Lightning-caused disturbance frequency and severity varies with topography in an Afromontane forest

dc.contributor.authorEvan M. Gora
dc.contributor.authorAlain Senghor K. Ngute
dc.contributor.authorRodrigue Batumike
dc.contributor.authorAida Cuni-Sanchez
dc.contributor.authorGerard Imani
dc.contributor.authorBeth A. Kaplin
dc.contributor.authorDrew Bantlin
dc.contributor.authorRobert Bitariho
dc.contributor.authorBianca Zoletto
dc.contributor.authorNikolaos Petridis
dc.contributor.authorDouglas Sheil
dc.contributor.authorMartin J. P. Sullivan
dc.date.accessioned2026-05-11T13:48:17Z
dc.date.issued2026
dc.description.abstract1. Lightning is an important agent of tropical tree mortality, but field data on lightning-caused disturbances is largely restricted to one lowland tropical forest in Panama. 2. Here we quantified variation in the frequency and severity of visually detectable lightning-caused disturbances across topography in the montane forests of Nyungwe National Park, Rwanda. This was the first systematic assessment of lightning-caused disturbance in any African tropical forest and a preliminary exploration of the association between lightning disturbance frequency and forest tolerance to lightning. 3. Lightning-caused disturbances were observed six times more frequently on ridges (19 strikes across 4.5 km of transects) than in valleys (2 strikes across 2.9 km), but lightning-caused disturbances in valleys tended to cause more tree-level damage than those on ridges (and also kill a higher proportion of the trees affected within each lightning disturbance, although the rarity of disturbances in valleys meant the latter effect was not statistically significant). Overall, lightning disturbances tended to kill a lower proportion of trees in this Afromontane forest than in previously documented lightning disturbances in tropical America. 4. We also observed less tree-level damage to ridge-dominant Syzygium spp. (Myrtaceae) compared to the community-wide average, providing support for taxonomic differences in lightning tolerance. 5. Synthesis. Our results indicate that lightning disturbance severity differs within and among sites, potentially mediated by differences in lightning tolerance among tree species and provide preliminary support for the hypothesis that disturbance severity declines with disturbance frequency.
dc.identifier.citationGora, E. M., Ngute, A. S. K., Batumike, R., Cuni‐Sanchez, A., Imani, G., Kaplin, B. A., ... & Sullivan, M. J. (2026). Lightning‐caused disturbance frequency and severity varies with topography in an Afromontane forest. Journal of Ecology, 114(3), e70278.
dc.identifier.urihttps://ir.must.ac.ug/handle/123456789/4358
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherJournal of Ecology
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United Statesen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/
dc.subjectclimate impacts
dc.subjectdisturbance ecology
dc.subjectforest dynamics
dc.subjectglobal change ecology
dc.subjectlightning
dc.subjectplant– climate interactions
dc.subjecttree mortality
dc.subjecttropical forest
dc.titleLightning-caused disturbance frequency and severity varies with topography in an Afromontane forest
dc.typeArticle

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