'The entire habitat is gone': Hawaii's natural wonders claimed by lava
The Kilauea eruption has wiped out rare sites and whole ecosystems. As the island mourns a tragedy, it also accepts the brutal cycle of nature
In Puna, the area of Hawaii island that's been hardest hit by the Kilauea volcano eruption, those who lived nearest to the lava flows watched the forest around their homes begin to die first. They said the fruit trees, flowers and ferns began turning brown, languishing in the noxious, sulfur-dioxide-filled air. Then the lava came. Now large swaths of formerly verdant forest has been replaced by rough and barren volcanic terrain.
"Before the eruptions, that area was probably the best forest left in the state of Hawaii," said Patrick Hart, a biology professor at the University of Hawaii at Hilo. "There were areas where the native Ohia forest extended right up to the ocean, and you just don't see that in the rest of Hawaii," he said. Now it's covered with 20 to 30ft of lava.
Continue reading...