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Australian fires kill thousands of native animals
#1
By Alex Koutts Mon Dec 18, 2:51 AM ET

Hundreds of thousands of native Australian animals such as koalas and kangaroos have been killed in bushfires that have burned across southeast Australia in the past two weeks, wildlife officials said on Monday.

The bushfires, which are still burning in three eastern states, have been so big and intense that wildlife officials fear some species may become extinct as the fires destroy large swathes of animal habitats.

"The fires are so devastating and moving so quickly that animals just don't have a chance to get out of the way," said Pat O'Brien, president of the Wildlife Protection Association.

"Because of the heat and the fireballs that are happening the animals are just bursting into flames and just being killed even before the fire gets to them because its so hot," O'Brien told Reuters on Monday.

Koalas and possums, which instinctively climb to the treetops for safety, would have had no chance of escaping the blazes, and kangaroos and bush birds would have been unable to outrun the fast-burning fires, he said.

This meant a very real threat of seeing species unique to the burnt-out areas, such as frogs and birds, becoming extinct, O'Brien said.

"These fires will directly contribute to the extinction of a number of species and we won't know the full effects for another 10 years," he said.

"It takes 100 years for some animals to move back in an area, if there's any available to move back in. In the case of gliders, which are rare and endangered anyway, they may never come back ... they'll just go into extinction."

Fires in Victoria, Tasmania and New South Wales states have burned more than 847,000 hectares (2 million acres). The worst fires are in Victoria where more than 4,000 firefighters are battling four large blazes which have blackened 750,000 hectares.

Police say more than 30 homes have so far been razed.

Firefighters said on Monday cooler conditions had eased the bushfire threat in the three eastern states but fires were still burning out of control. In Western Australia, a fire which has already destroyed 12,000 hectares is blazing unchecked.

EXPLODE INTO FLAMES

Wildlife officials said a major factor in the high animal death toll was the predominance of eucalyptus trees in burning bushland. The oil in the trees explodes into flames.

"As soon as they get hot the eucalypt oil catches on fire and then it just goes like a steam train," said Hugh Wirth, president of Victoria's Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA).

"If you've got a crown fire, in other words the fire is going through the treetops ... those fires move extremely rapidly and the animals just can't outrun them, not even kangaroos."

Wirth said he believed close to 100 percent of the animals in the path of the Victorian blazes had been destroyed, with wildlife rescuers reporting no survivors.

"Surviving wildlife usually comes out of hiding within three to four days of a fire going through the area and unfortunately we're not getting any reports of any survivors so far," he said.

Wildlife officials fear the animal death toll will rise even further as those animals which survive the fires may now starve to death in the charred landscape.
"Even if they do survive the fires there's starvation issues beyond that. It's just another nail in the coffin of the species which may have survived otherwise," said O'Brien.
Australia faces extreme fire danger this summer due to a drought. Bushfires are a regular feature of the summer and, over the past 40 years, they have killed more than 250 people. Scientists fear climate change will bring more frequent higher temperatures and less rainfall.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061218/wl_n...shfires_dc
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#2
Richard,

I live about 200km away from these fires and for the past two weeks, the atmosphere is filled with a smoky haze, it could only be compared to the worst polluted city in the world, the sun is orange from the fires and yes the animals are the ones who will suffer. These animals will not become extinct, there are too many of them around Australia, but it is surely equivalent to a mass cull.

What the people around the world do not realize, it is those who claim to fight for the animals that has ultimately put them in a position to die in the cruelest of ways. The greenies and their idiotic ways to ‘save the planet’, so they claim, they go in groups to the government to stop any logging, stop this and that! I agree not to rape the forest but when you have a climate that has little rain fall and incredibly hot summers you are left with thousands of acres of forest that has no vehicle access.
Our trees are very hardy and constantly shed leaves and branches, these accumulate on the forest floor and with no rain to compost these, there is just a mass kindling build up, so it only takes a cigarette butt on a hot day. The eucalyptus and gum trees let off toxins when they burn whilst alive, so what is that doing to the atmosphere?  Because the bush has no vehicle access, how can the firefighters get in to put them out?

The past two years the government has introduced strict laws of going out to the bush to collect fire wood - most of us have wood heating. We used to go out and cut up the big dead branches on the ground, no one is cutting down trees as you can not burn green wood. So my question – is this protesting from the greenies really for the animals and to save the trees, or is it another illusion set up by the government to create fear, despair and allow situations to occur where you have no control?



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#3
Karen, I didn’t know it was so bad out there. I can imagine what it is like trying to breath with that kind of air. You make a good point how the greenies are actually hurting the environment in some cases.
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#4
Hi Richard,

In my experience, it is always those who you are led to believe are the good guys are actually the bad guys. But check out this site for pictures, click view side show and then after that click on homes burnt. These are photos from the fires burning at the moment.

 

http://www.theage.com.au/photogallery/20...tml?page=3

 
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#5
I checked out the photos and I was amazed how bad things are out there. I’m thankful it is never like that around here. Are people having to wear breathing masks out there? I can imagine home air purifiers are selling like crazy out there.
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#6
I am sure those who are closer are wearing masks, there are many reports of people having respiratory problems and have to stay indoors. if we could just get some rain it would clear everything and also put out most of the fires. Wishful thinking!
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#7
It could be more than wishful thinking if a bunch of people out there used the power of thought to make it rain like in The Secret. Everyone will have to believe there’s tons of rain coming out there soon. icon_megagrin
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#8
There was a bushfire here last week which burnt 1 house to the ground and damaged 2 others. It was caused by an idiot burning off rubbish in his backyard (it's Total Fire Ban time) which got away from him. Police say he will charged. Lots of bush burnt out and the firefighters did an amazing job to finally put it out.
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#9
Hi reader,
Yes it is amazing that so many people deliberately do this type of thing but the one that baffles me is that many fires are lit by firefighters, you know that ‘method by madness philosophy’, so they can go in and be the hero but it usually gets so out of hand that it destroys more than they expected.
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