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Old 02-11-2009, 04:01 PM
Lara Lara is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 10,984
15 yr Member
Lara Lara is offline
Legendary
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 10,984
15 yr Member
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She's in hospital... "Sam" that is. See quote below which is from the first article url I posted below. Her feet were burned.

Quote:
Sam is being treated at the Mountain Ash Wildlife Shelter in Rawson, 100 miles (170 kilometers) east of Melbourne, where she has attracted the attention of a male koala, nicknamed "Bob," manager Coleen Wood said. The two have been inseparable, with Bob keeping a protective watch over his new friend, she said.
They can be docile. They also have very sharp claws and can rip the flesh to shreds. LOL Looks can be deceiving. Same with kangaroo.

Sadly there would be very few still alive in those areas, mrsD. The ferocity of the fire was hot enough to melt cars. I've seen footage of molten metal streams in the parched earth.

Usually koalas don't need water as they get their water out of the copious amounts of leaves that they eat.

There are agencies in Victoria looking for and caring for the injured wildlife.

I was reading about a zoo somewhere in that region that had only endangered species in it. They were transported to a zoo in Melbourne early when it looked as if there was going to be a disaster.

A lot of the areas are roadblocked. Too dangerous and for health reasons, the residents aren't allowed to go back there just yet. The forensic teams are having to sift through the area first. PLUS the fires are still raging.

WARNING: Some of this article is very unpleasant reading...


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By KRISTEN GELINEAU – 1 hour ago


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edited to add:
btw, many species of eucalypt regenerate very quickly after fire. Some native species actually need fire to open seed pods.



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good article!

Quote:
Fire has been present on the Australian continent for millions of years. Many of our plants and animals have evolved to survive fire events and subsequently most Australian ecosystems have developed very specialised relationships with fire.
Quote:
The long-term effect of fire on a landscape varies according to sequences of fire events, rather than to a single fire event. Sequences of fire events are known as 'fire regimes'. Fire regimes are determined by three factors: intensity (how severe fires are), frequency (how often fires occur) and season (the time of the year fires occur).

Last edited by Lara; 02-11-2009 at 04:27 PM.
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