The contribution of fire research to fire management: a critical review of a long-term experiment in the Kruger National Park, South Africa
Brian W. van Wilgen A C , Navashni Govender B and Harry C. Biggs BA Centre for Invasion Biology, CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment, PO Box 320, Stellenbosch 7599, South Africa.
B Scientific Services, Kruger National Park, Private Bag X402, Skukuza 1350, South Africa.
C Corresponding author. Email: bvwilgen@csir.co.za
International Journal of Wildland Fire 16(5) 519-530 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF06115
Submitted: 12 August 2006 Accepted: 23 July 2007 Published: 26 October 2007
Abstract
The present paper reviews a long-term fire experiment in the Kruger National Park, South Africa, established in 1954 to support fire management. The paper’s goals are: (1) to assess learning, with a focus on relevance for fire management; (2) to examine how findings influenced changes in fire management; and (3) to reflect on the experiment’s future. Results show that fire treatments affected vegetation structure and biomass more than species composition. Effects on vegetation were most marked in extreme treatments (annual burning, burning in the summer wet season, or long periods of fire exclusion), and were greater in areas of higher rainfall. Faunal communities and soil physiology were largely unaffected by fire. Since the inception of the experiment, paradigms in savanna ecology have changed to encompass heterogeneity and variability. The design of the experiment, reflecting the understanding of the 1950s, does not cater for variability, and as a result, the experiment had little direct influence on changes in management policy. Notwithstanding this, managers accept that basic research influences the understanding of fundamental ecosystem function, and they recognise that it promotes appropriate adaptive management by contributing to predictive understanding. This has been a major reason for maintaining the experiment for over 50 years.
Additional keywords: elephants, fire frequency, fire regimes, fire season, savanna.
Acknowledgements
We thank South African National Parks for access to data and information, and Mendy Smith for valuable comments on the manuscript. The team that maintained the experiment for many decades, especially Andre Potgieter, deserve special mention. We also acknowledge the significant contribution of Winston Trollope in rekindling and developing the science behind the experiment in the 1980s.
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