I've seen countless articles mention that 500,000,000 animals have died. I was skeptical as to how you could even devise such a number reliably so I looked into the source of this statistic. First off, this number was devised by a single Uni professor. How? He multiplied the square-mile density of each species by the amount of territory that's burned. Secondly, and he notes this in his estimate, it's 500,000,000 "killed _or affected_", not just killed. Third, for almost all species, there are no density figures, so he just picked the number 10 (lol, yes, seriously). Fourth, roughly 30% of those estimated animals are birds, of which other experts say 99% would survive because, ya know, they can fly away. Of the other 70%, many others would have just walked or slithered or run and gotten away from the fire.
Basically some guy just made up a number of animals that exist and everyone else just assumed that 100% of them were killed. Terrible "science."
Many bigger news sites have braced themselves for pushback on this stat by adding "and plants" ("500,000,000 animals and plants") so that their use of the statistic can't be criticized later.
> Fourth, roughly 30% of those estimated animals are birds, of which other experts say 99% would survive because, ya know, they can fly away. Of the other 70%, many others would have just walked or slithered or run and gotten away from the fire.
The fires we're talking about here aren't ones you can easily get away from if you're caught by them.
If they're near a firebreak of some kind (large river, cliff, etc) the animals may be able to escape, but otherwise these are very fast moving and very hot fires.
It's reasonable to think that for animals caught up in the fires, at least for ground dwelling animals, more were severely impacted than were not.
I'm not sure about birds. Where did you see the 99% number?
The fires can get hot enough to kill you from 100m away, cause firestorms, and are massive. A lot of birds would have needed to fly a very long way to be safe, and I've no reason to think that they either could or did.
The intellectually honest thing to do here would be to either try to find some precedent study of wildfire mortality for wildlife to get a coarse estimate on what happens, or to admit that you don't know. Instead, we have an "affected" number that is technically not presented as "killed", but we-kinda-sorta-hope-you-interpret-it-as-such.
I'm personally frustrated that no one has been able to dredge up an actual study on wildfire mortality patterns.
Small mammal populations in a eucalypt forest affected by fire and drought [2009][1] tracks 5 species in a particular area from 1970 until 2005.
Only the abstract is available (unfortunately), but by my reading of that it shows that a 1973 bushfire wiped out all 5 species in the area ("Following the 1972 fire, numbers fell to the lowest level recorded during the study and each population subsequently disappeared from the plot between the 1973 and 1974 winter censuses").
In further reading (I read a lot of abstracts trying to find one that had numbers!) it appears this pattern of some surviving the immediate fire but 18 months later having disappeared dur to predators and lack of habitat is fairly common.
Thank you, this is _exactly_ the kind of analysis I'm interested in! (but unfortunately, far too nuanced to be comprehended or covered by media with any sort of reach).
> it appears this pattern of some surviving the immediate fire but 18 months later having disappeared dur to predators and lack of habitat is fairly common.
I don't think your reading of this is quite correct (or perhaps the implication that I'm incorrectly reading into it). The species didn't quite "disappear", as all of the ones claimed to have done so after the 1972 fire were able to be tracked during the 1980 fire:
> Following the 1972 fire, numbers fell to the lowest level recorded during the study and each population subsequently disappeared from the plot between the 1973 and 1974 winter censuses. The less intense 1980 fire did not lead to extirpation, but numbers of A. agilis, A. swainsonii and R. fuscipes declined as drought conditions persisted through 1983.
This suggests to me that they were repopulated according to the carrying capacity of the habitat (which itself recovered), either from areas outside of the study area or from the small populations that remained (the abstract is careful to repeatedly say "disappeared from the plot", a qualifier that you dropped despite it being significant, as sampling has error).
These dynamics are what need to be studied, or at least extrapolated from. The study you shared is based on an 0.02 square mile study area (ಠ_ಠ), of a single ecosystem type; It's possible that the vast scale of the current wildfires mean that recovery from external populations is much less likely, but the claim under discussion here is very far off either way. (For more information about these dynamics, the "Population refuges and immigration" section of this paper is interesting).
At any rate, the centrally-trumpeted claims that these animals have already died based on habitat destruction is plainly false.
I guess I should note that I don't think pushing back against these estimates suggests that this isn't a tragedy, or that it rebuts calls to action against climate change or mitigation or whatever. I just don't think it serves anyone to misrepresent the facts, or in this case, for such a sloppily-calculated, off-the-cuff figure to be spread so widely as gospel. This is exactly the kind of thing that gives anti-science skeptics traction. OTOH, maybe I'm typical-minding too hard here: most people aren't interested in an accurate view of reality in any case, and maybe being dishonest and plying the public with bullshit figures is how things need to be done. Maybe the harm from giving stupid denialists fodder is outweighed by the benefit of inciting stupid non-denialists to care. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I aim to be sceptical when taking on new ideas or information, and all the questions people have are very reasonable.
It's hard to even imagine the size and ferocity of these fires.
The problem is when being sceptical twists into being dismissive. It's actually really easy to do a bit of research and contact professors - but it takes time.
When I first clicked through to the University of Sydney's statement, and clicked on Professor Dickman's profile, I was left reeling by the sheer volume of research the man has done on exactly these problems. In our emails he had an anecdote about jumping over fire fronts while researching them when he was younger.
The scariest part is that the estimates given were for less catastrophic events. They are a low bound based on previous understanding, and this is a far worse event than ever seen before. I highly recommend people reading the linked article, and follow the references therein.
I don't think your reading of this is quite correct (or perhaps the implication that I'm incorrectly reading into it). The species didn't quite "disappear", as all of the ones claimed to have done so after the 1972 fire were able to be tracked during the 1980 fire... This suggests to me that they were repopulated according to the carrying capacity of the habitat (which itself recovered), either from areas outside of the study area or from the small populations that remained
Yes, this is my reading too. I didn't mean to imply that they became extinct, just that they were wiped out from the area by the fire.
At any rate, the centrally-trumpeted claims that these animals have already died based on habitat destruction is plainly false.
I don't understand what this means ("these animals have already died based on habitat destruction is plainly false")?
This study showed that the fires wiped out the animals under survey. If the same pattern is shown here we'd expect the majority of small mammals to be dead in the fire areas.
