brush fire, fire in vegetation that is less than 1.8 metres (6 feet) tall, such as grasses, grains, brush, and saplings. See wildfire.
Many grassland and scrubland ecosystems are specifically fire-adapted: the species of plants and animals native to those ecosystems are enhanced by or dependent on the occurrence of fire to persist and reproduce. Lightning strikes in dry brush occur naturally, and fire can improve ecosystem health by reducing competition, fertilizing the soil with ash, and decreasing diseases and pests. In many regions that historically experienced brush fires, such as the tallgrass prairies of the Midwestern United States and the fynbos of South Africa, years of fire exclusion and suppression in the 19th and 20th centuries allowed fuels to accumulate, altering the vegetation communities present and leading to more extreme conflagrations when fires do occur. The use of prescribed fire, in which areas are burned intentionally and under controlled conditions, can restore those ecosystems and promote the conditions that were present historically prior to the removal of wildfire. Indeed, the prescribed burning in brushland areas is an important conservation tool and fosters the preservation of those ecosystems.