By Reality Check team
BBC News, 1/4/20
There is a widely-reported
estimate that almost half a billion (480 million) animals have been killed by
the bush fires in Australia.
It's a figure that came from Prof
Chris Dickman, an expert on Australian biodiversity at the University of
Sydney.
He released
a statement explaining how he had reached the figure - a
statement which refers to the number of animals affected rather than those
necessarily dying as a direct result of the fire (although the title of the release
talks about 480 million being killed).
The numbers are based on a report
he co-wrote in 2007 for the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) on the
impact of land-clearing on Australian wildlife in New South Wales.
It estimated that there were an
average of 17.5 mammals, 20.7 birds and 129.5 reptiles per hectare (10,000
square metres, so a square 100m on each side - about the size of a rugby
pitch).
They've then multiplied that by
the amount of land hit by the fires.
"We've estimated that in the
three million hectares of New South Wales alone that were burned up until about
10 days ago probably as many as 480 million mammals, birds and reptiles would
have been affected by the fires," Prof Dickman said.
"Certainly, large animals,
like kangaroos or emus - many birds, of course - will be able to move away from
the fire as it approaches," he told BBC Breakfast.
"I guess it's the less
mobile species and the smaller ones that depend on the forest itself that are
really in the firing line."
But he added that many of those
that survived the actual fire would die later because of lack of food or
shelter.
Colin Beale, an ecologist from
University of York told Reality Check that may have been overstated.
He said: "In the areas of
Africa where I work I am quite sure that very few birds die as a direct result
of fire. They certainly have the ability to fly away from fires, and this is
surely the case in Australia, too."
There are a few caveats with
these figures. First of all, the estimate is for damage only in New South
Wales, and the fires have spread to Victoria.
Also, the three million hectares
figure is somewhat out of date - the fires have spread since then. So it is
likely that more animals have been affected than the estimate suggests.
But it is important to remember
that this is just an estimate - its authors say the numbers are deliberately
conservative. The figure for the number of reptiles is particularly uncertain,
and reptiles make up three-quarters of the animals affected in these
calculations.
"Density estimates are not
available for many species, so they have had to be estimated from known
densities of other species," Tom Oliver, professor of applied ecology at
University of Reading, told Reality Check.
"For reptiles, there are no
density estimates of individual species at all, just an estimate from a single
study (Ehmann and Cogger 1985), which estimates 10 individuals per species per
hectare."
Colin Beale added: "Although
it is hard to find estimates of how well reptiles survive fires, in similar
areas of Australia the majority of these reptiles live in the soil.”
"Soil is a very good thermal
insulator and burrowing reptiles can certainly show very low mortality even
during intense fires."
"It seems extremely unlikely
that the majority of the animals affected by fire are actually killed, though
we may still ask whether they will survive longer-term.”
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