> I didn't mean to imply that they became extinct, just that they were wiped out from the area by the fire
Right, what I meant was that it's easy to infer from your phrasing (as I did) that the animals were wiped out (even if just locally) in a way whose implications wouldn't include the population being restored (or mostly restored) within a couple years, as was the case for most of the populations studied (a couple of them did permanently dwindle to zero). I don't think this was necessarily implied by your comment, but I thought it'd be better to clarify for our and others readers' benefit.
> I don't understand what this means
Sorry for the poor phrasing. I'm referring to the central claim parrotted by news articles, that half a billion animals _have_ died during the fires, as opposed to the forecast that half a billion will die due to habitat destruction (which I claim in the rest of the comment is itself a suspect estimate).
> This study showed that the fires wiped out the animals under survey.
I don't believe this is accurate. They sampled ~zero animals in the study area, which is easily (and much more likely) explained by the animals spending less time in the burned area until the habitat was restored. The surviviros could easily have been leading fulfilling lives 300 yards away (bearing in mind that the study area was a 700x700 ft square). "no animals don't spend time in recently-burned areas" is a substantially different finding from "burned areas cause total animal death".
This is why the comparison to the wildfires is hairy. The effect depends a lot more on migration dynamics than simple assumptions of total death based on carrying capacity per species. An additional wrinkle for expanding the dynamic in this study to the scope of all animals affected by the wildfire is the fact that it's limited to small mammals: if I'm not mistaken, it's a fairly basic tenet of ecology that a collapse in prey population due in part to predation is accompanied by a boom in predator population, for obvious reasons (followed by oscillations in both populations until equilibrium is reached).
I'm referring to the central claim parrotted by news articles, that half a billion animals _have_ died during the fires
Well that seems to be what the claim actually is[1].
I don't believe this is accurate. They sampled ~zero animals in the study area, which is easily (and much more likely) explained by the animals spending less time in the burned area until the habitat was restored. The survivors could easily have been leading fulfilling lives 300 yards away (bearing in mind that the study area was a 700x700 ft square). "no animals don't spend time in recently-burned areas" is a substantially different finding from "burned areas cause total animal death"
I don't have access to the full report, but this would surprise me. Have you ever seen what a bushfire does?
Large ones have fire fronts tens of kilometers wide and anything in bushland dies. Here[2] is a before and after pic on Kangaroo Island from the fires there that are happening at the moment. Here's a picture of a car after a bushfire went over it[3]. That silver on the ground is the wheels and engine block melted. Bushfires in Australia are nasty because the Eucalyptus oil makes them very hot - the radiant heat can kill 400m away[4].
This fire is worse than normal too, because the fire fronts are so wide. There isn't some place 300 yards away for animals to escape to.
I couldn't find the publication myself (though I now see others have posted it in other threads [0]) so I emailed Professor Dickson to get his input.
In the meantime I looked for some studies, and found two that are interesting and include some background on the subject.
The Responses of Mammals to La Niña (El Niño Southern Oscillation)–Associated Rainfall, Predation, and Wildfire in Central Australia [1]
> The responses of vertebrates to wildfires are complex, reflecting the varying food and shelter requirements of different species, their exposure to predation, and other factors. Vertebrates that shelter above the ground and are not particularly mobile are often killed directly by fire (Chew et al. 1959; Newsome et al. 1975; Silveira et al. 1999; Simons 1991). Conversely, species capable of extensive movements such as large predators and birds frequently escape the flames and may increase in abundance after wildfire when food resources become available (Loyn 1997; Newsome et al. 1975).,Burrowing herbivores and omnivores are likely to survive fires and, depending on predation, may increase in abundance after postfire flushes of vegetation (Newsome et al. 1975). Postwild-fire decreases in the abundance of some species have been attributed to a lack of food resources and increased exposure to predation (Groves and Steenhof 1988; Lawrence 1966; Newsome et al. 1975, 1983).
Immediate and short‐term responses of bird and mammal assemblages to a subalpine wildfire in the Snowy Mountains, Australia [2]
> Over 35 days in January–February 2003, wildfires burnt across much of the subalpine/alpine landscape of south‐eastern Australia, including about 70% of the land above 1500 m in the Snowy Mountains. At the time of the fire, studies of two subalpine faunal assemblages were being undertaken. The opportunity to resurvey the assemblages was taken in order to examine the immediate impact of fire in an environment where it is uncommon but predicted to occur increasingly with global warming. A study area in the Whites River Valley, where the number of bird species was counted monthly from 1996 to 2003, and weekly in late winter–spring from 2000 to 2003, was burnt in one fire. As well as the expected decrease in the number of individual birds, the fire resulted in an immediate decrease in the number of bird species, unlike in previously studied montane forest, with only the regularly wintering species plus the olive whistler and the ground‐feeding flame robin remaining. During the post‐winter avian immigration, few regular spring migrants appeared on burnt sites despite their nearby presence on the unburnt side of the valley. Five of six small mammal trapping grids were burnt. As with fires at lower altitudes, there was an immediate reduction in mammal numbers on burnt grids following the fire, but in addition, one species, Mastacomys fuscus, declined further in the ensuing 2 months both on burnt and unburnt sites. Numbers of Antechinus swainsonii and Rattus fuscipes stabilized until autumn/winter when there was a further decline due to the unavailability of subnivean space to allow winter foraging, allied with a concentration of fox predation on areas still carrying populations of small mammals.
Birds have very sensitive respiratory systems (which is why canaries were traditionally taken into mines to detect toxic gases). Given the prevalence of fires in these Australian bush habitats, it’s not unreasonable to expect birds in those areas to be extremely intolerant of smoke, allowing them to fly away and escape long before the fire gets close enough for them to feel the heat.
That seems plausible, but it doesn't seem to be what's happening.
The author of the 480 million affected animals estimate has co-authored an article which talks about the impact on birds (as well as many other animals).
The relevant quote from the article:
One might think birds and other fast-moving animals can easily escape fires. But smoke and strong winds can badly disorient them, and mass bird deaths in severe bushfires are common.
We saw this[0] in the current fire crisis, when dead birds including rainbow lorikeets and yellow-tailed black-cockatoos washed up on the beach at Mallacoota in Victoria.
The Age article referenced has more graphic detail:
Following the fires that have torn through the region, bird carcasses – perhaps in their thousands – have washed up on Mallacoota's once-pristine beaches.
Mr Semmens, 87, has counted 100 dead birds from 25 species on a half-kilometre stretch of Tip Beach, just outside Mallacoota, half-buried in blackened piles of leaves. “It’s a sorry sight,” he said.
