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Pantropical geography of lightning‐caused disturbance and its implications for tropical forests
Author(s) -
Gora Evan M.,
Burchfield Jeffrey C.,
MullerLandau Helene C.,
Bitzer Phillip M.,
Yanoviak Stephen P.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/gcb.15227
Subject(s) - pantropical , lightning (connector) , disturbance (geology) , tropics , ecosystem , geography , terrestrial ecosystem , ecology , subtropics , environmental science , forest ecology , tropical climate , shrubland , biomass (ecology) , tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests , climatology , agroforestry , biology , geology , paleontology , power (physics) , physics , quantum mechanics , genus
Abstract Lightning is a major agent of disturbance, but its ecological effects in the tropics are unquantified. Here we used ground and satellite sensors to quantify the geography of lightning strikes in terrestrial tropical ecosystems, and to evaluate whether spatial variation in lightning frequency is associated with variation in tropical forest structure and dynamics. Between 2013 and 2018, tropical terrestrial ecosystems received an average of 100.4 million lightning strikes per year, and the frequency of strikes was spatially autocorrelated at local‐to‐continental scales. Lightning strikes were more frequent in forests, savannas, and urban areas than in grasslands, shrublands, and croplands. Higher lightning frequency was positively associated with woody biomass turnover and negatively associated with aboveground biomass and the density of large trees (trees/ha) in forests across Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Extrapolating from the only tropical forest study that comprehensively assessed tree damage and mortality from lightning strikes, we estimate that lightning directly damages c. 832 million trees in tropical forests annually, of which c. 194 million die. The similarly high lightning frequency in tropical savannas suggests that lightning also influences savanna tree mortality rates and ecosystem processes. These patterns indicate that lightning‐caused disturbance plays a major and largely unappreciated role in pantropical ecosystem dynamics and global carbon cycling.