Wildfireâs toll on animals went largely unreported, researchers show
After the Marshall Fire, researchers at 91´ŤĂ˝ and Western Washington University muse on why animals disappear from disaster stories and suggest a remedy
When the Marshall Fire swept through Boulder County on Dec. 30, 2021, it killed two people and destroyed 1,084 homes. Coloradoâs governor called the relatively modest loss of human life a âNew Yearâs miracle.âĚý
As University of Colorado Boulder sociologist Leslie IrvineĚýlater found, however, the wildfire also killed more than 1,000 companion animals who were trapped in homes that rapidly incinerated while their people were at work, traveling or stuck in evacuation traffic.
New research fromĚý ˛š˛ÔťĺĚý, a sociology professor at Western Washington University, quantifies the extent to which the loss of sentient animal life was overlooked by public officials and the news media.

In recently published research, 91´ŤĂ˝ sociologist Leslie Irvine and colleague Cameron Whitely quantify the extent to which the loss of sentient animal life was overlooked by public officials and the news media following the Marshall Fire.
For many residents, the toll was devastating but largely invisible.
Out of 981 news stories published in the two months after the fire, only 16% mentioned animals at all. Fewer than 5% focused on animals in their coverage. Government officials mentioned animal loss in less than 1% of public statements.
âWhat surprised me most wasnât just what showed up in the media,â Whitley says of the research, which wasĚý. âIt was what didnâtâespecially considering how many people think of their animals as family.â
For Irvine, now retired from 91´ŤĂ˝ but still deeply engaged with the work, the Marshall Fire reopened questions she had hoped never to revisit.
Two decades earlier, after Hurricane Katrina, Irvine wroteĚý, a groundbreaking book documenting how disaster-response systems failed people with petsâand how those failures increased human risk as well. After Katrina, Congress passed the PETS Act, requiring emergency plans to account for companion animals.
âI said I would never study disasters and animals again,â Irvine recalls. âIt was too devastating.â
Then the Marshall Fire struck Boulder County âright in my backyard,â she says. Whitley, who grew up in nearby Lafayette and earned his BA from 91´ŤĂ˝, came to the project with both scholarly training and knowledge of personal loss.
âAs people were grieving animalsâpets, wildlife, livestockâthey kept telling me the same thing,â Whitley says. âThey werenât seeing that grief reflected anywhere.â
Using systematic content analysis, Whitley and his co-authors coded every Marshall Fire news story published by local, state and national outlets in the fireâs immediate aftermath. They tracked when animals appeared, how they were framed, andâcriticallyâwhen entire categories of loss vanished.
Domestic pets received the most attention, but usually as side notes to evacuation instructions or âfeelâgoodâ reunion stories. Agricultural animals were typically counted collectivelyâhorses evacuated, livestock lostârarely described as individuals. Wildlife barely appeared at all.
âThe default hierarchy is still very clear,â Irvine says. âHumans first. Then property. Animals come afterâif at all.â
When the âhierarchyâ obscures the truth

âThe only thing some families have left of their animals is a burnedâout food bowl. That alone should tell us something about whatĚýweâreĚýfailing to see,âĚýsays 91´ŤĂ˝ researcher Leslie Irvine. (Photo: Patti Benninghoff-Lawson)
That hierarchy persists despite decades of research showing that people routinely risk their lives for animals during disasters. Some refuse to evacuate without them. Others reâenter burn zones to try to rescue themâsometimes requiring rescue themselves.
In fact, one of the two human fatalities in the Marshall fire was Edna Turnbull, who died while trying to rescue her dogs. âTurnbullâs refusal to leave without making sure her companion animals were safe is not unique,â Whitley and Irvine write.
From an economic or safety standpoint alone, Irvine argues, ignoring animals is irrational. She contends: âIf government officials took animals seriously in disasters, they would reduce risks to first responders, reduce chaos and improve outcomes for everyone.â
One consequence of invisibility is what Whitley calls unrecognized grief. He cites research showing that losing a companion animal can provoke grief comparable to losing a human family member. But when that loss is absent from public discourse, grieving people also feel isolated, he observes, adding:
âIn the LA County fires weâre studying now, people talk about losing their home as something they could move past. Losing their animal, or being forced to give that animal up months later because of housing instability, thatâs what they say theyâll never recover from.â
That secondary grief rarely appears in disaster coverage. Nor do the longâterm consequences that follow fires even after humans rebuild.
Irvine points to toxic exposure as an underreported crisis. Dogs in burn zones may now need booties and paw decontamination. Outdoor cats may carry contaminants inside. Veterinarians report increases in respiratory illness and unexplained deaths among animal patients months or years later.

Merlin, a cat injured during the Marshall Fire, has since recovered. (Photo: Shelby Davis/Soul Dog Rescue)
âThese arenât dramatic images,â Irvine says. âThey donât fit into breaking news. But they shape everyday life for years.â
âWe tend to act as though a disaster ends once people rebuild their homes. But for people with animals, the disaster often continues for the rest of those animalsâ livesâthrough toxic exposure, longâterm illness and ongoing grief.âĚý
Why journalism struggles with animals
The researchers note the challenges facing journalists. Disaster coverage focuses on what can be confirmed quickly, counted easily and tied to economic loss.
âHomes and infrastructure are quantifiable,â Whitley says. âAnimals arenât, unless theyâre agricultural, and even then, theyâre usually listed as numbers, not lives.â
The media also gravitate toward redemptive narrativesâpets reunited with families, miraculous survivalsârather than mass loss without resolution.
âThereâs a kind of collective discomfort with stories that donât offer closure,â Irvine says.
Whitley notes that journalists are reporting statements of public officials, whose focus is on humans and property. âLess than 1% of official government statements mentioned animals at all.ĚýThatâsĚýnot just a media problem; thatâsĚýa policy failure.âĚý
But when animals disappear from disaster coverage, so do the people who love them.
The study offers a suggestion on disaster reporting: prioritize sentient lifeâhuman and nonhuman alikeâbefore property loss.
âThis isnât about placing animals above people,â Whitley says. âItâs about telling the whole story.â
As climateâdriven disasters become more frequent, these questions will arise more frequently, the researchers note.
âThe Marshall Fire taught us that firestorms are no longer remote or rare,â Irvine says. âAnd it showed us something elseâthat we are still failing to see whole parts of our communities when disaster strikes.â
Whitley adds: âWhen we talk about disasters, we celebrate the minimal loss of human lifeâwhile thousands of animals die without acknowledgement. For the people who lost them, that silence matters.âĚý
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