And he has only viewed a small section of the beach following the fires – he estimates that "thousands" more birds would have died in the area.
“The birds who avoided the firestorm are struggling to survive about the town, where residents are putting out water, seed and fruit, hoping it will save some of them.”
I read the GP comment with this caveats in mind, and I still think it's accurate. The figure used assumes that 100% of animals in areas affected by fires were killed. Even a quote like:
> It's reasonable to think that for animals caught up in the fires, at least for ground dwelling animals, more were severely impacted than were not.
taken literally, mean that the estimate is off by a factor of 2. I understand that you didn't mean this literally, but it's illustrative of the structure of the claims and skepticism here.
On top of that, even the core methodology of the study doesn't make any sense. Per the university's methodology notes[1], they copied the method used by a previous study on land clearing, ie, permanent destruction of habitat. It's a somewhat reasonable approach in that context: cleared and developed land is lost to wildlife in the equilibrium state, and it only relies on some fairly mild assumptions about a constant carrying capacity per species in order to use this methodology to calculate losses. There's no indication that destruction of the habitat leads to immediate death of the animals, and no attempt to account for the proportion of animals that may have successfully fled.
In the case of these wildfires, the burned land isn't being permanently and explicitly kept out of the ecosystem. It's easy to imagine species density increasing in the remaining areas in the short term, and I don't think anyone expects the habitats not to grow back onto the destroyed land.
Unless the claim is that the burned habitats are lost forever, the same logic obviously isn't applicable. The spread of this "fake news" is down to an irresponsible claim from the university and an incompetent/irresponsible game of Telephone from journalists.
That being said, this isn't anything new for journalism. I'm in the habit of checking the sources of dramatic claims, as reported even by "prestigious" outlets like the New York Times, and the hit rate is laughably low if you follow the trail of sources and have even a modicum of scientific literacy.
Again, this is true of _every_ topic they report on, not just specific, politically-loaded areas, which suggests it's not just a question of dishonesty and bias: Journalism's incentives are fucked right now, epistemology in the modern era is _really_ hard, and the hiring bar for journalism doesn't select all that stringently for intelligence. I don't know what the solution to this is...
In fact, they've pointed out the 500 million figure is a conservative estimate, and is likely to be much higher: "... The true loss of animal life is likely to be much higher than 480 million. ..."
> The authors deliberately employed highly conservative estimates in making their calculations. The true mortality is likely to be substantially higher than those estimated.
It's a shame the University of Sydney doesn't have access to this study such that they could have included a link so skeptical people could see for themselves the specifics of this alleged conservatism. Not doing that causes my intuition to question the truthiness of these claims, so I will file this item under "Unknown-Suspicious".
The report[1] (which is trivial to find) has a section on their estimation methodology and includes reasons why it is conservative (section 2.3):
Many species were excluded from estimates because there
is insufficient information on their abundance. The largest omission is the entire NSW bat fauna (37 species), for which no information on density could be found.
Many small mammals in semi-arid and arid regions exhibit large fluctuations
in density depending on
the prevailing weather. For example, historical accounts of the long-haired or plague rat (Rattus villosissimus) suggest that densities well in excess of 1000 animals per hectare can be attained after years of good rain31, with the species virtually disappearing again during drought. For such eruptive species, only the low-density population estimates were used.
The densities of several common species, such as the brown antechinus (Antechinus stuartii), agile antechinus
(A. agilis), yellow-footed antechinus (A. flavipes) and brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) have been measured in several studies, with most yielding low to moderate densities but small numbers
of studies yielding very high estimates. To reduce bias arising from these rare high values, means for each species were first calculated as log- transformed densities and then back-transformed to produce normal values. This method was used also by Cogger et al.
As noted, the usually lower densities obtained from studies carried out in the tablelands, western slopes and plains were used in preference to the higher estimates obtained in surveys further east. my note: these bushfires are in the East, so the higher estimates would be more appropriate here
Several species were omitted from consideration due
to uncertainty about how vegetation clearing would affect them.
>> Given Australia’s megadiversity of species and our comparatively small human population and research base, the density (ie number of individuals in a given area) of relatively few species has been determined with precision. In addition, the number of different species, or species richness, occurring in a given area is not known in great detail for many habitats. Estimates of these values must necessarily be extrapolated from a relatively small number of detailed studies. Therefore the authors have deliberately employed highly conservative estimates in making their calculations. The true mortality is likely to be substantially higher than those estimated in this report.
The authors seem fairly straightforward in admitting that these numbers should be considered unreliable, so no criticism from me on that. However: does this (un)certainty attribute accompany (with appropriate emphasis) the data into subsequent news articles and social media conversations, and ultimately millions of human minds?
>> 2.3 HOW HAVE THESE NUMBERS BEEN ESTIMATED?
(No excerpt because I have nothing particular to highlight.)
Again, from a science perspective, I have no complaints about the study itself, but I do have complaints about how it is being used as the basis of broadcasting a manufactured version of reality into the public psyche, dressed up as reality itself.
Take the University of Sydney article itself...
Headline: "A statement about the 480 million animals killed in NSW bushfires since September"
Article content: "Professor Chris Dickman estimates that 480 million animals have been affected since bushfires in NSW started in September 2019. This statement explains how that figure was calculated. "
See the differences?
a) "killed" --> "affected"
b) "480 million animals [have been] [killed]" --> "it is [estimated that] 480 million animals have been [affected]"
And this is the University of Sydney article, an "authoritative" (able to be trusted as being accurate or true; reliable) institution. Now imagine the hyperbolic distortions of content and certainty that the MSM, Twitterverse, and Reddit hivemind layer on top of this, which is then consumed repeatedly by hundreds of millions of people who consider it to be factual reality. [0] [1]
So, is this a big problem? I have no idea. How would one even estimate the magnitude of risk involved in the general public walking around with (unnecessarily) inaccurate internal representations of reality in their heads? Again, I have no idea. But with human behavior getting stranger by the day, I have a feeling that widespread adamant opposition to even considering this very real aspect of reality may turn out to be not a wise approach. Time will tell I suppose, although it's completely possible no one ever sees this perspective even if it does ultimately result in negative outcomes.
They use "killed" and "affected" interchangeably. The exact quote is:
Professor Chris Dickman has revised his estimate of the number of animals killed in bushfires in NSW to more than 800 million animals, with a national impact of more than one billion animals.
