Abstract

Determining the structure and fuel load is key to know the flammability of vegetation in the Mediterranean Basin where forest fires are frequent. Determine which plant structural variable is best related to living and dead fuel to develop allometric equations in nine species in the Western Mediterranean Basin. In the east of the Iberian Peninsula (Valencia Province), we measured four structural variables (basal stem diameter, height, maximum diameter and perpendicular diameter) that were related, by means of allometric equations, to the living and dead fuel separated into different size classes. We also analyze fuel changes across developmental states of the studied species, and the vertical distribution of dead fuel. General equations that consider all development states can be used to determine living fuel. However to obtain dead fuel, we recommend using specific equations for each development state and fuel fraction for better accuracy. The basal stem diameter was the best structural variable in almost all cases for estimating fuel in the studied species. Dead fuel load throughout species’ ontological development is a key factor to manage Mediterranean plant communities.

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