Current:Home > News'One Mississippi...' How Lightning Shapes The Climate -CapitalSource
'One Mississippi...' How Lightning Shapes The Climate
View
Date:2025-04-17 23:16:30
Evan Gora has never been struck by lightning, but he's definitely been too close for comfort.
"When it's very, very close, it just goes silent first," says Gora, a forest ecologist who studies lightning in tropical forests. "That's the concussive blast hitting you. I'm sure it's a millisecond, but it feels super, super long ... And then there's just an unbelievable boom and flash sort of all at the same time. And it's horrifying."
But if you track that lightning strike and investigate the scene, as Gora does, there's usually no fire, no blackened crater, just a subtle bit of damage that a casual observer could easily miss.
"You need to come back to that tree over and over again over the next 6-18 months to actually see the trees die," Gora says.
Scientists are just beginning to understand how lightning operates in these forests, and its implications for climate change. Lightning tends to strike the biggest trees – which, in tropical forests, lock away a huge share of the planet's carbon. As those trees die and decay, the carbon leaks into the atmosphere and contributes to global warming.
Gora works with the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute and the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, in collaboration with canopy ecologist Steve Yanoviak, quantitative ecologist Helene Muller-Landau, and atmospheric physicists Phillip Bitzer and Jeff Burchfield.
On today's episode, Evan Gora tells Aaron Scott about a few of his shocking discoveries in lightning research, and why Evan says he's developed a healthy respect for the hazards it poses – both to individual researchers and to the forests that life on Earth depends on.
This episode was produced by Devan Schwartz with help from Thomas Lu, edited by Gabriel Spitzer and fact-checked by Brit Hanson.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Largest scratch off prize winner in Massachusetts Lottery history wins $25 million
- Blue Shield of California opts for Amazon, Mark Cuban drug company in switchup
- Mississippi grand jury cites shoddy investigations by police department at center of mistrial
- 'Meet me at the gate': Watch as widow scatters husband's ashes, BASE jumps into canyon
- Nearly 4,000 pages show new detail of Ken Paxton’s alleged misdeeds ahead of Texas impeachment trial
- Shannon Sharpe joining 'First Take' alongside Stephen A. Smith this fall, per report
- James Buckley, Conservative senator and brother of late writer William F. Buckley, dies at 100
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Europe gets more vacations than the U.S. Here are some reasons why.
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- Ukrainian children’s war diaries are displayed in Amsterdam, where Anne Frank wrote in hiding
- Georgia Medicaid program with work requirement off to slow start even as thousands lose coverage
- World's cheapest home? Detroit-area listing turns heads with $1 price tag. Is it legit?
- Police remove gator from pool in North Carolina town: Watch video of 'arrest'
- Rhiannon Giddens is as much scholar as musician. Now, she’s showing her saucy side in a new album
- 'Motivated by insatiable greed': Miami real estate agent who used PPP funds on Bentley sentenced
- Company that leaked radioactive material will build barrier to keep it away from Mississippi River
Recommendation
RFK Jr. grilled again about moving to California while listing New York address on ballot petition
CDC tracking new COVID variant BA.2.86 after highly-mutated strain reported in Michigan
Europe gets more vacations than the U.S. Here are some reasons why.
Jamie Foxx took 'an unexpected dark journey' with his health: 'But I can see the light'
US auto safety agency seeks information from Tesla on fatal Cybertruck crash and fire in Texas
Federal judge rejects some parts of New Mexico campaign finance law
Maui town ravaged by fire will ‘rise again,’ Hawaii governor says of long recovery ahead
Millions of old analog photos are sitting in storage. Digitizing them can unlock countless memories