I'm not an expert in this area, but from my reading over the past few hours it appears the distinction between "killed" and "impacted" is not something ecologists think about a lot. It appears that they expect most of those "impacted" which do not immediately die, to die soon after (from predators or from habitat loss), or if they don't die they expect them not to be able to reproduce successfully (the young are too vulnerable in destroyed habitats).
I'd note this from the report (part you quoted):
The true mortality is likely to be substantially higher than those estimated in this report.
Edit 2: But it is true I'd like to see some more rigour around the estimates. I'd note that estimates for the 2009 Black Friday bushfires were for 1M animals killed with 400K hectares burnt. These fires have already burnt 8.5M hectares, but taking the 2009 death rate produces a number roughly an order of magnitude less.
> It's not clear why you keep picking it over looking for reasons not to believe it.
Because that's what lots of people do - at best, and I believe a solid argument can be made that this seemingly simple fact of human nature actually brings with it significant and unrealized risk.
Maybe it's worth pointing out explicitly: I'm not accusing the University or the professor of significant wrongdoing, intentional or not. Rather, my concern is with the effects our various styles of reporting the news (aka describing reality) has on the beliefs that individuals hold in their heads, and in turn the cascading/recursive unintended consequences that result from that.
HN is a relatively sane place, but look around at some of the other conversations taking place on planet earth - is it terribly innacurate to say that signs of fairly severe delusional thinking and insanity are becoming increasingly widespread?
An alien from another planet might reasonably predict that an increasing occurrence of (plausibly) climate-related calamities would result in massive widespread/unanimous concern among humanity for the health of the planet....and yet, what do we actually observe?
The same alien might reasonably predict, considering what's at stake, that the response to this unexpected outcome would be widespread concern among officials and intelligent people about what the hell is going on with people's thinking, and perhaps even a few initiatives to figure it out and rectify it while there's still time. But instead, we seem passionately satisfied with "groups x,y,z are stupid, and if they'd just stop we'd be all sorted....end of discussion!".
If our alien had a sense of humor, he might find this situation rather humorous.
birds, of which other experts say 99% would survive because, ya know, they can fly away
While I can believe many birds can easily survive the initial fire (if the smoke doesn't get them), do they have a 99% one-month survival rate after a large scale disaster like this?
Birds can usually only last a couple days without food, and the fires have affected such a large area that many more birds than usual will be seeking food in the remaining areas -- is there enough food to accommodate them all? And it's not just birds that will be seeking food in the non-fire stricken zones, but also their predators.
> how they handled species with no density figures
Many species were excluded from estimates because there
is insufficient information on their abundance. The largest omission is the entire NSW bat fauna (37 species), for which no information on density could be found. (page 16)
Third, for almost all species, there are no density figures, so he just picked the number 10 (lol, yes, seriously).
Where are you getting that? The density numbers come from this report[1] and I don't see any mention of "picking the number 10" or anything like that.
The estimate is for "affected or killed", and has since grown to over 1B[2].
While I agree that birds can fly away (although with habitat destruction that doesnt' always keep them alive), "Of the other 70%, many others would have just walked or slithered or run and gotten away from the fire" is just false. These fires catch people in cars because they are so fast moving.
Not to mention the spot fires that erupt, several km ahead of the main front, giving animals no where to go.
To put that into perspective, where I am, I was getting blackened gum leaves (meaning: highly flammable), but not actual embers when the main fire near me was still 80km away. We started getting cold ash falling when it was 20km away. One spot fire jumped about 5km toward my location (and spread to become 50000ha in it's own right).
You appear to be the some guy making up stuff, you provide no citations for any of your assertions.
Birds can fly away ya know, except they don't come with an IFR rating or instruments, a colossal area has burned -- I saw one estimate of around 8.5m ha (edit: which is over 32,000 square miles or more than Scotland's area) burned so far. So where are they flying away to in high temperature blackness, when the fire front might be moving faster than them? What about smoke inhalation, the biggest killer of people in domestic fires? Smoke from the fires has darkened the sky in Chile and New Zealand.
I am all for scrutiny of claims like this but I cannot verify some of your statements. I would encourage you to actually look at the report that is the basis for the claims. (The report btw is not the work of a single Uni professor but four authors are named.)
First, the press release specifically says "revised his estimate of the number of animals killed in bushfires in NSW to more than 800 million animals, with a national impact of more than one billion animals. " [1]
You say: "Third, for almost all species, there are no density figures, so he just picked the number 10 (lol, yes, seriously)"
When looking at the original report, linked in full text below [0] it reads:
> Many species were excluded from estimates because there is insufficient information on their abundance. The largest
omission is the entire NSW bat fauna (37 species), for which
no information on density could be found.
Regarding the birds, there is section 3.4 of the original report where the authors elaborate their stand. For instance, the loss of woodland (in this study the conversion to grassland) drastically reduces the number of birds in that area "90-95% fewer than in intact woodland". Given the size of the current fires it is a stretch to assume that 99% of birds are able to move to other forest and into other birds' habitats and be able to survive their alongside whatever lives there already.
He revised his estimate from 500 million to 800 million? Did 300 million more animals die in the interim or was his initial margin of error at least +/- 60%?
How do you feel that stat is misleading? Is it too large, too small? Perhaps some articles are using is misleadingly, but it seems like it is a ballpark estimate made by an educated expert.
Do you have references for your bird assertions, this is an article from yesterday where dead birds are washing up on shore, with a quote from an expert:
"A lot of people are under the impression that birds can easily fly away from a fire, but that’s not true"
For a coarse wildlife estimate like this, the range of uncertainty is probably about two orders of magnitude. So from 500 million "affected", the true range is 5-500 million or 50 million-5 billion, depending on who decided to truncate the range of uncertainty.
The conversion factor for "affected" to "killed"... I have no idea what it is, and there is contradictory intuition for its magnitude, so I don't want to trust any number until I see someone actually doing studies of wildfire mortality.
This is my primary point. The margin of error is two orders of magnitude. It's a bit absurd to throw a statistic around when it's such a huge unknown. I guess I'd be happier if margins of error were included with statistics at all times. Otherwise people think they are all equally certain
This is all too common, especially when it comes to politically charged discussion. Imagine saying data is incorrect/impossible and being called cold hearted, unconcerned with future of planet, hate people, or supporting evil or being a shill.
> Third, for almost all species, there are no density figures, so he just picked the number 10 (lol, yes, seriously).
This isn't a problem; most animals have a per-square-mile density higher than 10. The ones with lower density are the big, popular animals for which better statistics exist.
