News
Lucky strike. Lightning is often seen as a killer, leaving behind destruction and death of trees — but one tropical species has evolved to use the force of nature to its benefit.
The Lightning, along with the NHL, will produce a real-time, animated broadcast of the 2 p.m. game against the Islanders, programming they are calling “Hockey Paradise.” ...
The Definitive "Hockey Paradise" FAQ Guide Everything you need to know for Saturday’s real-time, animated Lightning game in the most magical version of Tampa Bay you’ve ever seen ...
Nature’s shock therapy: How lightning strikes help this tropical tree. Dipteryx oleifera is native to Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador. Evan Gora.
Though being struck by lightning is usually bad, the tropical tree Dipteryx oleifera benefits. A strike kills other nearby trees and parasitic vines.
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 ...
Lightning strikes on the almendros also reduced the average number of parasitic vines on a tree by 78 percent, by killing them. These vines climb on top of the trees to “steal” light.
NWS in Ruskin, the office that covers the Fort Myers-Cape Coral area, is forecasting an 80% to 90% chance rain through ...
Lightning to take live game programming to a virtual ‘Hockey Paradise’ A look at the virtual environment that will serve as the setting for the Lightning's real-time, animated broadcast of ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results