Abstract

The recently established Garden Route National Park (GRNP) along the Cape south coast of South Africa occurs in a landscape where indigenous forests, fire-prone fynbos shrublands and fire-sensitive plantations of alien invasive trees are interspersed. We used the area as a case study in the challenges facing conservation managers in the achievement of biodiversity goals in a fire-prone environment. We explored the context within which fire management was practised during the past century by interviewing former catchment managers and reviewing forestry and catchment management policies. Mountain fynbos adjacent to plantations was subjected to burning regimes aimed at the protection of commercial timber resources rather than the preservation of fynbos biodiversity. Prescribed burning of fynbos adjacent to the plantations was typically done in multiple belt systems at rotations of about 4-8 years during spring, summer and autumn, to avoid the winter berg wind season. Such short-rotation and low-intensity fires favour resprouting graminoids over slow-maturing reseeders, and likely account for the compositional impoverishment observed in fynbos near plantations. Current and future challenges faced by the GRNP include (1) balancing conflicting fire management requirements for plantation safety against fynbos conservation; (2) the continual invasion of fynbos by fire-propagated alien pines sourced from plantations; (3) inadequate resources to redress the 'invasion debt' caused by the socio-economic legacy and past management neglect; and (4) fragmentation of land use between conservation and forestry threatening the sustainability of the region at large. We provide recommendations for management actions and research priorities to address these challenges.

Highlights

  • Fire has been a key process and evolutionary force shaping plant traits and vegetation communities across the globe for much of its history.[1,2] It has been the most ubiquitous terrestrial disturbance, surpassed more recently only by human transformation of the landscape.[3]

  • Anthropogenic changes in land use have in turn resulted in modifications in the way fire occurs in space and time,[1] along with changes in our perceptions of fire and demands placed on land management agencies to protect lives and property.[4,5,6]

  • Fire is instrumental in maintaining diversity in the fynbos of the Cape Floral Kingdom (CFK) of South Africa,[12] and may be considered the most important fynbos management practice, being both a key ecological factor and a practical tool for resource manipulation

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Summary

Review Article

Affiliations: 1South African National Parks, Scientific Services: Garden Route, Sedgefield, South Africa. Past approaches and future challenges to the management of fire and invasive alien plants in the new Garden Route National Park. The recently established Garden Route National Park (GRNP) along the Cape south coast of South Africa occurs in a landscape where indigenous forests, fire-prone fynbos shrublands and fire-sensitive plantations of alien invasive trees are interspersed. Prescribed burning of fynbos adjacent to the plantations was typically done in multiple belt systems at rotations of about 4–8 years during spring, summer and autumn, to avoid the winter berg wind season. Such short-rotation and low-intensity fires favour resprouting graminoids over slow-maturing reseeders, and likely account for the compositional impoverishment observed in fynbos near plantations.

Introduction
Biophysical environment
Grootri Grootri
Indigenous forest
History of catchment and fire management
Fire season and intensity
Fire management
Historical legacy
Sustainable management at landscape scale
Research priorities
Management interventions to be considered
Invasive plant control
Landscape rationalisation
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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