van Wilgen, BWForsyth, GGde Klerk, HDas, SonaliKhuluse, SSchmitz, P2010-10-072010-10-072010van Wilgen, BW, Forsyth, GG, de Klerk, H et al. 2010. Fire management in Mediterranean-climate shrublands: a case study from the Cape fynbos, South Africa. Journal of Applied Ecology, Vol 47(3), pp 631–6380021-8901http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/123336821/PDFSTARThttp://hdl.handle.net/10204/4451Copyright: 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation: 2010 British Ecological SocietyThe authors used a spatial data base of fires within 10 protected areas covering >720 000 ha to examine the frequency, seasonality, size and cause of fires over four decades. Their study covered five fire climate zones and a range of mountain fynbos shrubland types. They examined whether regular prescribed burning would be necessary to rejuvenate the vegetation, and also to reduce the incidence and extent of wildfires. Cumulative fire frequency distributions indicated that the probability of fire was not strongly affected by post-fire age, with 50%of the area experiencing a successive fire within 10–13 years after the previous fire in most areas. This suggests that the accumulation of fuel did not limit the occurrence of wildfires, and that regular prescribed burning would not necessarily reduce the risk of wildfires.enBiodiversity conservationFire frequencyFire seasonInvasive alien plantsPinesPrescribed burningFire management in Mediterranean-climate shrublands: a case study from the Cape fynbos, South AfricaArticlevan Wilgen, B., Forsyth, G., de Klerk, H., Das, S., Khuluse, S., & Schmitz, P. (2010). Fire management in Mediterranean-climate shrublands: a case study from the Cape fynbos, South Africa. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4451van Wilgen, BW, GG Forsyth, H de Klerk, Sonali Das, S Khuluse, and P Schmitz "Fire management in Mediterranean-climate shrublands: a case study from the Cape fynbos, South Africa." (2010) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4451van Wilgen B, Forsyth G, de Klerk H, Das S, Khuluse S, Schmitz P. Fire management in Mediterranean-climate shrublands: a case study from the Cape fynbos, South Africa. 2010; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4451.TY - Article AU - van Wilgen, BW AU - Forsyth, GG AU - de Klerk, H AU - Das, Sonali AU - Khuluse, S AU - Schmitz, P AB - The authors used a spatial data base of fires within 10 protected areas covering >720 000 ha to examine the frequency, seasonality, size and cause of fires over four decades. Their study covered five fire climate zones and a range of mountain fynbos shrubland types. They examined whether regular prescribed burning would be necessary to rejuvenate the vegetation, and also to reduce the incidence and extent of wildfires. Cumulative fire frequency distributions indicated that the probability of fire was not strongly affected by post-fire age, with 50%of the area experiencing a successive fire within 10–13 years after the previous fire in most areas. This suggests that the accumulation of fuel did not limit the occurrence of wildfires, and that regular prescribed burning would not necessarily reduce the risk of wildfires. DA - 2010 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Biodiversity conservation KW - Fire frequency KW - Fire season KW - Invasive alien plants KW - Pines KW - Prescribed burning LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2010 SM - 0021-8901 T1 - Fire management in Mediterranean-climate shrublands: a case study from the Cape fynbos, South Africa TI - Fire management in Mediterranean-climate shrublands: a case study from the Cape fynbos, South Africa UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4451 ER -