The world’s bananas are at risk. A volcanic island might protect them.

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Pushing back flaps of yellowing banana leaves, Moisés Pulido trudges through a layer of dusty soil covering his plantation on the coast of La Palma. Under the blinding sun, batches of bananas are just about visible under the treetops, nestled together in lime-green bunches.

In late 2021, when the Cumbre Vieja volcano erupted on the western edge of this island in the Atlantic Ocean, burying 300 hectares (about 740 acres) of banana trees in ash and destroying 200 more, farmers like Mr. Pulido couldn’t imagine the volcano was doing them any favors.

But the Cumbre Vieja eruption could actually hold some of the answers to keeping bananas viable in the future, not just here but elsewhere.

Why We Wrote This

Cavendish bananas, the world’s most popular type, are under threat from a fungus that has wiped out other varieties. But the island of La Palma may have just the conditions to protect them.

A fungus behind the condition known as Fusarium wilt – or Panama disease – is threatening bananas around the world. Some say the fungus, which blocks the flow of water and nutrients to the plant through its roots, could cause the popular Cavendish banana to go extinct.

But unlike in tropical areas such as parts of India and China, where most of the world’s bananas are produced, the subtropical climate of the Canary Islands – and La Palma’s western coast, in particular – has provided a path of resistance to the wilt.

After the Cumbre Vieja volcano erupted in 2021, Mr. Pulido had to start over. In less than a year, his first crop of bananas has grown on top of hardened lava, in Los Llanos de Aridane, Spain.

Indeed, the volcanic ash that farmers once lamented after Cumbre Vieja’s eruption contains vital nutrients that protect the plant – and could be a key to bananas’ survival.

“Tropical crops, such as bananas, grow more slowly and are less productive [here] than in tropical places,” says Antonio Marrero, associate professor of agricultural and environmental engineering at the University of La Laguna in San Cristóbal de La Laguna, Spain. “But, in exchange, many of the diseases of tropical places are absent in the Canary Islands.”

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