why we suffer destructive bushfires?

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    WHY DOES AUSTRALIA SUFFER BUSHFIRES?

    Bushfires are a natural phenomenon in Australia, due to its
    hot, dry environment. Aborigines also traditionally burned the
    country for many reasons: hunting, communication, horticulture,
    ease of travel and for ceremonies. This constant burning
    controlled the build up of fuel and reduced large, intense fires.
    A mosaic of growth in different stages and types of vegetation
    development, which provided a range of food sources and habitats
    both for Aborigines and the animals they hunted. European
    settlement has seen an end to Aboriginal burning and resulted in
    a build up in fuel for fires across Australia.

    WHY DID THE BUSHFIRE INFERNO START?

    Australia's deadliest bushfire resulted from a combination of
    extreme weather conditions. Souheast Australia baked under a
    record heatwave, with temperatures over 40 degrees Celsius, for a
    week due to a stationary high pressure weather system. A decade
    long drought and hot, dry interior outback winds last week
    created a tinderbox. A series of small fires joined up into one
    big fire but strong southerly winds on Saturday night whipped it
    into an inferno, destroying towns and killing people.

    COULD THE FIRE HAVE BEEN PREVENTED?

    No. The Victorian fires started in remote nationaL parks and
    spread towards rural towns.

    HOW DO BUSHFIRES START?

    Lightning strike over dry land is the most common reason for
    bushfires, followed by human intervention such as fires which get
    out of control, cigarette butts thrown from cars and arson.
    Australia's bushfire danger period is from October to March,
    covering the end of spring, all of summer and the start of
    autumn, when temperatures are highest and humidity lowest.

    ARE BUSHFIRES NECESSARY?

    Bushfires are natures way of renewing bushland growth. Some
    plants require fire to spread their seeds. Australia's banksia
    plant requires heat and smoke to release seeds. Without bushfires
    these plants could not reproduce. Fire also generates new growth
    by eucalypts.

    WHAT IMPACT ON THE ECONOMY?

    The impact on the A$1 trillion national economy is minimal.
    The bushfires destroyed small rural towns, 80 km (50 miles) north
    of Melbourne, centres for small farms. There is no major industry
    in the region, but some top vineyards have been damaged.

    WHAT IS THE GOVERNMENT DOING?

    Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has announced a A$10 million aid
    package to fire victims. It has also placed the army on standby
    to help provide emergency shelter for those left homeless.

    Reuters.
 
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