TORONTO -- First Nations communities are disproportionately threatened by wildfires, a study finds, with people who live on reserves making up nearly one-third of all evacuees in Canada since the 1950s.
鈥淗ow frequently communities will experience fires is going to be a lot higher for First Nations reserves than for non-Indigenous communities in Canada,鈥 said Amy Cardinal Christianson, one of the co-authors of a study published in in April, in a telephone interview with CTVNews.ca.
鈥淥ur results suggest that the extent of losses and the number of evacuations that First Nations populations experience could drastically increase in the coming decades,鈥 the authors wrote.
Christianson, a Metis fire research scientist with the Canadian Forest Service, said it is troubling that is the case given that First Nations living on reserve make up a much smaller proportion of the total Canadian population -- about 1.1 per cent.
鈥淲e need to start preparing now for more fire events and that means sending additional money to mitigate the impacts on these communities,鈥 she said.
The National Resources Canada study, which looked at wildfire data dating back to the 1950s, found around four million people 鈥 or 12 per cent of the country鈥檚 total population 鈥 live near or within at-risk forest areas.
But when it came to First Nations people who live on-reserve, 32.1 per cent of this population were at risk of natural disasters driven by climate change.
Christianson said this increased risk to wildfires is brought about by a 鈥減erfect storm鈥 of factors including warmer climates, increased fuel load of dead leaves and vegetation which can drive fires, Indigenous communities sometimes having a limited ability to evacuate by road, and more people moving into areas where homes are built near or in wooded areas.
The recent findings are specially pertinent as wildfires destroy homes, habitats and livelihoods in many parts of Canada.
As of Aug. 18, 3.9 million hectares of land in Canada have been affected by wildfires this summer, according to data from the .
Researchers from the latest study said as buildings continue to go up near at-risk forests, we can expect more of them to be damaged or destroyed by fire. They say two-fifths of Canada forests are already close to housing, industry buildings and other infrastructure.
The authors said the risk of wildfires has only increased as the climate has become drier, and wildfire seasons have been starting earlier and ending later.
鈥淲e hope that our findings will raise awareness of the impacts of climate change on humans living and working in areas exposed to wildland fire,鈥 the authors wrote.
FIRST NATIONS RESIDENTS MADE UP THIRD OF ALL EVACUEES
The federal fire study found that people who live in First Nations reserves made up nearly a third of all evacuees in the recent decades.
鈥淚ndigenous communities in Canada are on the front lines of climate change,鈥 Christianson said. 鈥淲e're seeing that northern communities are already experiencing significant changes.鈥
In May, in First Nations communities in Manitoba. In , more than 1,000 people were evacuated from Pikangikum, Deer Lake, and Poplar Hill First Nations in northwestern Ontario. And a , 200 residents of the Cat Lake First Nation fled their homes to shelters in the Greater Toronto Area.
Researchers expect First Nations communities to continue being disproportionately represented among evacuees in the coming years.
They also echoed what many Indigenous people and fire researchers have been saying for decades: there needs to be larger focus on prevention and mitigation efforts, not simply allocating resources to extinguish fires.
鈥淚t is also important to recognize and value traditional knowledge,鈥 the researchers said.
Knowledge keepers and fire experts have previously said governments鈥 disregard of Indigenous prescribed and cultural burns -- purposefully burning away entire patches of trees and dry vegetation -- has greatly contributed to the wildfire crisis in British Columbia today.
A also found that Indigenous fire stewardship could help protect the world from the type of severe wildfires that have been occurring more frequently in recent years. Researchers there suggested cultural burning, could also help promote greater biodiversity. And while some countries and cultures are embracing these practices, Canada has fallen behind.
With files from CTVNews.ca鈥檚 Sharon Lindores