The Borneo Post

Firefighte­rs race to protect giant sequoias in California fires

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LOS ANGELES: Hundreds of firefighte­rs were battling to protect several groves of giant sequoias in the United States on Monday, warning the enormous ancient trees were at risk from out-of-control blazes.

A number of separate fires were converging on the California woodland that is home to the huge trees, highlighti­ng the terrifying power of wildfires to consume everything in their path.

Incident commanders said the Windy Fire, which has already charred 25,000 acres (10,000 hectares) has burned into the remote Peyrone Sequoia Grove and the Red Hill Grove.

“We don’t know that those are destroyed,” Windy fire incident spokeswoma­n Amanda Munsey said, according to the Los Angeles Times. “But the fire has completely surrounded those two groves.”

In nearby Long Meadow Grove, the blaze had spread to the vulnerable top of at least one of the trees.

“It was running toward multiple trees and (firefighte­rs) were able to get it out, but it did get into the crown of one of the sequoias.”

Wildfires that spread to the tops of trees – especially very tall trees – can move quickly through the forest, as the tops of the trees explode, showering embers over a large area below them.

Further north, the KNP Complex fire continued to threaten the renowned Giant Forest, home to General Sherman, the world’s biggest tree by volume, and standing at 275 feet (83 meters).

General Sherman, which is estimated by the National Parks Service to be 2,200 years old, was wrapped in fireproof foil blankets last week.

Incident commanders said they believed they could protect the tree from the 24,000-acre blaze, which was sparked by lightning just over a week ago

They point to meticulous forest management over the last few decades, including prescribed burns that deplete available fuels, and slow the progress of fires.

California and other parts of the western United States are laboring under a years-long drought that has left swathes of the region’s magnificen­t forests tinder dry.

Scientists say human activity, including the unchecked burning of fossil fuels, is warming the planet and changing weather patterns, making wildfires hotter, more intense and more destructiv­e.

The giant sequoias are the world’s largest trees by volume.

Their relatives, the California redwoods, can grow taller – well over 100 meters – but are not as wide.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Firefighte­rs dig a fireline around a Giant Sequoia as the Windy fire burns along the Trail of 100 Giants in the Sequoia National Forest, near Ponderosa, California.
— AFP photo Firefighte­rs dig a fireline around a Giant Sequoia as the Windy fire burns along the Trail of 100 Giants in the Sequoia National Forest, near Ponderosa, California.

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