Hurricane Gilbert struck Jamaica in 1988, and the damage it left in its wake might have allowed warm-adapted trees that normally grow at low altitudes to take root on the island’s mountains
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The destruction caused when tropical storms sweep across cool, high-elevation areas may open up enough ecological space for warm-adapted plant species to establish themselves, speeding up the ecological shifts caused by climate change
Edmund Tanner at the University of Cambridge began tracking vegetation plots that are about 1580 metres above sea level in the Blue mountains of eastern Jamaica in the mid-1970s, suspecting that a hurricane might come through his study area at some point …