logo
The Surprising Link Between Penguin Poop and Cloud Formation

The Surprising Link Between Penguin Poop and Cloud Formation

Gizmodo23-05-2025
Scientists have discovered a surprising—and smelly—source of clouds in Antarctica: penguin poop.
According to a new study published in Communications Earth & Environment, ammonia gas emanating from these flightless birds' guano sets off a chain of chemical reactions that causes clouds to form. These clouds may be changing local temperatures in the Antarctic—and perhaps the global climate.
At the Marambio Base on the Antarctic Peninsula, researchers led by Matthew Boyer—a doctoral candidate at the University of Helsinki in Finland—measured the concentration of ammonia wafting from a colony of 60,000 Aldelie penguins from January to March 2023.
When the wind blew from the direction of the colony, ammonia levels spiked, sometimes reaching 1,000 times above normal levels. In February, the penguins left the area to continue their annual migration, but the guano they left behind kept ammonia levels up to 100 times higher than normal for over a month.
Because penguins mainly eat fish and krill, their excrement is full of nitrogen waste that ultimately breaks down into ammonia. This chemical compound rises into the air as gas, then mixes with sulfur gas produced by marine microorganisms, such as phytoplankton. That reaction creates aerosol particles, which then join with water droplets to form clouds.
Previous studies have modeled this chain reaction before, but Boyer and his colleagues watched the clouds form in real time. In February 2023, they measured a particularly strong burst of aerosols from the guano, then sampled a fog that formed just a few hours later. This confirmed that the fog contained particles created by the reaction between ammonia from the guano and sulfuric acid from plankton.
'There is a deep connection between these ecosystem processes, between penguins and phytoplankton at the ocean surface,' Boyer told Grist. 'Their gas is all interacting to form these particles and clouds.'
There are about 20 million penguins living in Antarctica, according to the British Antarctic Survey. This teeming population produces a lot of poop, and therefore a lot of clouds. Computer models have found that these clouds reflect sunlight, leading to significant ground cooling.
Boyer and his colleagues state that more research is needed to fully understand the clouds' impact on local temperatures. But if they do have a cooling effect, they suggest that declining penguin populations could exacerbate Antarctic warming during the summertime.
'It is already understood that widespread loss of sea ice extent threatens the habitat, food sources, and breeding behavior of most penguin species that inhabit Antarctica,' the authors state. 'Consequently, some Antarctic penguin populations are already declining, and some species could be nearly extinct by the end of the 21st century.'
Among the world's 18 penguin species, 11 are globally threatened, according to BirdLife International. The Adelie penguins that Boyer studied, however, are one of the few species whose Antarctic population is experiencing an increase in numbers.
But if these poo clouds are less reflective than the ice beneath it, they may trap heat close to Earth's surface and cause temperatures to rise, Boyer told the Washington Post. Getting to the bottom of these impacts is important because local changes in Antarctica and the Arctic can affect the whole world, particularly in terms of sea level rise.
'The oceans and the penguins are influencing the atmosphere and actually influencing the local climate in Antarctica,' Boyer told the Washington Post. 'The local changes in Antarctica will have an impact on global climate.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Body of Antarctic researcher found 66 years after he disappeared exploring glacier
Body of Antarctic researcher found 66 years after he disappeared exploring glacier

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Body of Antarctic researcher found 66 years after he disappeared exploring glacier

The remains of a 25-year-old Antarctic researcher have been found 66 years after he disappeared when he fell into a crevasse in 1959 during a survey mission, officials said. Dennis "Tink" Bell's remains were found among rocks exposed by a receding glacier at Admiralty Bay on King George Island, situated off the Antarctic Peninsula after he fell into a crevasse on July 26, 1959, and his team was unable to recover his body after the accident, the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) said. Over 200 personal items were also found, including the remains of radio equipment, a flashlight, ski poles, an inscribed Erguel wristwatch, a Swedish Mora knife, ski poles and an ebonite pipe stem, the BAS confirmed. MORE: Prisoner escapes custody at airport while being transported by Department of Corrections officers MORE: $30,000 of stolen Labubus recovered in major California bust 'The remains were carried to the Falkland Islands on the BAS Royal Research Ship Sir David Attenborough and handed into the care of His Majesty's Coroner for British Antarctic Territory, Malcolm Simmons, who accompanied them on the journey from Stanley to London, supported by the Royal Air Force,' officials said. Samples of his DNA were then tested and compared to samples from his brother, David Bell, and his sister, Valerie Kelly, by Denise Syndercombe Court, a professor and forensic geneticist at King's College London, who was able to confirm that the remains found were that of Dennis Bell. 'When my sister Valerie and I were notified that our brother Dennis had been found after 66 years we were shocked and amazed,' said David Bell, who is now living in Australia. 'The British Antarctic Survey and British Antarctic Monument Trust have been a tremendous support and together with the sensitivity of the Polish team in bringing him home have helped us come to terms with the tragic loss of our brilliant brother.' MORE: Coast Guard suspends search for missing fisherman after boat with 4 crew members capsizes MORE: Royal Caribbean water slide malfunction injures cruise ship guest Dennis Bell set out from the Antarctic base with three other men and two dogs on July 26, 1959, and attempted to climb a glacier leading to an ice plateau they were trying to get to so that they could carry out survey and geological work. As they ascended the glacier, Bell, along with surveyor Ben Stokes, negotiated a crevassed area and believed that they were in the clear, according to the BAS. 'The deep soft snow made the going difficult and the dogs showed signs of tiredness. To encourage them Bell went ahead to urge them on, tragically without his skis,' officials with the BAS said in their statement recounting what happened. 'Suddenly he disappeared leaving a gaping hole in the crevasse bridge through which he had fallen.' MORE: 2 hikers rescued by helicopter from remote beach after rising tides cut off exit route MORE: Denmark zoo asks for people to donate their pets to feed its predators 'Despite the terrible conditions and the ever-present risk of falling into another crevasse they continued to search for the scene of the accident,' officials recounted. 'Ken Gibson [witness] remembers 'It was probably twelve hours before we found the site and there was no way he could have survived.'' The remains were discovered on the Ecology Glacier earlier this year in January by personnel from the Henryk Arctowski Polish Antarctic Station on King George Island, though officials made their discovery public on Monday. MORE: 9-year-old dies at Hersheypark's water park in Pennsylvania MORE: Man sentenced to time served for trying to open plane door, stab flight attendant in neck The family will now decide how to mark Dennis's memory. 'Dennis was one of the many brave FIDS personnel who contributed to the early science and exploration of Antarctica under extraordinarily harsh conditions,' Director of BAS Professor Dame Jane Francis said. 'Even though he was lost in 1959, his memory lived on among colleagues and in the legacy of polar research. This discovery brings closure to a decades-long mystery and reminds us of the human stories embedded in the history of Antarctic science.' Solve the daily Crossword

