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The Impressive Regeneration After The Australian Bushfires
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<blockquote data-quote="Justcoz70" data-source="post: 111717" data-attributes="member: 16563"><p>The Australian Bush is made to do this. A lot of plant and tree species need the fires to reproduce. Sadly the wild life is the thing that suffers the most when these fires are fuelled by extensive overgrowth from mismanagement of forestry by people that think they know best.</p><p>Even the Aboriginals used to use fire to manage the Bush during the colder months, reducing the amount of available dry fuel.</p><p>The weather conditions with top high temperatures, hot dry winds coming off the land in the interior and an abundance of dry low lying fuel in a lot of residential areas sadly make for some pretty furious wild fires.</p><p>A lot of Animal life was lost, but hopefully there were enough saved that can be reintroduced to their native habitats so they can start to repopulate the Australian Bush.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Justcoz70, post: 111717, member: 16563"] The Australian Bush is made to do this. A lot of plant and tree species need the fires to reproduce. Sadly the wild life is the thing that suffers the most when these fires are fuelled by extensive overgrowth from mismanagement of forestry by people that think they know best. Even the Aboriginals used to use fire to manage the Bush during the colder months, reducing the amount of available dry fuel. The weather conditions with top high temperatures, hot dry winds coming off the land in the interior and an abundance of dry low lying fuel in a lot of residential areas sadly make for some pretty furious wild fires. A lot of Animal life was lost, but hopefully there were enough saved that can be reintroduced to their native habitats so they can start to repopulate the Australian Bush. [/QUOTE]
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The Impressive Regeneration After The Australian Bushfires