Trees Could Help Predict Volcanic Eruptions, Say Geologists

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Trees and plants could one day help predict volcanic eruptions, geologists have discovered.

This is because some trees are extremely sensitive to changes in volcanic gases, a new study published in Geochemistry, Geophysics, and Geosystems said. And these changes are actually visible from space.

The study, led by Robert Bogue of the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Canada’s McGill University, focused on data from Yellowstone National Park between 1984 and 2022.

“We detected signals of this increased health from 1984 to 2001 in Yellowstone National Park, USA,” the study said. ” One area of the forest that was exposed to volcanic gasses was healthier than nearly identical, nearby forests growing without the influence of the volcano.”

A volcano is surrounded in lush forests. One day, trees could help scientists predict a coming eruption, according to a study.
Gani Pradana Ongko Prastowo/Getty

This suggests that volcanic carbon dioxide and water are beneficial to the trees and their vegetation. But when volcanic activity increases, it starts to harm the trees’ health. The researchers found that plants browned as eruptions grew closer.

“We detected increases in plant stress caused by increases in soil temperature and sulfur emissions before they were detectable by other types of satellites,” the study said. “Combining these two contrasting effects represents a promising new path for additional monitoring of active volcanoes.”

This finding is not only fascinating but could be useful in predicting volcanic eruptions one day.

Although scientists can guess if an eruption is about to take place based on the activity a volcano is displaying, eruptions are generally quite difficult to predict. Sometimes there will be many signs of an impending eruption, but one does not take place. Other times there is little warning before an eruption occurs.

For this reason, scientists are always on the lookout for new ways to measure volcanic activity.

From these findings, scientists using satellites may one day be able to predict eruptions based on the health of vegetation surrounding volcanoes.

Although the technique may not work for some volcanoes, it could prove particularly useful for volcanoes like Mount Etna in Italy and the Taal Volcano in the Philippines because forests and trees surround these mountains, New Delhi Television reported.

In some cases, timely predictions of volcanic eruptions can save lives. Many deadly volcanic eruptions occurred at times when experts knew little about the science behind the phenomenon.

However, a lot more research will need to be done before the assessment of trees and plants is a viable method for predicting eruptions.

“Combining ground-based plant and gas emission measurements with our satellite approach could yield a much more comprehensive understanding of volcanic volatile emissions than either approach individually,” the study read.

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