Poop pinpoints penguins
Last Updated: Friday, June 5, 2009 | 5:48 PM ET
The Associated Press
Scientists looking for lost penguins have stumbled upon an effective method of tracking the seabirds: follow their poop from space.
Researchers in remote Antarctica have been unable to figure out just where colonies of emperor penguins live and whether their population is in peril.
It's harder still because emperor penguins breed on sea ice, which scientists say will shrink significantly in the future because of global warming.
Because the large penguins stay on the same ice for months, their poop stains make them stand out from space.
Scientists at the British Antarctic Survey found this out by accident when they were looking at satellite images of their bases. A reddish-brown streak on the colourless ice was right where they knew a penguin colony was, said survey mapping scientist Peter Fretwell.
The stain was penguin poo — particularly smelly stuff — and it gave researchers an idea to search for brown stains to find penguins. They found the same telltale trail, usually dark enough to spot from space, all over the continent, said Fretwell by telephone from England.
Using satellite data, the scientists found 10 new penguin colonies, six that had moved from previously mapped positions to new spots and another six that seemed to have disappeared. Overall, 38 colonies were spotted from above, according to Fretwell's paper, Penguins From Space, in the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography.
Serious result from lighthearted method
"It's a very important result scientifically, even though it's a lighthearted method," Fretwell said Monday.
Although Antarctic sea ice hasn't melted so far, scientists predict it to shrink by one-third by the end of the century, potentially threatening the birds, Fretwell said.
The research is "incredibly useful," because the only time to see emperors are during breeding in winter when weather makes it nearly impossible to get to the colonies, said longtime penguin researcher William Fraser, who wasn't involved in the study.
Fraser noted that salty penguin guano, as the poo of seabirds is known, "over time will corrode your boots," adding that he has lost nearly a dozen pairs to poop in 35 years of penguin research.
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