The Prague Post - The surprising climate power of penguin poo

EUR -
AED 4.140023
AFN 78.900062
ALL 97.738032
AMD 433.320557
ANG 2.017233
AOA 1034.160738
ARS 1280.761724
AUD 1.757352
AWG 2.030275
AZN 1.919384
BAM 1.950001
BBD 2.27324
BDT 137.132176
BGN 1.955162
BHD 0.42498
BIF 3308.742723
BMD 1.127148
BND 1.454455
BOB 7.780035
BRL 6.319808
BSD 1.125852
BTN 96.758246
BWP 15.193478
BYN 3.684443
BYR 22092.099257
BZD 2.261424
CAD 1.562571
CDF 3229.279118
CHF 0.935199
CLF 0.027695
CLP 1062.754206
CNY 8.118287
CNH 8.120047
COP 4705.842571
CRC 572.198312
CUC 1.127148
CUP 29.86942
CVE 109.93805
CZK 24.888595
DJF 200.316769
DKK 7.459128
DOP 66.452374
DZD 149.580432
EGP 56.223723
ERN 16.907219
ETB 152.545508
FJD 2.557104
FKP 0.838357
GBP 0.840097
GEL 3.088051
GGP 0.838357
GHS 13.115704
GIP 0.838357
GMD 81.154414
GNF 9752.995105
GTQ 8.642298
GYD 235.544279
HKD 8.822621
HNL 29.305492
HRK 7.53758
HTG 147.321872
HUF 403.477253
IDR 18442.507002
ILS 4.052942
IMP 0.838357
INR 96.905865
IQD 1474.913684
IRR 47481.106114
ISK 144.804985
JEP 0.838357
JMD 178.907937
JOD 0.799136
JPY 162.540932
KES 145.627876
KGS 98.569225
KHR 4506.697277
KMF 489.710691
KPW 1014.467561
KRW 1558.479228
KWD 0.346102
KYD 0.938189
KZT 570.224183
LAK 24335.30423
LBP 100878.530021
LKR 337.027697
LRD 225.165376
LSL 20.298633
LTL 3.328175
LVL 0.681801
LYD 6.150708
MAD 10.401766
MDL 19.550857
MGA 5059.840075
MKD 61.5298
MMK 2366.845897
MNT 4031.779808
MOP 9.07521
MRU 44.572444
MUR 51.228804
MVR 17.425575
MWK 1952.151107
MXN 21.76263
MYR 4.818554
MZN 72.036044
NAD 20.298633
NGN 1791.871815
NIO 41.426799
NOK 11.499529
NPR 154.810169
NZD 1.909597
OMR 0.433917
PAB 1.125837
PEN 4.140786
PGK 4.615274
PHP 62.849568
PKR 317.490201
PLN 4.252577
PYG 8979.296045
QAR 4.115062
RON 5.06225
RSD 116.872428
RUB 89.806734
RWF 1612.767942
SAR 4.227887
SBD 9.41255
SCR 16.024479
SDG 676.850801
SEK 10.861693
SGD 1.456641
SHP 0.885761
SLE 25.608528
SLL 23635.728576
SOS 643.378065
SRD 41.30969
STD 23329.686267
SVC 9.850705
SYP 14655.306205
SZL 20.295642
THB 37.040297
TJS 11.466545
TMT 3.950653
TND 3.368083
TOP 2.639894
TRY 43.865894
TTD 7.652243
TWD 33.895027
TZS 3040.479738
UAH 46.732719
UGX 4110.774772
USD 1.127148
UYU 46.830728
UZS 14566.67946
VES 106.906063
VND 29279.357977
VUV 136.657713
WST 3.036359
XAF 654.003325
XAG 0.034039
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.046174
XDR 0.811776
XOF 654.012003
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.85529
ZAR 20.292267
ZMK 10145.684059
ZMW 30.708356
ZWL 362.941171
  • BCC

