they make alot of damage sometimes they kill people
50
nothing happen that much in this year
Forest fires can cause significant damage to homes and pose risks to human health and safety, particularly if they spread to residential areas. The intensity and speed of a fire can make it challenging to control, leading to potential destruction of homes and infrastructure. In addition, the smoke and ash generated by wildfires can have adverse effects on human health, especially for those with respiratory conditions.
A forest fire will ALWAYS stop. Furthermore forest fires, usually caused by lightning, are a natural part of the wilderness. In fact several plant species benefit from fires as part of their life cycle. Nothing. Forest Fires are a natural occurence. The scary question is what will happen if hippies keep trying to prevent forest fires! Massive loss of life, massive loss of property, environmental damage, etc; have all happened, and will happen on a much larger scale of controlled burns are not practiced in forested and inhabited areas.
They don't affect forests much at all if they are made safely and responsibly and according to local rules and laws. When set fires get out of hand, they can cause the destruction of large areas of forest.
Pollution is caused by many things such as factories, burning fuels, and even as much as forest fires.
The quicker the fire can be stopped, the less CO2 will be released. However, stopping forest fires permits greater undergrowth fuel for much more devastating fires later on. Forests and fires have coexisted for several hundred million years. Trees have evolved coping mechanisms for intermittent fires. Disrupting this natural activity is not necessarily always good. We must adjust our practices to the notion that some measure of forest fire is acceptable, perhaps even useful, from time to time.
It only killed one person but extensive residential damage was caused, that is no where near as much as the cost for the annual fires though.
Controlled forest fires aka "controlled burns" are man made fires that are lit when a forest or area becomes overrun with either too much dead debris or begins to grow out of control of man, and possibly impedes whatever humans have going on in the area, or to make the fire happen on human terms where we can deal with it, and not endanger anyone EX. a controlled burn out in the Midwest or southeast to clear brush/debris allowing a new generation of pine trees to grow in place of all the old and dying ones.
Yes, forest fires can be deadly. People can be killed directly by the flames, smoke inhalation, or heat. In addition, fires can indirectly lead to fatalities through evacuation procedures, accidents, or health issues exacerbated by poor air quality.
Much of the park is made up of coniferous forest, such as lodgepole pine (especially after the 1988 fires), but other habitat types are also represented including grasslands, riparian zones, and deciduous forest.
After a small fire on a stove or by a heater, smoke damage restoration may be required. Small fires are not as bad so not much has to be restored.