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  • Getting hit by lightning is good for some tropical trees

    Posted: 2025-03-28 13:52:58

    Lightning strikes, while often destructive, can benefit some tropical forests. A new study in the journal Nature Plants reveals that lightning plays a key role in shaping the composition of these forests. Researchers found that lightning-caused tree mortality disproportionately affects larger, dominant canopy trees, creating gaps that allow smaller, light-demanding species to flourish. This disturbance contributes to greater tree diversity within tropical forests, challenging previous assumptions that lightning primarily causes uniform damage. The study suggests that lightning is an important, overlooked factor in maintaining biodiversity in these ecosystems.

    Summary of Comments ( 34 )
    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43505447

    Hacker News users discussed the study's limitations, pointing out the small sample size (20 trees) and the potential for confounding variables. Some questioned whether the observed nitrogen fixation was solely due to lightning and suggested that other factors, like microbial activity in damaged bark, could contribute. The lack of before-and-after measurements on the same trees was also criticized, making it difficult to definitively conclude that lightning caused the increased nitrogen. A few commenters expressed interest in the broader implications of the findings, wondering about the role of lightning in other ecosystems and how this natural nitrogen fixation might be impacted by climate change. Others debated the definition of "good" in the headline, arguing that while nitrogen fixation is beneficial, the damage from lightning strikes could outweigh that benefit for individual trees.