Chaitén Volcano in southern Chile erupted on May 2,
2008 for the first time inn 9,000 years. NASA satellites that monitor changes
in vegetation near volcanoes could aid in earlier eruption warnings.
Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center
Scientists know that changing tree leaves can indicate when a nearby
volcano is becoming more active and might erupt. In a new collaboration between
NASA and the Smithsonian Institution, scientists now believe they can detect
these changes from space.
As volcanic magma ascends through
the Earth’s crust, it releases carbon dioxide and other gases which rise to the
surface. Trees that take up the carbon dioxide become greener and more lush.
These changes are visible in images from NASA satellites such as Landsat 8,
along with airborne instruments flown as part of the Airborne Validation
Unified Experiment: Land to Ocean (AVUELO).
Ten percent of the world’s population lives in areas susceptible to volcanic hazards. People who live or work within a few miles of an eruption face dangers that include ejected rock, dust, and surges of hot, toxic gases. Further away, people and property are susceptible to mudslides, ashfalls, and tsunamis that can follow volcanic blasts. There’s no way to prevent volcanic eruptions, which makes the early signs of volcanic activity crucial for public safety. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, NASA’s Landsat mission partner, the United States is one of the world’s most volcanically active countries.
Carbon dioxide released by rising
magma bubbles up and heats a pool of water in Costa Rica near the Rincón de
LaVieja volcano. Increases in volcanic gases could be a sign that a volcano is
becoming more active.
Alessandra Baltodano/Chapman
University
When magma rises underground before an eruption, it releases gases,
including carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide. The sulfur compounds are readily
detectable from orbit. But the volcanic carbon dioxide emissions that precede
sulfur dioxide emissions – and provide one of the earliest indications that a
volcano is no longer dormant – are difficult to distinguish from space.
The remote
detection of carbon dioxide greening of vegetation potentially gives scientists
another tool — along with seismic waves and changes in ground height—to get a
clear idea of what’s going on underneath the volcano. “Volcano early warning
systems exist,” said volcanologist Florian Schwandner, chief of the Earth
Science Division at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley,
who had teamed up with climate scientist Josh Fisher of Chapman University in
Orange, California and and volcanologist Robert Bogue of McGill University in
Montreal a decade ago. “The aim here is to make them better and make them
earlier.”
“Volcanoes emit a lot of carbon dioxide,” said Bogue, but there’s so much existing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that it’s often hard to measure the volcanic carbon dioxide specifically. While major eruptions can expel enough carbon dioxide to be measurable from space with sensors like NASA’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory 2, detecting these much fainter advanced warning signals has remained elusive. “A volcano emitting the modest amounts of carbon dioxide that might presage an eruption isn’t going to show up in satellite imagery,” he added.
Gregory Goldsmith from Chapman University launches a
slingshot into the forest canopy to install a carbon dioxide sensor in the
canopy of a Costa Rican rainforest near the Rincón de LaVieja volcano.
Alessandra Baltodano/Chapman University
Because of this, scientists must trek to volcanoes to measure carbon
dioxide directly. However, many of the roughly 1,350 potentially active volcanoes worldwide are in remote locations or challenging
mountainous terrain. That makes monitoring carbon dioxide at these sites
labor-intensive, expensive, and sometimes dangerous.
Volcanologists like Bogue have
joined forces with botanists and climate scientists to look at trees to monitor
volcanic activity. “The whole idea is to find something that we could measure
instead of carbon dioxide directly,” Bogue said, “to give us a proxy to detect
changes in volcano emissions.”
“There are plenty of satellites we
can use to do this kind of analysis,” said volcanologist Nicole Guinn of the
University of Houston. She has compared images collected with Landsat 8, NASA’s Terra satellite, ESA’s (European Space Agency) Sentinel-2, and
other Earth-observing satellites to monitor trees around the Mount Etna volcano
on the coast of Sicily. Guinn’s study is the first to show a strong correlation
between tree leaf color and magma-generated carbon dioxide.
Confirming accuracy on the ground that validates the satellite imagery is a challenge that Fisher is tackling with surveys of trees around volcanoes. During the March 2025 Airborne Validation Unified Experiment: Land to Ocean mission with NASA and the Smithsonian Institution scientists deployed a spectrometer on a research plane to analyze the colors of plant life in Panama and Costa Rica.
Alexandria Pivovaroff of Occidental College measures
photosynthesis in leaves extracted from trees exposed to elevated levels of
carbon dioxide near a volcano in Costa Rica.
Alessandra Baltodano/Chapman University
Fisher directed a group of investigators who collected leaf samples from
trees near the active Rincon de la Vieja volcano in Costa Rica while also
measuring carbon dioxide levels. “Our research is a two-way
interdisciplinary intersection between ecology and volcanology,” Fisher said.
“We’re interested not only in tree responses to volcanic carbon dioxide as an
early warning of eruption, but also in how much the trees are able to take up,
as a window into the future of the Earth when all of Earth’s trees are exposed
to high levels of carbon dioxide.”
Relying on trees as proxies for volcanic carbon dioxide has its limitations. Many volcanoes feature climates that don’t support enough trees for satellites to image. In some forested environments, trees that respond differently to changing carbon dioxide levels. And fires, changing weather conditions, and plant diseases can complicate the interpretation of satellite data on volcanic gases.
Chapman University visiting professor Gaku Yokoyama
checks on the leaf-measuring instrumentation at a field site near the Rincón de
LaVieja volcano.
Alessandra Baltodano/Chapman University
Still, Schwandner has witnessed the potential benefits of volcanic carbon
dioxide observations first-hand. He led a team that upgraded the monitoring
network at Mayon volcano in the Philippines to include carbon dioxide and
sulfur dioxide sensors. In December 2017, government researchers in the
Philippines used this system to detect signs of an impending eruption and
advocated for mass evacuations of the area around the volcano. Over 56,000
people were safely evacuated before a massive eruption began on January 23,
2018. As a result of the early warnings, there were no casualties.
Using satellites to monitor trees
around volcanoes would give scientists earlier insights into more volcanoes and
offer earlier warnings of future eruptions. “There’s not one signal from
volcanoes that’s a silver bullet,” Schwandner said. “And tracking the effects
of volcanic carbon dioxide on trees will not be a silver bullet. But it will be
something that could change the game.”
By James Riordon
NASA’s Earth Science News Team
Source: NASA Satellite Images Could Provide Early Volcano Warnings - NASA
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