Lianas increase lightning‐caused disturbance severity in a tropical forest

Author:

Gora Evan M.12ORCID,Schnitzer Stefan A.23ORCID,Bitzer Phillip M.4ORCID,Burchfield Jeffrey C.5ORCID,Gutierrez Cesar2,Yanoviak Stephen P.26ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook New York NY 12545 USA

2. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Balboa Panamá

3. Department of Biological Sciences Marquette University Milwaukee WI 53233 USA

4. Department of Atmospheric and Earth Science The University of Alabama in Huntsville Huntsville AL 35899 USA

5. Earth System Science Center The University of Alabama in Huntsville Huntsville AL 35899 USA

6. Department of Biology University of Louisville Louisville KY 40208 USA

Abstract

SummaryLightning is an important agent of plant mortality and disturbance in forests. Lightning‐caused disturbance is highly variable in terms of its area of effect and disturbance severity (i.e. tree damage and death), but we do not know how this variation is influenced by forest structure and plant composition.We used a novel lightning detection system to quantify how lianas influenced the severity and spatial extent (i.e. area) of lightning disturbance using 78 lightning strikes in central Panama.The local density of lianas (measured as liana basal area) was positively associated with the number of trees killed and damaged by lightning, and patterns of plant damage indicated that this occurred because lianas facilitated more electrical connections from large to small trees. Liana presence, however, did not increase the area of the disturbance. Thus, lianas increased the severity of lightning disturbance by facilitating damage to additional trees without influencing the footprint of the disturbance.These findings indicate that lianas spread electricity to damage and kill understory trees that otherwise would survive a strike. As liana abundance increases in tropical forests, their negative effects on tree survival with respect to the severity of lightning‐related tree damage and death are likely to increase.

Funder

National Geographic Society

National Science Foundation

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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