Lightning Damage Facilitates Beetle Colonization of Tropical Trees

Author:

Parlato Brady P1,Gora Evan M2,Yanoviak Stephen P23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Georgetown College, Georgetown, Kentucky

2. Department of Biology, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky

3. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Panama

Abstract

Abstract Lightning is a common agent of disturbance in many forest ecosystems. Lightning-damaged trees are a potentially important resource for beetles, but most evidence for this association is limited to temperate pine forests. Here, we evaluated the relationship between lightning damage and beetle colonization of tropical trees. We recorded the number of beetle holes on the trunks of trees from 10 strike sites (n = 173 lightning-damaged trees) and 10 matching control sites (n = 137 control trees) in Panama. The trunks of lightning-struck trees had 370% more beetle holes than control trees. The abundance of beetle holes increased with increasing total crown dieback among both control and lightning-damaged trees, and with larger tree diameter among lightning-struck trees. Beetle holes also were more abundant in trunk sections of lightning-damaged trees located directly below a damaged section of the crown. The results of this study suggest that lightning damage facilitates beetle colonization in tropical forest trees and provide a basis for investigations of the effects of lightning-caused disturbance on beetle population dynamics and assemblage structure.

Funder

Georgetown College to BPP and NSF

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Insect Science

Reference44 articles.

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3. Longevity of lightning-struck trees and notes on wildlife use;Baker;Proc. Tall Timbers Fire Ecol. Conf,1973

4. Gridded lightning climatology from TRMM-LIS and OTD: dataset description;Cecil;Atmos. Res,2014

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