Published July 15, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Pantropical geography of lightning-caused disturbance and its implications for tropical forests

  • 1. University of Louisville
  • 2. University of Alabama in Huntsville
  • 3. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

Description

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-1) 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 ca. 832 million trees in tropical forests annually, of which ca. 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.

Notes

Funding provided by: National Science Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000001
Award Number: DEB‐1354060,DEB‐1655346,DEB‐1354510,DEB‐1655554

Files

FOSbiomass_data.csv

Files (262.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:f646ab99253a2fb99461c65ec4250102
5.8 kB Download
md5:4b6249a9239627686b09ee3df4cfd015
147.2 kB Preview Download
md5:e35a13db07864ec37b6c926872240ad3
10.1 kB Download
md5:ca07b939c59aed4b2f5d244db7fa7173
20.6 kB Preview Download
md5:2fd453e32bb8d1cd6ce3f643b380670c
11.9 kB Download
md5:30a06a4eadf8f4bc76fe2311aa8a9047
18.5 kB Download
md5:9dea5d23594b9cce1285485333e2978b
16.3 kB Download
md5:819e2bba92b3ebee4c6a9c52a343f47c
8.1 kB Download
md5:a65f1c778f3c9657959172d43d15f669
24.3 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/gcb.15227 (DOI)