will find that it is
extremely strong.
[on-screen text: Old Man Weed (Centipeda cunninghamii)]
1
Plants have always been used for medicines, and this particular one they call ‘Old Man
Weed’. All Victorian aborigines remember this as an important medicine plant. They say
they use it for everything.
[on-screen text: Old Man Weed (Centipeda cunninghamii) – fever, wounds, headache,
colds]
N1: Wow! Who’d of thought you could actually live off some of the plants in this
wetland? Have a look around and see if you can see any of the ones Beth talked about.
[Melbourne Water logo; `Tagline – ‘Helping keep our wetlands full of healthy plants’]
2
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