“…Similarly, fire season (the time of year a fire occurs) plays a major role in determining fire effects on savanna vegetation (Govender et al, 2006), with dry‐season fires being generally larger, more intense and consuming more biomass than wet‐season fires (Levick et al, 2019). Late‐dry‐season fires have been suggested as a potential management tool to combat woody encroachment (Eastment et al, 2022; Scholtz et al, 2022), a pervasive challenge in savanna ecosystems (Stevens et al, 2017), but at the cost of tall tree mortality (Smit et al, 2016; Strydom et al, 2023). In contrast, land managers across savanna ecosystems have been encouraged to implement early‐dry‐season burning to mitigate emissions from late‐dry‐season fires (Lipsett‐Moore et al, 2018).…”