被闪电击中对一些热带树木有好处。
Getting hit by lightning is good for some tropical trees

原始链接: https://www.caryinstitute.org/news-insights/press-release/getting-hit-lightning-good-some-tropical-trees

《新植物学家》杂志上的一项新研究表明,一些热带树种,例如奥利弗翼柄豆(*Dipteryx oleifera*),不仅能够承受雷击,甚至还能从中受益。这项由Evan Gora领导的研究对巴拿马的树木进行了追踪,发现奥利弗翼柄豆能够承受直接雷击,而不会造成严重的损害,这与其他经常被雷击致死的树种截然不同。 雷击会杀死周围的树木和寄生藤蔓,从而减少对光照和养分等资源的竞争,并显著提高该树种的种子产量。奥利弗翼柄豆的高大和宽阔的树冠可能使其更容易遭受雷击,实际上充当了避雷针。这种耐受性赋予了它们竞争优势,这体现在它们往往比周围的树木更高,因为竞争对手被雷击致死。研究结果凸显了雷击在塑造森林动态方面被低估的作用,雷击可能更有利于耐雷击的树种,尤其是在气候变化导致雷击活动增加的情况下。

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原文

Getting zapped with millions of volts of electricity may not sound like a healthy activity, but for some trees, it is. A new study, published in New Phytologist, reports that some tropical tree species are not only able to tolerate lightning strikes, but benefit from them. The trees may have even evolved to act as lightning rods.

The research was led by Evan Gora, a forest ecologist at Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies. Gora studies how lightning impacts biodiversity and carbon storage in Panama’s tropical forests.

Lightning kills hundreds of millions of trees per year. But in 2015, while working in Panama, Gora and his colleagues came across a Dipteryx oleifera tree that had survived a strike with little damage — even though the jolt had been strong enough to blast a parasitic vine out of its crown and kill more than a dozen neighboring trees.  

“Seeing that there are trees that get struck by lightning and they’re fine was just mind blowing,” Gora recalled. Over time, the team encountered other D. oleifera trees thriving after getting hit, so they decided to take a closer look.

tree with purple flowers
Also known as the eboe, choibá, tonka bean or almendro, Dipteryx oleifera is native to Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador. Its hard wood is used in construction, and it produces almond-flavored seeds that are edible and sold in local markets. A keystone species of Panamanian forests, D. oleifera fruits and seeds are a crucial food source for rainforest mammals such as agouti during the dry season.

Scientists had previously suspected that some trees evolved to tolerate lightning, but evidence to back it up was lacking. In 2022, Gora and colleagues demonstrated for the first time that trees differ in their ability to survive getting hit by lightning. Their new paper, published Wednesday, is the first to show that trees can actually benefit from these electric jolts.

Using a unique lightning location system, the team tracked the outcomes of 93 trees that had been struck by lightning in Barro Colorado Nature Monument in central Panama. For two to six years after the strike, the team measured tree survival rates, crown and trunk condition, number of parasitic vines or lianas, and neighboring tree mortality. The study included nine directly struck D. oleifera trees, and compared them with 84 other trees that had been struck.

All nine D. oleifera trees survived direct lightning strikes with only minor damages. In contrast, directly struck trees of other species were badly damaged, losing 5.7 times more leaves from their crowns, and 64% died within two years.

When each D. oleifera tree was zapped, an average of 9.2 neighboring trees were killed as the electricity traveled between adjoining vines and touching branches, or jumped across small gaps between trees. Lightning strikes also decreased D. oleifera's parasitic liana infestations by 78%, further reducing competition for light and nutrients.

tree before and after lightning strike
A Dipteryx oleifera tree just after being struck by lightning in 2019 (left) versus two years later (right). The tree survived the strike with minimal damage, and benefited from having its parasitic vines and competing neighbors removed by the strike. Photos: Evan Gora

These patterns also bore out across the broader population. The team found that D. oleifera trees in general tend to have fewer lianas. Analyzing trends in tree death over the past 40 years, the researchers found that the trees neighboring D. oleifera trees were 48% more prone to die than other trees in the forest, likely because of lightning.

Using drones, Gora and colleagues created 3D models of canopy height, which showed that D. oleifera trees tend to be about four meters taller than their nearest neighbors, likely because lightning killed their taller neighbors, giving them an advantage in competing for light and space.

“These data provide the first evidence that some trees benefit from being struck by lightning,” the authors write. Or, as Gora puts it, “It's better off for a Dipteryx oleifera tree to be struck than not.”

Because of all these benefits, the team thinks D. oleifera trees may be specially adapted to attract lightning. With their distinctive height and unusually wide crowns, they may be up to 68% more likely to get electrocuted than other trees with average height and crowns, according to the team’s calculations.

view of tree canopy from below, with gaps in the canopy
Lightning strikes open up gaps around Dipteryx oleifera trees, giving them more space to spread out and collect light. Photo: Evan Gora

Estimates suggest individual Dipteryx oleifera trees are directly hit by lightning every 56 years, on average. And since the trees can live for hundreds or possibly more than a thousand years, they are expected to survive these blasts many times throughout their lives. During the study, one of the D. oleifera trees was struck twice in just five years.

The remarkable ability to survive lightning strikes and benefit from the removal of lianas and competitors gives D. oleifera trees a major advantage over other trees. According to the scientists' calculations, lightning tolerance boosts the species’ ability to produce offspring by 14 times.

Next, the team aims to investigate what electrical or structural traits allow these trees to survive lightning strikes. They would also like to explore whether other species show lightning tolerance, to better understand how common this phenomenon is.

What is clear is that lightning plays an underappreciated role in tree competition. And with lightning on the rise in many regions due to climate change, its influence may increase, potentially favoring lightning-tolerant species like Dipteryx oleifera. Understanding lightning and its role in shaping the forests may be important for predicting changes in biodiversity and carbon storage, and for informing tropical reforestation efforts.

Study co-authors include: Helene Muller-Landau and Pablo Narváez of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute; KC Cushman of Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Jeannine Richards of Florida Gulf Coast University; Phillip Bitzer and Jeffrey Burchfield of the University of Alabama in Huntsville; and Stephen Yanoviak of the University of Louisville.

New Phytologist is a leading international journal focusing on high quality, original research across the broad spectrum of plant sciences, from intracellular processes through to global environmental change. The journal is owned by the New Phytologist Foundation, a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to the promotion of plant science. 

Funding

This work was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (DEB-1354060, DEB-1655346, and DEB-2213246 to SPY, DEB-1354510, DEB-1655554, and DEB-2213247 to PMB, and DEB-2213245, DEB-2241507, and GRF-2015188266 to EMG), the National Geographic Society (9703-15 to EMG), and a Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Tupper Postdoctoral Fellowship to EMG. KCC was supported as part of the Next Generation Ecosystem Experiments-Tropics, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research.

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