Volunteers race to save wild animals hurt in bush fires

Ms Tracy Burgess, a volunteer at the Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service, holding a brushtail possum that was severely burned by bush fires and rescued from the rural town of Clarence in the Blue Mountains region, west of Sydney.
Ms Tracy Burgess, a volunteer at the Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service, holding a brushtail possum that was severely burned by bush fires and rescued from the rural town of Clarence in the Blue Mountains region, west of Sydney. PHOTO: REUTERS

BLUE MOUNTAINS (Australia) • A possum severely burned by bush fires in Australia's Blue Mountains laps water from a bowl as her rescuer holds her gently in a towel, while at a nearby home, a kangaroo with bandaged feet is rocked like a baby by another carer.

As Australia battles wildfires that have razed more than four million ha across five states, volunteers are trying to save wild animals caught in the inferno.

Australia's bushland is home to a range of indigenous fauna, including kangaroos, koalas, wallabies, possums, wombats and echidnas.

Officials fear that 30 per cent of just one koala colony on the country's north-east coast, or between 4,500 and 8,400 of them, have been lost in the recent fires.

The authorities have no exact figure on how many native animals in total have been killed, but experts say it is likely to be in the millions.

Ms Tracy Burgess, a volunteer at Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service (Wires), said it was very worrying that rescuers were not receiving as many animal patients as they would expect.

"We're not getting that many animals coming into care," Ms Burgess told Reuters as she held the injured brushtail possum.

"So our concern is that they don't come into care because they're not there any more, basically."

With limited government funds, Wires relies heavily on donations from the public and the goodwill of volunteers like Ms Burgess who care for the animals in their own homes. The possum being looked after by Ms Burgess was found in the rural town of Clarence in the World Heritage-listed Blue Mountains region, around 100km west of Sydney.

Another Wires rescuer Tracy Dodd is caring for the badly scalded kangaroo that was found in the same town, where several houses were destroyed by blazes.

"He was just sitting under a bush and his mum was not too far away, but he was obviously not well enough to hop around.

"He's had lots of fluids and now he's off to the vet."

Wires and other groups usually discourage people from feeding wild animals but wildfires have prompted them to change that advice to encourage people to provide much-needed food and water.

Photos and videos posted on social media in recent weeks have shown dehydrated animals crawling to residential pools and bird baths.

Ms Burgess is hoping she is in time to save her possum patient, especially since she discovered the small marsupial is carrying a passenger.

"Once we got the pouch open, a tiny little hand came out with claws on it, so, yeah, there's a pinkie - a very little baby unfurred possum," Ms Burgess said. "So she's a ferocious mother who has clearly done her best for her bub."

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 31, 2019, with the headline Volunteers race to save wild animals hurt in bush fires. Subscribe