“…In southeastern U.S. ecosystems, where production and turnover rates are high [19,20], repeated burning provides a continuum of fine surface fuels and living vegetation that enable a broad range of fire behavior throughout the year [21,22]. As such, the low (often <1 m height) vegetation (shrubs, grasses, forbs, leaf litter, soil organic layer, and small coarse wood) continuously changes with each fire and ecological response [13], making estimates of surface vegetation structure and loading, notwithstanding fuel moisture dynamics [23], highly variable at fine temporal (<hr) and spatial scales (<1 m). Furthermore, large diameter coarse woody debris (>20 cm) have little opportunity to accumulate, and hence contribute little to combustion during prescribed burns because of their high moisture retention and fast decay rates [24,25].…”