Write an article on 'The issues of forest fire and how to combat it 'to not only save the lives
of people but also the innocent animals.
Answers
Answer:
we didnot have to camp fire in forest because it take a big risk of fire in the forest and also cause pollution
Each year wildfires destroy 6 to 14 million hectares of fire-sensitive forests worldwide, a rate of loss and degradation comparable to that of destructive logging and agricultural conversion. At the same time, many fire-adapted forest ecosystems are fire-starved. Humans, including government departments charged with the management of forest resources, are altering natural fire regimes around the world without regard to long-term consequences. Decision-makers and the public are better at reacting to short-term recurring crises than focusing resources on long-term and sustainable solutions.
Integrated approaches to fire management place greater emphasis on addressing underlying causes and seek long-term, sustainable solutions
The immediate impacts of fires can be devastating to human communities and forest ecosystems. In the longer term, they can adversely affect the supply of environmental services necessary for the well-being of local communities, threaten the survival of endangered species, simplify the structure and composition of biologically important forest, and provide conditions suitable for entry of invasive species.
However it is also important to understand that the role of fire varies among different types of forest. For example, in tropical dry forest, boreal forests and some types of conifer forests, a certain amount of fire is an essential factor in the maintenance of forest structure, function and plant and animal composition. Conversely, in tropical moist forest, fire is usually always detrimental
Fire regimes can and do change over time, through natural causes and from human intervention. In many forest areas fire regimes have been altered substantially by hundreds, and in some cases thousands, of years of human use. For example, aboriginal fire regimes in Australia over thousands of years have had a major influence on the "natural" extent and distribution of eucalyptus forests, dry woodlands and rainforests. Thus understanding a fire regime for any given forest is essential to the development of sound forest and fire management strategies.