The fire that broke out on Saturday in the municipality of
Covilhã is still active today and has already consumed about 10,000 hectares,
which are also part of the PNSE, an area of 89,000 hectares that covers
territories of the municipalities of Celorico da Beira, Covilhã, Gouveia,
Guarda, Manteigas and Seia.
It is this Natural Park that, Domingos Patacho told Lusa, is
being significantly affected by the flames, which have essentially been
consuming maritime pine, an indigenous species.
“The first lesson of this fire is that we have to have more
compartmentalised areas, more hardwoods are needed, such as beech trees, which
in Manteigas were less affected by fire and which will therefore be able to
regenerate more easily”, said the association leader.
Maritime pine, a resinous tree planted in large quantities in the Serra during the Estado Novo (in 1938) to stop erosion, but it burns more easily..
It is these trees that, he said, will take decades to
repopulate the PNSE area. But he adds that the yew forests, rare in Portugal,
have so far been spared from the flames, which have not reached the Zêzere
Valley area.
With the fire continuing to consume the Park, now also
affecting areas of pastures and agriculture, Domingos Patacho warns that this
will not only be harmful to the cheese production but also to the honey.
“Part of the areas of the Park that are undergrowth can
regenerate. But we are not talking about 10, or 100 hectares. We are talking
about thousands of hectares, of habitats on which many species of animals
depend, the pollinating insects, the mountain gecko… all this works in a
chain”, he said.
In the view of the Quercus leader, the most worrying
consequence of the fire are the steep slopes of the Zêzere Valley, now without
trees and subject to erosion when it rains, as has happened in the past.
In the coming months, he argued, emergency management
measures should be in place to contain erosion.
I have had a house in the serra gardunha range, since 2017 and what i cant understand is that the forests in portugal are still not partitioned with decent fire breaks to prevent the spread of fires and therefore reduce the overall destruction and loss. i would happily help
By michael saint from UK on 16 Aug 2022, 10:39
I am sadly wondering how it will be able to ever recover if next year we get more of the same extreme weather with heatwaves and drought. A forest may be able to regenerate under normal conditions but we no longer have them. I fear we are continuing to lose biodiversity and very many species of flora and fauna that cannot survive the habitat destruction brought about by climate change.
By Steve Andrews from Other on 17 Aug 2022, 13:50