> Fourth, roughly 30% of those estimated animals are birds
And this is completely impossible. There aren't enough birds. How many were ants?
The number is meaningless to the public anyway. I have absolutely no frame of reference for how many animals live in a certain area. For all I know, 500m ants get killed by a period of fairly heavy rainfall.
It's more annoying when numbers are misrepresented that we DO have real world experience of, for instance sea level rise. Many people are under the impression that global warming will cause skyscrapers to become submerged, or the majority of the Earth's land area to disappear. All within a few decades.
People may argue that it's useful for people to believe this, but I don't want a society of useful idiots. I want a society of skeptics.
was watching a video about the sinking of Jakarta. The biggest contributing factor is actually ground water abstraction and consequently, contraction of the city foundation, not sea level rising.
I mean, if I woke up and read that 500 million mosquitoes were victim to the Australian wildfires, I might not be so sad either.
But then you watch a video showing the charred carcasses of many beautiful Australian marsupial and bird species littered on the side of the road [1], and you realize jokes aren't really very useful here.
I think they are just pointing out that the people who think they love animals actually only really seem to love cute animals. And when you think about that for a bit, it seems less pure.
It's true that the images are slightly outlandish due to the compilation of data over a long period of time. Also not all these fires were or are of the same size or nature (winds, fast moving or slow moving, controlled or wild).
But regardless it's been tragic and devastating.
If you want to shock people, forget showing maps or even pictures of destroyed homes; just show them the footage of burning koalas being rescued and dying off their injuries; that's far more visceral. I can't even watch it without tearing up (from a local's perspective).
It's true that the images are slightly outlandish due to the compilation of data over a long period of time.
According to the article, it's also true that a lot of places labeled as being on fire are actually things like furnaces, the roofs of large buildings, and "any heat source that is hotter than its surroundings."
The NASA maps are significantly more accurate. According to the article, it has a false-positive rate of just 1%.
> If you want to shock people, forget showing maps or even pictures of destroyed homes; just show them the footage of burning koalas being rescued and dying off their injuries; that's far more visceral
Also be sure to mention 500,000 animals have been killed in these fires.
A few days ago, they were saying 500 million plants and animals are affected, so that includes things like birds that flew away and will come back once the fire is gone. Not sure which source is more reliable. It looks like the 1 billion number also includes invertabrates, so I guess things like bugs.
I fully believe that a devastating number of animals have died, but when I see nice, big, round numbers like 0.5 or 1 billion thrown out there I wonder how we calculated this. How rigorous are these estimates?
Wildlife population demographic estimates are generally unreliable, even in the best of conditions. In the a well-conducted survey, the 95% confidence interval is going to be an order of magnitude--e.g., 10-100.
The number that's thrown out here is not strongly sourced, but given that it's in response to an ongoing event, I suspect that it comes from "take a stab at animals per hectare, multiply times number of hectares burned, and round up to next round number to maximize outrage." Or maybe it will be slightly more accurate, with someone taking the time to dig up some numbers from a prior survey to estimate population differences per biome and tracking down how much of each biome has died.
Which is a long-winded way of saying that these estimates (almost certainly) are not reliable.
Edit: someone else linked the source. The number turns out to be "number of animals per hectare * hectares burned." I still stand by my verdict of not reliable, as there is not an even an indication of what the range of uncertainty is in this information, just a single number.
Unless I am misunderstanding, this method assumes that all animals per hectare are non-mobile and do not run from fire. The impact from loss of habitat/starvation may end up making the numbers not far off though.
That is my understanding as well--the actual source states "affected" instead of "died." I have yet to see anyone actually give a reliable estimation of how to turn "affected" into "died", and I can sustain arguments for anything between 1% and 100%.
There are essentially three pieces of information going into this estimate: pre-fire density, fire acreage, and fire mortality (in the long run). The first number is known at best to an order of magnitude, the second is quite well-known (thanks to satellites), and the last appears to be unknown.
That assumption is not totally insane these fires are often moving at around 60km/h. Also from the videos I have seen you can see huge pile ups of burned animal bodies stuck on fences.
> In your thesis or dissertation, you will have to discuss the methods you used to do your research. The methodology or methods section explains what you did and how you did it, allowing readers to evaluate the reliability and validity of the research. It should include:
The type of research you did
How you collected your data
How you analyzed your data
Any tools or materials you used in the research
Your rationale for choosing these methods
Well sure, the methodology is touched upon, but not terribly thoroughly (perhaps there is a link to their actual calculations in there). But, that methodology rests upon other methodologies in other studies. I mean, not that that's inappropriate, this is simply the complex nature of scientific studies. But on any kind of topic like this, I get a constant impression from comments that "the science" is right there for the reading, no gaps or uncertainty exist whatsoever.
Are people literally saying exactly that? Well ya, a lot of the time they are literally saying that. But even if not, this is what is usually being implied, and it's certainly the impression readers are walking away with. In my experience, it's a rare person who can unemotionally acknowledge the fact that much of what we loosely refer to as "the truth" is actually just a big messy collection of approximations, if not outright imaginations in many cases.
> when I see nice, big, round numbers like 0.5 or 1 billion thrown out there I wonder how we calculated this. How rigorous are these estimates?
Round numbers are much more scientific, honest, and every other good thing than precise numbers are. You can estimate that 5-600,000,000 things died and present that as "500,000,000", a number with one significant figure. If you instead claimed that 516,772,943 things died, you'd be claiming to have a lot more knowledge than you actually do.
You should be inclined to trust big round numbers more than you trust odd-looking numbers, not the other way around.
When I see large round numbers like that, I alway figured the numbers were meant to be in the right magnitude but not exact. Like somewhere between 250M and 750M.
That's why they are called estimates, not real numbers. If they could run a census of animals living in the forest, there would be no need for estimates.
As the BBC article suggests, generally the most accurate maps of where recent fires are and how much they’ve burnt are the state government fire or emergency services websites. Unfortunately they are state-by-state (which isn’t usually a problem, but does mean there’s not a good whole-of-Australia map), and some of them show all emergencies, not just fires.
This one (from WA) covers the whole country, and shows a) where the fire fronts and b) what's been burnt. This website is actually linked to in the main article (MyFireWatch):
It's also the one that ends up being doctored then played around social media.
