Abstract

A hypothesis is developed that environmental fac- tors (rainfall and substrate) determine the potential limits of forest distribution, but that actual forest location pattern is determined by the fire pattem, which in tum is determined by the interaction between prevailing winds during dry periods and terrain physiography. The warm-temperate, mixed, ever- green forests of the study area occur in few large but isolated patches on the coastal platform and river valleys, but in many small patches in the dissected mountains. Late arrival of europeans in the area due to many deep and steep gorges through the coastal platform, and the early control over timber cutting and forest clearing prevented man from influencing the location pattern of the forests. Rainfall throughout the study area is high (900-1200 mm per annum, and expected to be higher in the mountains). The strike of geological formations cuts across forest patches. The forests persist on both deep and very shallow, rocky soils, and the soils are similar both inside and outside the forest. The study has shown that forests on the coastal platform persisted in topographic shadow areas of the gusty, hot, desiccating northwesterly fohnlike bergwinds which are com- mon during autumn and winter. Bergwind direction is locally changed due to barriers posed by the position and form of the mountain ridge to the windward (northern) side of the forests, and is channelled through valleys running from the mountains. Fires associated with the bergwinds would burn with higher frequency in zones in the landscape where forest is currently absent. The wind-fire pattern would furthermore cause calm conditions and a lower frequency of fire in localities where the forests have survived. A graphic model is presented to indicate the likelihood of forest persistence in topographic positions in relation to bergwind direction. The study also related under- storey differences and the presence of seed of the legume tree Virgilia divaricata Adamson, and of charcoal in the litter layer of Witelsbos forest to such a bergwind fire which occurred an estimated 230 years ago. Forest can therefore recover from episodic, extreme fires, but disappears from areas where fires occur at high frequencies. The results have implications for the interpretation of spe- cies-diversity patterns in the landscape in relation to disturb- ance and recovery, for the application of prescribed burns in catchment management, for the development of fire protection plans for commercial forestry, and for understanding the spread and control of invasive alien plants.

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