
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.
Published today 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, said 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, Mr 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 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 fertiliser.
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
Mr 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 Mr Boyer emphasised 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 photosynthesising 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," Mr Boyer said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


RTÉ News
3 days ago
- RTÉ News
Milky Way may not be destroyed in galactic smash-up after all
The Milky Way may not have a catastrophic collision with another huge galaxy as has been predicted, computer simulations have revealed, giving our home galaxy a coin-flip chance of avoiding destruction. But don't worry either way: no galactic smash-up is expected for billions of years, long after our ageing Sun will have burnt away all life on Earth. The Milky Way and the even-larger galaxy Andromeda are speeding towards each other at 100 kilometres a second, and scientists have long predicted they will collide in around 4.5 billion years. That would be bad news for our neighbourhood. Previous research has suggested that the Sun - and our Earth - could wind up in the centre of this newly merged "Milkomeda" galaxy and get sucked into its supermassive black hole. Alternatively, the Sun could be shot out into the emptiness of intergalactic space. However "proclamations of the impending demise of our galaxy seem greatly exaggerated", according to a new study in the journal Nature Astronomy. There is only a roughly 50% chance the Milky Way and Andromeda will smash into each other in the next 10 billion years, the international team of astrophysicists determined. "It's basically a coin flip," lead study author Till Sawala of the University of Helsinki told AFP. The researchers ran more than 100,000 computer simulations of our universe's future, using new observations from space telescopes. A galaxy merger in the next five billion years is "extremely unlikely", Mr Sawala said. Much more likely is that the galaxies will zoom relatively close to each other - say, a little under 500,000 light years away. In only half of the simulations did dark matter then eventually drag the two galaxies together into a cataclysmic embrace. But this would likely only occur in around eight billion years - long after our Sun has died, the researchers found. "So it could be that our galaxy will end up destroyed," Mr Sawala said. "But it's also possible that our galaxy and Andromeda will orbit one another for tens of billions of years - we just don't know." Galaxy's fate 'open' "The fate of our galaxy is still completely open," the study summarised. The researchers emphasised that their findings did not mean that previous calculations were incorrect, just that they had used newer observations and taken into account the effect of more satellite galaxies. Future data releases from Europe's recently retired Gaia space telescope as well as Hubble could provide a definitive answer to this question within the next decade, Mr Sawala predicted. How much all this all matters to us is a matter of debate. The Sun is expected to make Earth inhospitable to life in around a billion years. "We might have some emotional attachment" to what happens after we're gone, Mr Sawala said. "I might prefer the Milky Way not to collide with Andromeda, even though it has absolutely no relevance to my own life - or the lives of my children or great-great grandchildren."


Irish Independent
28-05-2025
- Irish Independent
‘A shocking situation' – global heating could surpass 2C level for the first time in next five years
Scientists had hoped 2024 would not be repeated for some time but now say there is unlikely to be any respite. They say the record, which saw 2024 become the first full year when global average temperatures breached the 1.5C of warming threshold, is very likely to be beaten by 2029. Worse still, there is a small chance that a full year could breach 2C. 'It's exceptionally unlikely – something like a 1pc chance,' said Dr Leon Hermanson of the UK Met Office which carried out the analysis with the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO). 'But we are now in relation to 2C where we were in 2015 in relation to 1.5C.' In 2015, it was thought highly unlikely that the 1.5C threshold would be breached much before 2030 but warming occurred much faster than expected. 'We are really very close now to having 1.5C years commonplace,' said Professor Adam Scaife, head of long-range prediction at the Met Office. 'This is a shocking situation and there is even a chance now of 2C. 'It's the first time we have ever seen such an event on our computer models. It's still exceptionally unlikely but it's now possible. It was effectively impossible just a few years ago.' The 1.5C threshold refers to the amount of extra heat the world now holds compared to pre-industrial times before emissions from fossil fuel burning rocketed. It causes major changes in ice-melt, rainfall intensity, storm strength, heatwaves and droughts. ADVERTISEMENT The world's countries signed the Paris Agreement in 2015 pledging to keep warming to as close to 1.5C as possible and not to let it rise to 2C but warming and impacts have accelerated faster than expected since then. Warming is not spread evenly across the globe but the impacts have knock-on effects internationally. Arctic warming outstripped the global average last year and could be 3.5 times the global average in the next five years, accelerating ice melt further. Predictions to 2029 are for an upset to traditional rainfall patterns, with wetter than average conditions in the Sahel – the region that stretches across Africa below the Sahara – and drier than average conditions in the normally rain-abundant Amazon. The scientists acknowledge than unforeseen events could derail their predictions – such as a major volcanic eruption spewing ash that blocks the sun and holds down temperatures. But they warn the overall trend is clear that the planet is warming and will continue to do so without a rapid and dramatic end to emissions. 'We have just experienced the 10 warmest years on record,' said WMO deputy secretary-general Ko Barrett. 'Unfortunately, this WMO report provides no sign of respite over the coming years, and this means that there will be a growing negative impact on our economies, our daily lives, our ecosystems and our planet.'


RTÉ News
22-05-2025
- RTÉ News
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. Published today 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, said 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, Mr 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 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 fertiliser. 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 Mr 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 Mr Boyer emphasised 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 photosynthesising 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," Mr Boyer said.