Binna Burra Lodge's Steve Noakes |
False alarm: the great rainforest fire that wasn't.
A frightening image.
Pristine rainforest that has not burned for millions of years is
ablaze as bushfires of unprecedented intensity roar through the
hinterland of south-east Queensland. It's difficult to imagine a more
graphic illustration of the consequences of climate change. That is
what was widely portrayed during the region's fire emergency earlier
this month. The only problem is, it didn't happen.
The destruction of
ancient World Heritage-listed Gondwana subtropical and temperate
rainforests by fire was reported unequivocally as fact. Guardian
Australia proclaimed in a headline: “Like nothing we've seen:
Queensland bushfires tear through rainforest.” The landscape of
Lamington National Park surrounding the historic Binna Burra Lodge,
which was destroyed in the fires, was “blackened remnants of what
used to be lush rainforest”, reported the Australian Associated
Press in a story carried by multiple news outlets.
Satellite imagery showing dry rainforest areas burning on the edge of Lamington National Park |
But the Gondwana rainforests, those priceless relics of times long gone, did not burn. No news coverage showed rainforest burning. The 20,600ha Lamington National Park in Queensland and the adjoining 31,700ha Border Ranges National Park in NSW encompass the largest expanse of subtropical rainforest in the world. As on countless occasions over the centuries, fire raging in surrounding eucalypt woodland did not destroy the rainforest.
To be sure, bushfires of such intensity in the region are unusual, especially in early spring; 16 homes were lost in southern Queensland. Unlike south-east Australia with its hot and dry summers, the subtropics are usually afforded a degree of protection by high humidity, an absence of prolonged periods of scorching temperatures, and generous rainfall which - as in much of the country - has been in short supply lately.
Binna Burra Lodge is not encircled by rainforest, as was claimed repeatedly. The lodge is surrounded on three sides by eucalypt woodland; it came close to being lost when a control burn 20 years ago got away. On this occasion, explains Binna Burra chairman Steven Noakes: “The fire went tearing up a steep slope through eucalypt woodland and we're perched on a ridge at the top. With those winds there was nothing we could do.” A camping ground and tea-house that adjoin rainforest survived the inferno; flames did not extend beyond the lodge into rainforest.
A few kilometres across Lamington National Park from Binna Burra, O'Reilly's Rainforest Retreat was evacuated during the fire emergency. Unlike Binna Burra, O'Reilly's is surrounded entirely by rainforest. O'Reilly's manager, Shane O'Reilly, says there was no need for evacuation; the nearest fires were 15km away: “The rainforest here doesn't burn. It was pretty much eucalypt country that burned... There's a lot of emotion surrounding this. A story is being propagated that it's more of an issue about rainforest than it is.” O'Reilly adds that an international scientific symposium at the lodge in 2011 heard the rainforest had not burned for at least three million years.
Patrick Norman, a Griffith University PhD student and former Lamington park ranger, has analysed satellite data from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite over burnt forest. The images indicate about 400ha of rainforest burned, but this was primarily dry rainforest at lower altitudes known as vine scrub. Burned areas also included wet scleropyll, a forest type comprised of tall eucalypts with some rainforest plants.
Says Norman: “Drawing a line between rainforest and wet sclerophyll is a tricky task. By and large, the rainforest that burned was on the drier end of the spectrum. I am quite confident no warm or cool temperate rainforest was burned.” The affected dry rainforest mostly burned lightly, with the ground layer impacted. Norman cautions that if the forests burn again in the foreseeable future there could be more serious impacts.
Burnt dry rainforest, Lamington National Park- Pic Patrick Norman |
Healing
says similar conditions were experienced before, for instance in the
early-1990s: “I'm not going to get into a climate change
conversation but climate varies between floods and drought in this
country and historical records show that.”
Claims about
Australian rainforest burning for the first time also circulated late
last year when 121,000ha of land around Eungella National Park near
Mackay were scorched. At the time, the ABC published a photograph of
a fire-stricken area; the caption said it had been a “rich green
subtropical rainforest”. Although it was pointed out that the area
had in fact been grassland and shrubs, the captioned photograph
remains on ABC websites.
The wrongly captioned photograph at Eungella |
The ABC reported
that Eungella rainforests were reduced to cinders and would take
hundreds of years to recover.
Rural Fire
Service manager for the Mackay region, Andrew Houley, a former
forester, says rainforest that burned around Eungella was largely
regrowth on cleared land. Recent images show tree ferns and some
other rainforest plants regrowing.
However, the heat was so intense
that about 10-15m of the edge of pristine rainforest in places was
destroyed before the fires stopped. Houley adds: “Headlines say the
fires are once in a lifetime but these weather patterns affect us
every 25 years or so.”
Tree ferns regenerating at Eungella - Pic Rosanne Houley |
A crisis facing
rainforest is underway not in Australia but in south-east Asia, the
Amazon Basin and central Africa. Huge tracts of forest are being
intensively logged or bulldozed for livestock or crops. Extensively
damaged rainforest remnants and felled trees are then burned. In some
countries, such as Indonesia, sound environmental laws are in place
but are largely unenforced or ignored. In others, like Brazil,
governments are unapologetically pursuing polices to develop
rainforest. Australia is fortunate that its World Heritage
rainforests are standing tall.
Rainforest under attack in Africa's Congo Basin |
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