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With Australia Ablaze, These Animals Are Still In Danger

While Hollywood’s most sought-after stars fêted themselves at the 77th Golden Globe Awards on Sunday night, Australia’s devastating brush fires continued to burn. 
The particularly brutal wildfire season has wreaked havoc on the continent, with millions of acres of land destroyed and 24 people confirmed dead so far and 64 brush fires remain uncontrolled. While an estimated 2,700 firefighters continue to battle the flames, the ecological disaster they have wrought is poised to generate ripple effects that grip the country for decades to come, serving as a major reminder for the climate disaster we currently face.
Many of the star-studded event’s attendees spoke to the catastrophic environmental impacts of the unfolding disaster — including Russell Crowe who, despite electing to stay in his native Australia for the awards ceremony, enlisted Jennifer Aniston to deliver a statement by proxy to say that “the tragedy unfolding in Australia is climate-change based.”
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"We need to act based on science, move our global workforce to renewable energy and respect our planet for the unique and amazing place it is,” Crowe said. “That way we all have a future.” And Crowe's point extends beyond just the human population — many animals, especially those native to Australia, are in serious danger as the ongoing rescue efforts have limited resources.
According to the latest estimates by ecologists at the University of Sydney, around 480 million animals have been killed in the wildfires thus far. That number includes about 8,000 koalas, with officials fearing that up to 30 percent of the koala colony in New South Wales has been wiped out.
Koalas and kangaroos in particular — the unofficial mascots of Australia — have proven to be compelling motivators when it comes to mobilizing the global community to donate to emergency fundraisers aimed at financing relief efforts on the continent.
On Sunday, video of the cuddly marsupials piled dead along a burning highway in NSW went viral on Twitter. Other similarly grim videos and pictures showed badly burned and dehydrated koalas, wrapping themselves around volunteer rescuers and being bottle-fed water by firefighters. Experts estimate that the Koala community has been uniquely hard-hit, with a fire on Kangaroo Island — previously considered a koala safe-haven — being described as “virtually unstoppable” by firefighters battling the blaze over the weekend.  
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As the fires continue, though, it's more important than ever to draw attention to the animal populations at risk. Those hoping to donate to efforts to help preserve koala populations can give to a University of Sydney-backed fundraiser to establish more drinking stations in Australia’s eastern states, as well as to a GoFundMe benefitting the Port Macquarie Koala Hospital, which is currently rehabilitating 31 displaced koalas.
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