Abstract
Earlier research on eradicating macchia (fynbos) vegetation on the Amatole Mountains showed that both the lowland and highland macchia communities were re‐established from coppice growth and seedlings. Follow‐up burning treatments were, therefore, applied following eradication. In the lowland macehia, burning two years after destroying a dense stand of Cliffortia linearifolia, followed by another burn one year later, virtually eliminated the species and caused a complete recovery in the grass sward. In the highland macehia, burning two, three, or four years after the original treatments was equally effective in reducing the regrowth of Erica brownleeae and Cliffortia paucistaminea to negligible proportions. However, the hotter the burn, the more adversely affected was the grass sward. This effect became more pronounced as the interval increased between the original eradication treatment and the follow‐up burn.

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