Stoborough Heath will take eight years to recover from blaze

Stoborough Heath will take eight years to recover from blaze Stoborough Heath will take eight years to recover from blaze

AN AREA of Purbeck heathland equivalent in size to three football pitches was decimated by a major wildfire yesterday.

Around 80 firefighters attended the blaze on Stoborough Heath, which forced police to close the busy A351 as flames advanced towards traffic.

Ten fire engines, seven Land Rovers, the all-terrain Unimog and other specialist vehicles attended the fire, which was first reported around 1.45pm.

It is not known what sparked the blaze, but arson has not been ruled out at this stage.

Wildlife experts told the Daily Echo it is likely to take at least eight years for the habitat to return to its pre-fire state.

High winds caused the flames to spread quickly and firefighters worked for two hours to bring them under control.

No-one was injured but an estimated three acres of protected heathland habitat has been destroyed.

A number of poles carrying electricity lines have also been charred. Engineers will work to ensure they are stable.

An investigation into the wildfire’s cause has started, but firefighters say evidence of how it started will in all likelihood have been destroyed by the intense temperatures.

DFRS station manager Richard Coleman said: “From the start the fire was big and moving quickly. It was a fairly typical heath fire but the difference in this instance was it was relatively short-lived.

“The reason it escalated was because of the wind.

“A wind-driven fire makes it much more difficult and becomes much more dangerous.

“We closed the A351 because the flames were getting near the edge of the road and we needed somewhere to work from. When smoke starts coming across the road, chances of an accident increase.”

The majority of firefighters left the scene around 4.30pm, but a number of them remained dampening down and monitoring hot spots.

Mark Singleton, of the RSPB, said: “We manage this site.

We’ve walked the perimeter and haven’t found any evidence of dead reptiles.

“This fire will probably set the heathland habitat back about eight years though.”

The protected heathland is home to a number of rare reptiles and birds, but Mr Singleton believes the recent cold snap will have aided their survival.

“Most of them would have been hunkered down because of the weather, otherwise things would have been a lot worse,” he explained.

Comments(6)

mmmmmmm says...
9:38am Thu 14 Mar 13

"probably"

The Fish says...
11:28am Thu 14 Mar 13

Not wanting to be picky but Stoborough Heath is 109 Hectares in size, if the heath had been 'decimated' then only about 10 hectares would be left but only 2/3 hectares were affected (approx 2.7% of the heath) - over reporting (and misue of the word decimate) by the Echo again!

JoeyJo says...
1:45pm Thu 14 Mar 13

Decimate means one tenth is destroyed, not one tenth left.

zoltan the bearded says...
3:23pm Thu 14 Mar 13

I thought fire was a necessary aprt of heathland maintenance, keeping down the colonising birch trees and preventing the site turning to woodland.
Good point about decimation. Ha!

The Fish says...
3:55pm Thu 14 Mar 13

@JoeyJo - coming from a DSP background decimation refers to any downsampling of a signal - from a factor of two to a factor of n (i.e. to down-sample by a factor of 10 would be to remove 90% of the signal).
Though I have to agree in roman terms to decimate was to remove one tenth of the legion.

Phixer says...
4:16pm Thu 14 Mar 13

zoltan the bearded wrote:
I thought fire was a necessary aprt of heathland maintenance, keeping down the colonising birch trees and preventing the site turning to woodland.
Good point about decimation. Ha!
Fire is most definitely a natural way for nature to remove old growth and generate new, including seeds which lay dormant waiting for a fire.

I don't condone arson but neither do I support the notion that fire is a 'disaster' for such areas, whether heathland or forest.

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