Bushfires are just that bushfires.
Deadly if not controlled or directed, Preventable if managed.
Though managing the Bush through controlled burning leads to problems of a different kind it does reduce the spread and scale of the fire.
If your looking for more in depth explanation look at CALM Western Australia (Conservation And Land Management)
Australian wildfires, known as bushfires, can occur in the dense bushland of the national parks around Sydney and the Blue Mountains. This is a common area for bushfires. There have been many times when smoke haze from surrounding bushfires has descended on Sydney, remaining for several weeks.
Australia does not have wildfires; it has bushfires.Victoria is most commonly the scene of major bushfires, but bushfires occurred in all the mainland states in the summer of 2009-2010.
Australia has had too many bushfires for all of them to be recorded. Bushfires are a common summer hazard, and the media tends to only report the larger fires that threaten homes and lives. According to the Australian Government's website, and backed by data from the Australian Institute of Criminology, there are roughly 52,000 bushfires every year. Actual figures may vary from 46,000 to 62,000 per year. Most of them are small and easily controlled, but the few that get out of hand, like the Black Saturday bushfires of 2009, can be utterly devastating.
Whilst this is a question that many people are probably asking right now, with the bushfires having continued since 7 February, it is certain that the bushfires will end eventually. The return of hot, dry, gusty weather has caused the fires to continue, fed by the tinder-dry countryside, but these conditions must end sometime.
In Australia, forest fires are called bushfires. According to the Australian Government's website, and backed by data from the Australian Institute of Criminology, there are roughly 52,000 bushfires every year. Actual figures may vary from 46,000 to 62,000 per year.
Australian wildfires, known as bushfires, can occur in the dense bushland of the national parks around Sydney and the Blue Mountains. This is a common area for bushfires. There have been many times when smoke haze from surrounding bushfires has descended on Sydney, remaining for several weeks.
Fire can be a devastating fact of life within the Australian bush lands, especially after periods of severe drought.
a spray that makes vegetation
-1622 The Batavia Shipwreck. -1851 Black Thursday Bushfires -1899 -1903 The Boer War -1939 The Black Friday Bushfires These are the most important events in Australian history beginning with the letter B.
According to the Australian Government's website, and backed by data from the Australian Institute of Criminology, there are roughly 52,000 bushfires every year. Actual figures may vary from 46,000 to 62,000 per year.
Australia does not have wildfires; it has bushfires.Victoria is most commonly the scene of major bushfires, but bushfires occurred in all the mainland states in the summer of 2009-2010.
they make the land unsuitable for growth of plants and theres a more likely chance of bushfires
Australia has had too many bushfires for all of them to be recorded. Bushfires are a common summer hazard, and the media tends to only report the larger fires that threaten homes and lives. According to the Australian Government's website, and backed by data from the Australian Institute of Criminology, there are roughly 52,000 bushfires every year. Actual figures may vary from 46,000 to 62,000 per year. Most of them are small and easily controlled, but the few that get out of hand, like the Black Saturday bushfires of 2009, can be utterly devastating.
It depends on what, exactly, is meant by the question. No animal that is caught in a bushfire can survive it. However, there are some Australian animals that can burrow sufficiently deep enough to stay safe. The short-beaked echidna, for example, can burrow up to a metre deep and survive in areas of low oxygen until a bushfire has passed. bilbies and burrowing bettongs have been known to survive bushfires as well. Platypuses dig burrows deep in riverbanks where they will shelter during bushfires: they do not stay in the water.
The Australian state of Victoria, in the south-east of the country, was worst affected by the recent bushfires.
they made orginizations to raise money to rebuild the houses and buildings the fires distroyed
Australia is a very dry continent with lower rainfall than other continents. It is drought-prone, with long, hot, dry summers in the southern states. Vegetation, as a result, becomes very dry, easily ignited and tinder for fires. The intensity of bushfires is increased by this dry vegetation, which is why bushfires often occur after a period of heatwave. There are usually strong, gusting winds, which come from the south or west, and these fan the bushfires.