As a 'side note' though, the article mentions:
> In contrast to MyFireWatch maps (left), blue symbols on New South Wales Rural Fire Service maps (right) give 'Advice' warnings, indicating no immediate danger
This is blatantly misleading. Blue means there are fires still active in the area, the MyFireWatch shows exactly where those active fires are. And personal experience has shown that Blue can become Yellow and then Red within a space of 10 minutes.
> [...] MyFireWatch shows exactly where those active fires are.
I didn’t link to MyFireWatch precisely because it is showing ‘hotspots’ from the past 72 hours, which is not necessarily the same thing as mapping actual reported fires, hence the confusion of some of the maps talked about in the article. The data on MyFireWatch on areas which have burned is also very inaccurate for some states (Tasmania and Victoria at least).
MyFireWatch explicitly says not to use their map in an emergency[0], because the ‘latest’ hotspot data can be up to four hours old, can be up to 2km out of place (5km in extremes), and may not show fires obscured from or otherwise undetectable from the satellite.
After the sky turned orange in New Zealand a few days ago from the smoke from the Australian bushfires [1], I stumbled across this blog post by Scott Bachmeier:
The post contains relevant satellite imagery taken from Himiwari-8 showing the creation of pyrocumulonimbus clouds from the fires, along with thermal imaging. There is also a technical explanation about how the thermal anomalies are detected.
The smoke cloud is now heading to the middle of pacific ocean and is still visible from space [2]
The Guardian has a visualisation of the total area burned in this fire season, which can be overlayed on google maps to any location. It is not the size of 'currently burning' but is the size of 'burning, or burnt'
I advise knowledgeable people to look at the data themselves! Nowadays anyone can browse, download and process open access satellite data (Landsat, Sentinel, Terra, Aqua, Suomi-NPP, etc.) with open source tools (QGIS, Python, etc.). In this specific topic I recommend taking a look at the work of Pierre Marcuse: https://pierre-markuse.net/2018/04/30/visualizing-wildfires-...
I have to admit, my grandpa was a wildfire firefighter coordinator and still, I wasn't really aware of wildfires being this very thin front behaving like a fractal until I saw this kind of satellite data: https://twitter.com/Pierre_Markuse/status/119499877723451392...
I'm not sure that is the lesson. I don't doubt that maps are hard, but there are plenty of capable people making decent ones all the time (the OP article contains a link to BBC's own visualizations). All of the issues described in the linked article are complete sloppiness or dishonesty, not mistakes due to the difficulties of map visualizations.
I'm a big fan of https://www.memeorandum.com/ but I saw a story on there that "almost 200 people had been arrested for setting fires" ... only to find Alex Jones was one of the sources. Crikey.
Well, it does seem to be semi factual, 183 people had been arrested, "only 24 of them for arson:
24 people have been charged over alleged deliberately-lit bushfires
53 people have had legal actions for allegedly failing to comply with a total fire ban, and
47 people have had legal actions for allegedly discarding a lighted cigarette or match on land.
I think their complaint isn't about the story not being factual but about the fact that Alex Jones is an insane person/outrage feeder who shouldn't be quoted as a source. Instead, they could have quoted, well, the source you give. It's much more credible, after all.
The problem is that even a broken clock is correct twice a day. And for the sort of people who follow conspiracy theory whackjobs, that's all they need.
A STOPPED clock is correct twice a day, as long as you already know what the time is you can tell that the clock is right at this time.
A broken clock will always be wrong. Even if you already know what the time it, the fact that the broken clock looks like it is working will lead you to wanting to believe that it might be right just this once.
No, but even if the crazy person is correct in this instance, I'm still not relying on them for political/personal safety/vitamin/any other information of any consequence.
They should also be including previous years data - I’ve seen a lot of people who appear to think arson was invented this summer. And a mind blowing few who think it was invented by people desperate to keep the climate change hoax going :/
I'm sure it does, to people who don't realize what the usual numbers are. That's why it should only be presented with the context of data from previous years. And that data says
>The Australian Productivity Commission has calculated that between 2001–02 and 2006–07, [there was] an average of nearly 54,000 fires per year (SGRSP 2008). ... It is estimated that 50 percent of fires are either deliberately lit or suspicious in origin as shown in Figure 1.
edit: and to compare arson charges specifically, the same article says that between 2001 and 2006 there were 133 convicted bushfire arsonists in New South Wales - or about 20 per year convicted in a single state. Since there probably isn't a 100% conviction rate, I'd expect the total number charged each year for the whole country is along the order of 50 people.
That's pretty crazy... if there's 133 convicted in that time span then the actual number of folks doing this might be considerably larger. This seems like a subject worth someone doing a documentary about given this is likely, if it's happening in Australia, happening in many other places.
Of course it's larger, its tens of thousands of fires deliberately lit each year. There are books, I wouldn't be surprised if there's a documentary somewhere.
As an aside, I didn't realise we had explicit laws for smoking:
> Light or use a tobacco product within 15metres of any stack of grain, hay corn, straw or any standing crop, dry grass or stubble field – up to a $5500 fine.
Mum grew up on a wheat station (meaning: huge farm/ranch) and always said that the wheat fires moved pretty quickly, so I suppose that's where this law comes from.
The original police statement was "The NSW Police Force has taken legal action against more than 180 people for bushfire-related offences since late last year." of which only "24 people have been charged over alleged deliberately-lit bushfires".
https://www.police.nsw.gov.au/news/news_article?sq_content_s...
Most of the offenses are for having a barbeque/campfire during a "total fire ban" day or discarding a lit cigarette - these receive formal cautions or fines
> Discarding a cigarette from a vehicle can attract a fine for littering of $250, the NSW Environmental Protection Authority states. If it’s lit and tossed away, the fine is $660, which doubles on a day of total fire ban to $1320.
> Lighting a fire on a day of total fire ban attracts an on the spot fine of $2200. If the matter goes to court, you could face a fine of up to $5500 or 12 months behind bars.
> Well, an authoritative source can still be wrong but by definition does not lie
That's the type of thing I imagine someone in north korea saying. By definition does not lie? That's news to me and certainly not true of any "authoritative sources". Every authoritative sources has lied. Even more, every autoritative sources was created specifically to lie. If you think I'm wrong, go read about the creation of these "authoritative sources". Who created them and why?
Even the hallowed BBC by definition told lies. Orwell worked for the BBC Eastern Service as a propagandist. It was one of his inspirations for 1984. You might have heard of him.
> who are you going to bet on over the long term?
Neither - especially when it comes to important issues. As I said the slavish "appeal to authority". It's the basis of all tyranny.