    -0.5900

    86.74

    -0.68%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    12.59

    -1.03%

  • CMSC

    -0.0990

    21.951

    -0.45%

  • SCS

    0.1150

    10.125

    +1.14%

  • GSK

    0.2400

    38.78

    +0.62%

  • AZN

    0.5200

    70.2

    +0.74%

  • BCE

    0.0630

    21.533

    +0.29%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    73.72

    +0.2%

  • RBGPF

    4.2000

    67.2

    +6.25%

  • RIO

    -0.3150

    61.665

    -0.51%

  • RYCEF

    0.3300

    11.25

    +2.93%

  • BTI

    0.1050

    44.565

    +0.24%

  • CMSD

    -0.0380

    21.752

    -0.17%

  • VOD

    0.1250

    10.545

    +1.19%

  • RELX

    -0.0500

    55.05

    -0.09%

  • BP

    0.1000

    28.98

    +0.35%

The surprising climate power of penguin poo
The surprising climate power of penguin poo / Photo: Mark RALSTON - AFP/File

The surprising climate power of penguin poo

Antarctica's icy wilderness is warming rapidly under the weight of human-driven climate change, yet a new study points to an unlikely ally in the fight to keep the continent cool: penguin poo.

Text size:

Published Thursday in Communications Earth & Environment, the research shows that ammonia wafting off penguin guano seeds extra cloud cover above coastal Antarctica, likely blocking sunlight and nudging temperatures down.

Lead author Matthew Boyer, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Helsinki, told AFP that lab studies had long shown gaseous ammonia can help form clouds.

But "to actually quantify this process and to see its influence in Antarctica hasn't been done," he said.

Antarctica is an ideal natural laboratory. With virtually no human pollution and scant vegetation -- both alternative sources of cloud-forming gases -- penguin colonies dominate as ammonia emitters.

The birds' future, however, is under threat.

Shrinking sea ice disrupts their nesting, feeding and predator-avoidance routines -- making it all the more urgent to understand their broader ecological role.

Along with other seabirds such as Imperial Shags, penguins expel large amounts of ammonia through droppings, an acrid cocktail of feces and urine released via their multi-purpose cloacas.

When that ammonia mixes with sulfur-bearing gases from phytoplankton -- the microscopic algae that bloom in the surrounding ocean -- it boosts the formation of tiny aerosol particles that grow into clouds.

To capture the effect in the real world, Boyer and teammates set up instruments at Argentina's Marambio Base on Seymour Island, off the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula.

Over three summer months -- when penguin colonies are bustling and phytoplankton photosynthesis peaks -- they monitored wind direction, ammonia levels and newly minted aerosols.

When the breeze blew from a 60,000-strong Adelie penguin colony eight kilometers (five miles) away, atmospheric ammonia spiked to 13.5  parts per billion -- about a thousand times the background level.

For over a month after the birds had departed on their annual migration, concentrations stayed roughly 100 times higher, with the guano-soaked ground acting as a slow-release fertilizer.

Particle counters told the same story: cloud-seeding aerosols surged whenever air masses arrived from the colony, at times thick enough to generate a dense fog.

Chemical fingerprints in the particles pointed back to penguin-derived ammonia.

- Penguin-plankton partnership -

Boyer calls it a "synergistic process" between penguins and phytoplankton that supercharges aerosol production in the region.

"We provide evidence that declining penguin populations could cause a positive climate-warming feedback in the summertime Antarctic atmosphere," the authors write -- though Boyer emphasized that this remains a hypothesis, not a confirmed outcome.

Globally, clouds have a net cooling effect by reflecting solar radiation back into space. Based on Arctic modeling of seabird emissions, the team believes a similar mechanism is likely at play in Antarctica.

But the impact also depends on what's beneath the clouds.

Ice sheets and glaciers also reflect much of the Sun's energy, so extra cloud cover over these bright surfaces could trap infrared heat instead -- meaning the overall effect hinges on where the clouds form and drift.

Still, the findings highlight the profound interconnections between life and the atmosphere -- from the Great Oxygenation Event driven by photosynthesizing microbes billions of years ago to penguins influencing cloud cover today.

"This is just another example of this deep connection between the ecosystem and atmospheric processes, and why we should care about biodiversity and conservation," Boyer said.

E.Soukup--TPP