When Fire Brings New Life

Fire is Essential to Regenerating Fynbos

© Colin Windell

Jun 8, 2009
Overlook the Fynbos, Colin Windell
A raging brush fire is seen as destructive, but for the fynbos of the Western Cape it is a vital necessity.

Possibly the most well-known of the fynbos is the Protea. It is the national flower of South Africa and emblazoned on the sports kit of our cricketers, rugby players and other national sporting teams.

Strange as it may seem, the fynbos – literally translated from the Dutch as fine bush – community needs fire every 15 years or so. All the species have flowered and set seed for several successive years by then.

Fire is an Essential Event

Although fire is seen as a destructive power, in the fynbos community it is an essential event, which provides new opportunities for organisms to regenerate, produce offspring and then die back in anticipation of the next fire. If there are no fires for lengthy periods, some species, such as proteas, start degenerating.

The Cape Fynbos is the term given to a collection of plants that are mainly shrubs and is comprised of species belonging to South Africa's southwestern and southern Cape. Fynbos makes up four-fifths of the Cape Floral Kingdom, which covers an area of less than 90 000 square kilometres (the size of Malawi or Portugal) and hosts 8 600 plant species. To put this in perspective, the British Isles, three and a half times larger, have only 1 500 plants and less than 20 of those are endemic. Table Mountain alone has almost 1 500 species in 57 square kilometres.

One of Six Plant Kingdoms

So special is the Cape Floral Kingdom that it has been designated as one of the earth's six plant kingdoms and is the smallest Floral Kingdom in the world.

Fynbos flowers stay fresh for a long time and make excellent export products, especially the protea. Dried flowers and restios for arrangements of dried flowers are also marketed and exported extensively. Both Rooibos tea and honey tea are fynbos products. Today Rooibos tea is cultivated and processed mainly in the Cedarberg area and exported. Buchu, rich in oil, is used on a large scale in medicines and as an oil base for perfume.

There are at present 12 nature reserves (51 099 ha) and four wilderness area (123 115 ha) that have been set aside in the fynbos areas. No development may be undertaken in these areas without the necessary approval. The largest reserve at present is the 24 569 ha Hottentots-Holland Reserve (in the Strand area).

Rich Variety Of Flowers

To many people, fynbos is merely seen as the drab covering on mountain slopes. At a distance fynbos does seem like inconspicuous clumps of spiky grass but closer examination reveals a rich variety of exquisite flowers.

Humans invaded the fynbos and besides introducing alien vegetation that chokes the fynbos growth, brought with them fire. While fire is essential, too much is not good and in recent years, fired by the oils in the fynbos the Western Cape raging fires have cut a destructive swathe across the mountains, leaving conservationists and Government departments the uneviable task of trying to protect this amazing species.


The copyright of the article When Fire Brings New Life in Wildlife Preservation is owned by Colin Windell. Permission to republish When Fire Brings New Life in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Overlook the Fynbos, Colin Windell
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Protea, Heiner Lutzeyer
Mountain Fynbos, Heiner Lutzeyer


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