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Effects of volcanic and hydrologic processes on forest vegetation: Chaitén Volcano, Chile

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Title Effects of volcanic and hydrologic processes on forest vegetation: Chaitén Volcano, Chile
Names Swanson, Frederick J. (creator)
Jones, Julia A. (creator)
Crisafulli, Charles M. (creator)
Lara, Antonio (creator)
Date Issued 2013-04-16 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work.
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería (National Survey of Geology and Mining) and can be found at: http://www.sernageomin.cl/.
Abstract The 2008-2009 eruption of Chaitén Volcano (Chile) involved a variety of volcanic and associated hydrologic
processes that damaged nearby forests. These processes included coarse (gravel) and fine (silt to sand) tephra fall, a
laterally directed blast, fluvial deposition of remobilized tephra, a variety of low-temperature mass-movement processes,
and a pyroclastic flow. Each of these geophysical processes constitutes a type of ecosystem disturbance which involves a
distinctive suite of disturbance mechanisms, namely burial by tephra and sediment, heating, abrasion, impact force, and
canopy loading (accumulation of tephra in tree crowns). Each process affected specific areas, and created patches and
disturbance gradients in the forest landscape. Coarse tephra (‘gravel rain’, >5 cm depth) abraded foliage from tree canopies
over an area of approximately 50 km² north-northeast of the vent. Fine tephra (>10 cm depth) accumulated in tree crowns
and led to breakage of branches in old forest and bowing of flexible, young trees over an area of about 480 km². A directed
blast down the north flank of the volcano damaged forest over an area of 4 km². This blast zone included an area of
tree removal near the crater rim, toppled forest farther down the slope, and standing, scorched forest around the blast
perimeter. Fluvial deposition of >100 cm of remobilized tephra, beginning about 10 days after initiation of the eruption,
buried floodplain forest in distinct, elongate streamside patches covering 5 km² of the lower 19 km of the Rayas
River and several km² of the lower Chaitén River. Across this array of disturbance processes the fate of affected trees
varied from complete mortality in the tree removal and pyroclastic flow areas, to no mortality in areas of thin tephra fall
deposits. Tree damage included defoliation, loss of branches, snapping of tree trunks, abrasion of bark and ephiphytes,
and uprooting. Damaged trees sprouted from epicormic buds located in trunks and branches, but sprouting varied over
time among disturbance mechanisms and species. Although some effects of the Chaitén eruption are very similar to
those from the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens (USA), interactions between biota and geophysical processes at
Chaitén produced some unique effects. Examination of vegetation response helps interpret geophysical processes, and
disturbance mechanisms influence early stages of biotic response to an eruption.
Genre Article
Topic Environmental impacts
Identifier Swanson, F., Jones, J., Crisafulli, C., & Lara, A. (2013). Effects of volcanic and hydrologic processes on forest vegetation: Chaiten volcano, chile. Andean Geology, 40(2), 359-391. doi:10.5027/andgeoV40n2-a10

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