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In Chile three border collies are planting seeds and bringing life back to fores...

 3 years ago
source link: https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/chile-three-border-collies-are-planting-seeds-bringing-life-back-forests-destroyed-by-fire-1628737
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In Chile three border collies are planting seeds and bringing life back to forests destroyed by fire

Border collies Summer, Olivia and Das spend their days bounding through charred forests, unaware they're leaving a trail of seeds that could transform the landscape.

A novel scheme to bring life back to forests devastated by fires is underway in Chile. The most unusual thing about this project is its workers: three border collies.

Border collies chile forest fires Border collies Olivia, Das and Summer rest while wearing their special backpacks in a forest devastated by fire in Talca, about 350 kilometres south of Santiago Martin Bernetti/AFP

The worst wildfires in Chile's history swept through vast swathes of tinder-dry forests, consuming more than 580,000 hectares (1,433,000 acres). On 2 January, a fire broke out in the coastal Chilean city of Valparaiso, destroying more than 100 homes. Over the next month, more than 100 separate wildfires raged through forests in the El Maule region.

Overwhelmed by the scale of the disaster, the Chilean government called for international aid. More than 12 countries as far afield as Japan, Russia and the US took part in the huge operation, sending firefighters and water-dropping planes. The fires were finally brought under control in early February, having destroyed more than 1,500 homes and claiming 11 lives.

Border collies chile forest fires Aerial view of a forest area consumed by a massive fire and now being resown by dogs Martin Bernetti/AFP Border collies chile forest fires Charred trees are seen in a forest that was devastated by a massive fire in Talca Martin Bernetti/AFP

Months on from the disaster, charred trees and blackened earth cover the landscape as far as the eye can see. The once vibrant forests are dead; any birds, reptiles and mammals that survived the inferno fled into other areas.

Replanting the vast forests will take years, but border collies Summer, Olivia and Das are trying to bring some greenery back to the dead forest in the meantime. The dogs scamper through the charred remains wearing special backpacks loaded with seeds. As they run they leave a trail of seeds. The hope is that once seedlings, grass and flowers take hold, insects will return, followed by some of the reptiles, birds and mammals that fled.

"The main thing is for the fauna to be able to live," said Francisca Torres, the owner of the three dogs tasked with this big mission.

Border collies chile forest fires The border collies' special backpacks are filled with tree seeds Martin Bernetti/AFP Border collies chile forest fires Francisca Torres puts a seed-sowing backpack on one of the trained border collies Martin Bernetti/AFP border collies chile Border collies Summer, Olivia and Das run through a forest devastated by massive fire Martin Bernetti/AFP Border collies chile forest fires Seeds are scattered across the forest floor as a border collie runs between burnt trees in Talca, about 350 kilometres south of Santiago Martin Bernetti/AFP

The project began in March, and the dogs seem to be loving their job – not that know they have a job. They spend their days happily bounding through the forests, blissfully unaware that they may be transforming the landscape. The job has pretty good incentives – they receive treats whenever their backpacks become empty. Then their satchels are filled up with more seeds and off they go again.

Torres, who runs an environmental NGO named Pewos, said border collies – bred to herd sheep – are smart and fast and therefore perfect for the job. They are certainly better than humans, she said, as the dogs can cover a range of 30 kilometres in a day, whereas a person could only do three kilometres.

Border collies chile forest fires Francisca Torres and her sister Constanza prepare the border collies for the day's work resowing a forest Martin Bernetti/AFP Border collies chile forest fires Francisca Torres walks with the border collies through a burnt area of forest Martin Bernetti/AFP Border collies chile forest fires Trained border collies run through a forest devastated by massive fire, while sowing tree seeds Martin Bernetti/AFP Border collies chile forest fires A border collie sows seeds as it runs through a forest devastated by massive fire Martin Bernetti/AFP

Over the past three months, the dogs have been used in 15 forests in the Maule region. In some of them, grasses are coming back, and seedlings and vines are beginning to push through the blackened earth. Torres expressed hope that by the end of summer enough seeds will have germinated to attract animal life back to the forest.

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