How do you know the whacko is telling the truth this time?
Only because you already know the facts from reliable sources.
So given you already knew the facts in order to ascertain that the whacko was telling the truth, why are you bothering with the whacko?
Worse, by pointing out that the whacko was right this time, you encourage others to believe other claims by the same whacko, since they have been right at least once!
Can you illuminate me as to how I am “using the term fact so casually”?
The facts in this case are easy to discern: they are numbers reported by NSW Police. The basis for those numbers is irrelevant: the only fact here is a media release from the police containing certain statements, and the claims made by certain agencies reporting on that media release,
Well, I suppose it depends on what exactly the facts being discussed are.
For example, are we discussing:
- numbers of fires actually started by people (and, deliberately vs accidentally)
- (the unknown) number of people who have actually engaged in risky behavior
- numbers of people who have been arrested (charged?) for any of the above
> The basis for those numbers is irrelevant
In terms of my "casual" accusation, agreed. I think it's fair to say that in this case it was actually me who was speaking too casually due to a preoccupation with the philosophical ideas around facts.
The mainstream media can push conspiracy theories, such as Russiagate, until the cows come home but people are generally fine with that. During Russiagate numerous establishment outlets pushed blatantly false stories, such as Buzzfeed's story, refuted pretty much immediately by Mueller, about Trump supposedly directing Michael Cohen to lie to Congress and the Guardian's story about Manafort allegedly meeting with Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy (a meeting that likely never actually happened given there were no records of it at the embassy). Neither of these two example stories were retracted IIRC.
Not to mention crazy conspiracy theorists calling the whole thing fake, we've had a few of those right here on HN. As if something of this magnitude can be made up.
Climate change denialists (this is just the latest offshoot of a long running campaign with the same tactics) are starting to make flat earthers look well reasoned and sane.
I'm not really a social media guy, but my relatives live near the badly impacted areas and I can confirm the damage done to a lot of communities is very significant.
Yes. Celebrities were spreading photos of fires on other continents and other years and claiming that it was the end of the world.
Their apologists will claim they were "just raising awareness" or "drawing attention to the tragedy," but in reality they're doing more harm than good.
Interesting, I think that climate change, slash and burn agricultural practices on marginal land, and the inability of the biome to re-establish itself is what is doing the harm. I never even once gave a single thought to what "celebrities" or other people that were wrong are saying, just like how I deal with right wingers that deny climate change is occurring.
And I would argue that it's hard to overstate the harm of global warming, so a few ignorant celebrities being incorrect against the mountains of well fund misinformation is not doing more harm than good. They are wrong on the scientifically correct side of the issue, and that matters. They are unlikely to cause harm to anyone, like climate change denier or Jenny McCarthy on vaccines.
The area burned so far is larger than most European countries. Entire towns have been razed, breeding grounds for various animals are destroyed and the fire in Kangaroo Island decimated the population of chlamydia-free koalas.
Even worse is that this mass clearing of forests will lead to a drastic increase in new growth which will lead to worse conditions for fires next year (since young plants with shallower root systems will dry out faster)
This pales in comparison to the actual problem, climate change. There are people that deny it is happening while profiting from it, and those people are in positions of power.
A cumulative visualization of the scope of the fires that is being misinterpreted as real time is farting into a hurricane in comparison.
Using misleading images gives climate change deniers justification for their skepticism. One might think that doesn't matter because those people would never believe anyway but there are plenty of people on the fence who are going to see this false information about the scope of the fires as proof that those speaking about climate change are dishonest and have a hidden agenda. Credibility matters.
Priorities also matter, one can't help but notice the BBC put work into this, but not in reporting in the links between drought fires and our climate crisis.
"Alternatively, a national figure can be obtained by aggregating publicly available data on arson that are available from each state and territory police jurisdiction. Based on these figures, there were approximately 14,975 incidents of arson recorded by police in 2011–12. This is likely to be an underestimate owing to the various ways in which different police jurisdictions define arson for statistical purposes, as well as the omission of unreported incidents.
To estimate the number of arson incidents not reported to police, Mayhew (2003a, 2003b) used a multiplier of 3.0. Applying this to the above police recorded crime figure, in 2011–12 there were an estimated 44,925 incidents of arson."
So there are about ~100 cases of arson per day in Australia in a given year. What is different about bush fires this year?
It goes both ways. People are using the "180 arrested for starting fires" as a reason to discredit the impact of climate change on the current situation. Though it's conveniently ignored that only a fraction of those were starting actual forest fires (eg not a BBQ...), and there have been arsonists every year.. they're not a new phenomenon.
>This pales in comparison to the actual problem, climate change
Seems a bit ideological to label climate change as "the actual problem" when 24 arsonists were caught, over the season, deliberately starting forest fires. Forest fires aren't a new thing but people deliberately starting them seems to be.
Arson is certainly a thing that happens but isn't suddenly drastically increasing for no reason.
What is increasing is the rate at which those acts become extensive bushfires. Which is caused by drought drying out the land (increasing fuel). Which is linked to ... yep, climate change.
Assuming "cause a brushfire" means intentional causing, rather than unintentional causing during commission of another arson, that's certainly an alarming trend. I live in a region of Canada that's had seasonal forest fires for as long as I remember and I don't recall any of them being intentionally set. Not good to see this emerge as a crime trend although I'm, in a way, not surprised given I've wondered for awhile why terrorists haven't been using forest fires as a tactic given the potentially low risk to mayhem ratio.
'but isn't suddenly drastically increasing for no reason.' You have data on that?
Given the fanatic stirring caused by Thunberg, enactment of a 'State of Fear' as envisaged in the novel by Michael Crichton is not an unreasonable fear. It's even been encouraged by climatatogist Stephen Schneider who wrote: "...to reduce the risk of potentially disastrous climate change ...we have to get some broad-based support, to capture the public’s imagination. That, of course, entails getting loads of media coverage. So we have to offer up scary scenarios, make simplified, dramatic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we might have. This double ethical bind which we frequently find ourselves in cannot be solved by any formula. Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest. I hope that means being both."
If any arsonist did light a fire with this in mind, he or she has certainly been vindicated given the media's reaction.
My argument was narrow: to counter "seems to be a new thing". The argument of "the scale of these fires is unusual, but if there is an unusual cause, it's an unusual amount of arson, not unusual climate conditions".