Remains of British Researcher Lost in 1959 Are Discovered Off Antarctica
Remains of British Researcher Lost in 1959 Are Discovered Off Antarctica

New York Times

timea day ago

  • New York Times

Remains of British Researcher Lost in 1959 Are Discovered Off Antarctica

Nearly seven decades after a British researcher plummeted to his death in a glacial crevasse off Antarctica, his remains have been identified and returned to his family, the British Antarctic Survey announced on Monday. The researcher, Dennis Bell, was 25 years old on July 26, 1959, when he fell into a chasm on King George Island, which is part of the South Shetland Islands and is about 75 miles north of Antarctica. Mr. Bell, who grew up in northwest London and was known as Tink, had been working as a meteorologist for the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey, the predecessor of the BAS, which oversees most of Britain's research in Antarctica. Blizzard-like conditions foiled a desperate attempt to rescue him by several other members of the expedition that he was on, according to the organization. This January, while combing through some loose rocks on the island at the front of the Ecology Glacier, which had receded, a research team from Poland discovered human remains that scientists later said matched samples taken from Mr. Bell's brother, David Bell, and sister, Valerie Kelly. 'When my sister Valerie and I were notified that our brother, Dennis, had been found after 66 years, we were shocked and amazed,' David Bell, who lives in Australia, said in a statement provided by the BAS. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Remains of researcher who vanished in 1959 found on Antarctic glacier
Remains of researcher who vanished in 1959 found on Antarctic glacier

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Remains of researcher who vanished in 1959 found on Antarctic glacier

The remains of a British researcher who vanished in 1959 in Antarctica when he was 25 years old were discovered amid rocks near a receding glacier and identified using DNA analysis, the British Antarctic Survey said Monday. Dennis "Tink" Bell had been working as a meteorologist for the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey, the predecessor of the British Antarctic Survey, when he died on July 26, 1959, in a crevasse on a glacier at Admiralty Bay on King George Island, located off the Antarctic Peninsula. His body was never recovered. Bell and another man, Jeff Stokes, left the base they were staying in to survey a glacier using a dogsled, according to the survey. The snow was deep and the dogs began to show signs of tiredness, so Bell walked up to encourage them, but wasn't wearing his skis. He suddenly disappeared into a crevasse. According to accounts in the British Antarctic Survey records, CBS News partner network BBC News reported, Stokes lowered a belt to Bell and he was pulled up to the lip of the crevasse. As he reached the lip of the hole, though, the belt broke, and Bell fell again. He then no longer responded to his friend's calls. The Polish team that found Bell's remains also found over 200 personal items, including an inscribed watch, a Swedish knife, radio equipment and ski poles. "When my sister Valerie and I were notified that our brother Dennis had been found after 66 years, we were shocked and amazed," Bell's brother David told the British Antarctic Survey. David Bell said the work of The British Antarctic Survey, British Antarctic Monument Trust and the Polish team that brought Bell's remains home "helped us come to terms with the tragic loss of our brilliant brother." "I had long given up on finding my brother. It is just remarkable, astonishing. I can't get over it," David Bell, now 86, told BBC News. Jane Francis, the director of the British Antarctic Survey, called the discovery a "poignant and profound moment." "This discovery brings closure to a decades-long mystery and reminds us of the human stories embedded in the history of Antarctic science," Francis said. Bodies exposed by melting glaciers in recent years As glaciers melt and recede around the world, there has been an increase in discoveries of the remains of missing skiers, climbers and hikers. Last year, the preserved body of an American mountaineer was found in Peru, 22 years after he disappeared scaling a snowy peak there. In 2023, the remains of a mountaineer who had been missing for 37 years were recovered from a glacier in the Swiss Alps. In 2017, a shrinking glacier in Switzerland revealed the bodies of a couple who went missing in 1942. Jamie Lee Curtis: The 60 Minutes Interview Derek and the Dominos co-founder Bobby Whitlock dies Artisan bakers sparking sourdough boom Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store