It wouldn't. Metagenomics involves analysis of DNA taken from the environment. This has absolutely nothing to do with hurricanes or tornadoes.
Hurricanes and tornadoes are both weather phenomena and so would be covered by the study of meteorology. There is no term for the study of hurricanes or tornadoes in particular.
Tornadoes are called "twisters." Hurricanes are sometimes called "tropical storms" before they reach violent wind speeds, and are referred to as "typhoons" in the Pacific. Both tornadoes and hurricanes can be called "cyclones" because they both have violently rotating wind.
I don't believe tornadoes occur over water. Maybe a better question would be "How do hurricanes effect Coral Reefs".
Their main ones that they get affected by is hurricanes, tornadoes, and some flooding.
1)There are constant hurricanes and tornadoes 2)No oxygen 3)No food
The eastern Great Lakes are probably the safest.
i would say Florida. September is the time that they don't have hurricanes or tornadoes... but it is just my opinion.
Well I would think that wildfires or natural disasters like tornadoes,hurricanes are disturbances.
Tornadoes are not given names as hurricanes are, but are often referred to by where they hit. So it would be called the Auckland tornado.
In terms of total energy output no. That title would probably go to hurricanes which are much bigger and longer lasting than tornadoes. However, tornadoes are the most intense storms on earth, with winds that can exceed 300 mph.
Potentially. It is actually fairly common for hurricanes to produce tornadoes. While tornadoes and hurricanes are weather events, earthquakes are geologic and are completely unrelated to weather. Nothing would actually prevent a hurricane or tornado from striking at the same time as an earthquake, but such an event would be entirely by coincidence and therefore extremely unlikely.
A series of tornadoes, floods, and hurricanes happening at the same time would be the WORST thing that could happen in weather.