If a single act of Arson was the only fire started then it still wouldn't make sense to attribute the fires to arson alone, because arson can start a fire but for it to grow it needs dry fuel. Which is created by drought. Which is linked to climate change.
And of course arson trails behind legal and illegal burning off and lightning as starter of fires anyway [1].
I mean like sure if we were able to somehow eliminate arson and burning off we would probably have less bushfires.
That doesn't change that the scale of these fires is straightforwardly linked to climate change. Fixating on these miscellaneous factors distracts from the broader, more critical issue.
None of the fires in Victoria have been confirmed to be deliberately lit. Police have charged one man in Victoria with _attempting_ to light a fire.
Deliberate arson is not new in Australia, don't make out that it's the reason for the scale of these particular fires. "Conditions, not ignitions".
Fire chiefs had anticipated and warned of the likelihood of these fires, and they are clear in asserting that climate change is a factor. Australia just had its hottest day ever broken multiple times over a series of days.
Arson has always been around in Australia. But climate change exacerbates the impact. Less time for safely going hazard reduction burns, and drier forests, and less rain makes a big impact.
You mean like how this year is the latest in a long run of parts of the country breaking temperature records year round, as well the general uptick in mean-surface temperature since 1950 - http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/current/annual/aus/2018/#tabs=... ?
Or that we're in one of the longest droughts on record, with many rural towns prior to this (and still actively) running out of water (as in, no water in the pipes at all), and Sydney on water-restrictions?
Mysteriously, Australia has been having a multi-decadal run of consistently seeing the factors which would be worsened by global warming, get worse.
Droughts are getting worse because of climate change (and of course in Australia droughts make bushfires worse because there is more dry scrub, and hazard reduction burns are too dangerous to do).
Hey gd1, your comment is dead so I can't reply. But here is your BOM citation (it also has your requested timeseries data):
Australia's driest year on record
Nationally-averaged rainfall 40% below average for the year at 277.6 mm
The national total rainfall for 2019 was 40% below the 1961–1990 average at 277.6 mm (the 1961–1990 average is 465.2 mm). This makes 2019 the driest year in the 119 years since 1900.
This article is manipulative, bordering on malicious.
Its claim boils down to "Data visualization techniques can't be interpreted literally" -- which is obvious -- but is titled and written in such a way to provide ammunition to climate change deniers that "the other side" is being loose with facts, or something.
Absolute and insulting garbage. Whoever wrote this, edited it, approved it for release, and whoever posted it here, should be ashamed.
If "your side" is being loose with facts, then pointing that out isn't just providing ammunition to "the other side". Arguments are not soldiers you need to support unconditionally to secure victory for "your side" in the war of public opinion. Pointing out when "your side" is wrong will hopefully help it make better arguments in the future.
But "my side" isn't being loose with facts. That's my point. Data visualization techniques are always lossy, that's just how they work. The article tries to paint this lossiness as deception, and that's wrong.
> one shouldn't suppress truth and normalize deceit.
My point is that the article is claiming deceit where none exists. Data visualization techniques are always lossy, that's just how they work. The article tries to paint this lossiness as deception, and that's wrong.
Just in case someone actually still doesn't realise - this is a bullshit claim. (that arson is relevant in this situation) There are fires every year and they will happen. Climate change doesn't start fires. What it does is extends the fire season and makes forest management harder, which provides more fuel when the fire is burning.
The number is correct. The relevance is bullshit. Australia will have fires every year, arson or not. It needs to keep them under control either way - which is related to climate and forest management. If arson can create out of control fires, so can lightning.
I don't have any figure or analysis, but I would actually expect arson to be worse, since lightning strikes are more or less random whereas a skilled arsonist can theoretically start the fire in the right place (upwind, etc.)
I'm not sure what you're looking for here. Fires are out of control. Have you got someone proving that fire caused by lightning could be controlled easier than fire started by arson?
Basically if you claim they're relevant, it's on you to find an explanation how/why. Not on everyone else to disprove every possible theory. Otherwise we're stuck in gish gallop.
You can't prove a negative. If they're connected and people have proof and it's relevant, they'd present it. And again, arson-related arrests are real and I'm not disputing them.
This would not even be an interesting topic if it wasn't pushed so strongly on social media with a lot of bias. (Wasn't as interesting a decade ago when it was a firefighter starting fires) So let's do a reasonable thing and drop that whole thing until someone comes up with a credible proof, not a theory abused by bots and media.
Newscorp should definitely not be your source for anything climate related.
It's well documented that the Murdoch's (of Newscorp ownership) are part of IPA thinktank [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institute_of_Public_Affairs] push to portray climate change as imaginary. IPA drives Murdoch properties, right wing and conservative talking heads and seemingly 99% of the 'oh the greenies did (that thing that was enacted by the government in power)' conversations.
> obviously misleading maps are posted as representations of fire damage
The maps referenced in the article aren't "obviously misleading" -- data visualization techniques are always lossy, that's just how they work. Claiming they're misleading is the real deception.
I appreciate the clarity of the BBC maps. Having said that, the entire point of a map is to artificially represent something that cannot be perceived naturally. All maps are a simplification of reality. And a graphically misleading map can be better because it helps people understand the truth. It is like a metaphor or analogy.
So it's okay to spread a graphic that exaggerates the data as long as it's "helping to understand the truth"? Is not your perception of the magnitude of the truth subjective? This is another way of saying that it's okay to mislead as long as the issue is sufficiently important and/or people aren't taking it seriously enough (in your judgement).
Metaphors and analogies are supposed to make a concept clearer, not to show scale. A gif with each frame showing the data from each day would have a similar impact but be clearer.
I've seen countless articles mention that 500,000,000 animals have died. I was skeptical as to how you could even devise such a number reliably so I looked into the source of this statistic. First off, this number was devised by a single Uni professor. How? He multiplied the square-mile density of each species by the amount of territory that's burned. Secondly, and he notes this in his estimate, it's 500,000,000 "killed _or affected_", not just killed. Third, for almost all species, there are no density figures, so he just picked the number 10 (lol, yes, seriously). Fourth, roughly 30% of those estimated animals are birds, of which other experts say 99% would survive because, ya know, they can fly away. Of the other 70%, many others would have just walked or slithered or run and gotten away from the fire.
Basically some guy just made up a number of animals that exist and everyone else just assumed that 100% of them were killed. Terrible "science."
Many bigger news sites have braced themselves for pushback on this stat by adding "and plants" ("500,000,000 animals and plants") so that their use of the statistic can't be criticized later.