English

There are two kinds of wild rice. The first is manoomin, foraged in lakes mainly by the Anishinaabeg in the Great Lakes region of the northern Midwest. The second is wild rice domesticated by public university researchers in the 1950s and is raised in paddies by commercial growers. Yet neither is st...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stack Whitney, Kaitlin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Environment & Society Portal, Rachel Carson Center 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arcadia.ub.uni-muenchen.de/arcadia/article/view/73
Description
Summary:There are two kinds of wild rice. The first is manoomin, foraged in lakes mainly by the Anishinaabeg in the Great Lakes region of the northern Midwest. The second is wild rice domesticated by public university researchers in the 1950s and is raised in paddies by commercial growers. Yet neither is still truly wild: traditional harvesters must actively seed and restore lakes with rice beds yearly in order to sustain it as a culinary and cultural staple, while cultivated wild rice is undergoing genomic sequencing and transformation. Both now face the threat of pests, disease, and climate change, leaving the future of wild rice uncertain.