Grassroots Grassroots - Vol 20 No 1 | Page 30

NEWS Veld, weeds and fire: The good, the bad and the ugly Current Address: ARC Plant Health and Protection E-mail Address: [email protected] Reprinted From: http://bit.ly/2Te25Kb Jeremy Goodall A sizeable part of South Africa’s native vegetation has naturally adapted to burn quite often and fynbos, grassland and bushveld all burn at some stage during their growth cy- cles. Preventing this vegetation from burning results in massive accumulation of biomass that can cause devastation when the next wildfire occurs. Farmers are accustomed to preparing fire breaks in the dry season and burning old veld to stimulate the regrowth of grazing. The advantages of the controlled burn- ing of veld outweigh the disadvantages. Consider alien vegetation, especially species that invade native vegetation. Invasive plants affect native vegetation in many ways. This article illustrates the effect fire can have on various invasive plant species. Black and silver wattle Wattle trees are especially problematic in the Drakensberg region. Black wattle (Acacia mearnsii) and silver wattle (Aca- cia dealbata) are the main culprits. Since the inception of the Working for Water programme in the mid-1990s, there have been large-scale attempts to bring wattle trees under control with ringbark- ing and chemical control (Figure 1). Studies that evaluated the impact of clearing wattles in the Drakensberg, found that most infestations where standing trees were treated, had experi- enced destructive wildfires one to three years following treatment, and the soil surfaces had been scorched. The burnt soil surfaces became water repellent and prone to surface wash. This resulted in large-scale soil erosion, the worst of which included the formation of don- gas. Wattle seeds have a hard seed coat that protects the embryo from the heat of fire. However, the heat stimulates the germination of seeds in the burnt area within days after the fire (Figure 2). The 29 Figure 1: A stand of wattle in Bulwer, KZN, which has died from being ringbarked intensity of these wildfires is enormous, and little vegetation other than wattle regeneration remains to bind the soil (Figure 3). Grassland areas that are invaded by wattles become wattle forests that burn fiercely during wildfires and afterwards turn into impenetrable wattle thickets that are of little use. Felling trees, us- ing the wood, planting grass between staked brush lines and controlling seed- lings would be more beneficial to the environment. Wattle control also needs careful plan- ning because old wattle stands are valuable sources of timber that can be utilised for energy and building mate- rial. In some areas the removal of wattle trees has resulted in local communities relying on indigenous forests for fire- wood. Paraffin weed Paraffin weed (Chromolaena odorata) is a tropical shrub that invades forests, bushveld and grasslands in KwaZulu- Natal, Swaziland, Mpumalanga and Limpopo (Figure 4). The oil in this weed makes it flammable in the dry season, when plants become moisture stressed. Indigenous forests do not burn natural- ly, but once they are invaded by paraf- Grassroots Vol 20 No 1 March 2020