Climate change: Penguin guano may help reduce effects of climate change in Antarctica
2025-05-22
(Press-News.org) Ammonia released from penguin guano may help to reduce the effects of climate change in the Antarctic by contributing to increased cloud formation, according to an analysis published in Communications Earth & Environment. The conclusion is the result of measurements taken downwind of a colony of Adelie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae).
Antarctic ecosystems are facing significant pressures because of human-driven climate change, including a recent decreasing trend in the area covered by sea ice. Penguins are key species in the Antarctic ecosystem whose habitat is threatened by this ongoing ice loss. They are also, along with other seabirds, major emitters of ammonia in the region. Ammonia can increase cloud formation by reacting with gases containing sulphur to increase the creation of aerosols — particles which give water vapour a surface to condense upon, leading to cloud formation. The resulting clouds can act as insulating layers in the atmosphere, often helping to reduce surface temperatures and subsequently affecting the extent of sea ice coverage. However, the specific interaction between penguins and the Antarctic climate is currently poorly understood.
Matthew Boyer, Mikko Sipilä, and colleagues measured the concentration of ammonia in the air at a site near Marambio Base, Antarctica, between 10 January and 20 March 2023. They observed that when the wind blew from the direction of a 60,000-individual Adelie penguin colony around 8 kilometres away, the ammonia concentration increased to as high as 13.5 parts per billion — more than 1,000 times higher than the baseline value (less than 10.5 parts per trillion). Even after the penguins migrated from the area towards the end of February, the ammonia concentration was still more than 100 times higher than the baseline, as the penguin guano left at the colony site continued to emit the gas.
To confirm that the increase in ammonia concentration affected aerosol particle concentration, the authors recorded several additional atmospheric measurements on a single day. When the wind blew from the penguin colony, the number, and size, of aerosol particles recorded at the site sharply increased, with the authors later (approximately three hours after the wind changed) observing a period of fog which they say was likely a result of the increased aerosol particle concentration.
The results suggest that penguin guano may be helping to reduce the effects of climate change on the penguins’ own habitat of Antarctica. The authors say that their work emphasises the importance, and benefits, of protecting seabirds and their habitats from the effects of climate change.
****
Springer Nature is committed to boosting the visibility of the UN Sustainable Development Goals and relevant information and evidence published in our journals and books. The research described in this press release pertains to SDG 13 (Climate Actions) and SDG 15 (Life on Land). More information can be found here.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-05-22
Key Findings
Women living in neighborhoods with high vulnerability had a higher risk of earlier natural menopause onset, primarily due to socioeconomic status and household conditions.
No significant association was found between neighborhood disadvantage and the severity of menopause symptoms.
Boston, MA – A new study led by the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute highlights the significant impact of living in disadvantaged neighborhoods on the onset of menopause. The research followed 691 women from pregnancy to midlife and found that those residing in highly vulnerable neighborhoods, particularly within 10 years of perimenopause onset, experienced menopause approximately two ...
2025-05-22
About The Study: In this cross-sectional study, 1 in 10 patients hospitalized for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) had a concurrent acute cardiovascular event. Odds of cardiac events were significantly higher in RSV vs COVID-19 hospitalizations in both vaccine-boosted and unboosted individuals. In contemporaneous hospitalizations for RSV or influenza after the pandemic (2023-2024), odds of heart failure were significantly higher in RSV hospitalizations vs vaccine-breakthrough influenza hospitalizations. These findings suggest that patients with preexisting cardiovascular risk should consider vaccination ...
2025-05-22
About The Study: In this cohort study of children in the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) cohort, analyses identified children on the path to obesity as early as age 3.5 years. Modifiable factors could be targeted for early prevention and intervention programs aimed at reducing childhood obesity.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Chang Liu, PhD, email c.liu@wsu.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.11835)
Editor’s ...
2025-05-22
Radboudumc researchers Kirsten van Abeelen, Edwin Ardiansyah, Sofiati Dian, Vinod Kumar, Reinout van Crevel and Arjan van Laarhoven used metabolomics to study cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from tuberculous meningitis patients in Vietnam and Indonesia, with long-standing collaborators from Bandung and Jakarta (Indonesia), the Broad Institute (Boston) and the Oxford University Research Unit in Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam).
Meningitis is the most severe form of tuberculosis. Damaging inflammation contributes to its poor prognosis. Corticosteroids reduce mortality, but ...
2025-05-22
Not all children grow the same way. A new study from the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program suggests that body weight changes in early childhood may be associated with later obesity risk.
Funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the study tracked children’s body mass index (BMI) from infancy through age 9 and found two distinct growth patterns. Most children followed a typical curve, with BMI decreasing in early childhood before gradually rising again. But a smaller group followed a trajectory marked by a sharp rise in BMI, ...
2025-05-22
Key Takeaways
Helmet laws work (when they’re universal): Motorcycle riders in North Carolina (with a universal helmet law) wore a helmet 94% of the time compared with 47% of riders in South Carolina (partial law).
Helmets mean less severe injuries: Motorcyclists who wore helmets were less likely to die or require intensive care after an accident.
Lost progress: Helmet laws have been rolled back in many states resulting in only 19 states now having universal helmet laws.
CHICAGO — New ...
2025-05-22
A potentially lifesaving new smartphone app can help people determine if they are suffering heart attacks or strokes and should seek medical attention, a clinical study suggests.
The ECHAS app (Emergency Call for Heart Attack and Stroke) is being developed by experts at UVA Health, Harvard, Northeastern and other leading institutions. It is designed to help people recognize the signs of cardiac and neurological emergencies so that they get care as quickly as possible, for the best possible outcomes.
Put to the test in an initial clinical study with more than 200 real-life emergency-room ...
2025-05-22
“Although Brazilian plant species show promising potential as therapeutic agents in SC, the available studies are still scarce.”
BUFFALO, NY — May 22, 2025 — A new review was published in Volume 12 of Oncoscience on May 8, 2025, titled “The chemopreventive effects of native Brazilian plants on stomach cancer: A review of the last 25 years.”
The study led by first author Iara Lopes Lemos and corresponding author Mario Roberto Marostica Junior from the University of Campinas reviewed scientific studies published over the past 25 ...
2025-05-22
Infections from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in children requiring primary care led to significant societal economic costs from outpatient treatment and parental work absences in Europe, according to a study just published on Eurosurveillance.
The study sought to provide insights for public health policy and support costs and benefits analyses for RSV immunisation strategies. RSV infections are a leading cause of acute respiratory infections in children, with nearly all children experiencing at least one RSV infection by the age of 2. While some children develop a severe form of RSV disease that might require hospitalisation, ...
2025-05-22
Machine learning at the core
‘Aurora uses state-of-the-art machine learning techniques to deliver superior forecasts for key environmental systems—air quality, weather, ocean waves, and tropical cyclones,’ explains Max Welling, machine learning expert at the University of Amsterdam and one of the researchers behind the model. Unlike conventional methods, Aurora requires far less computational power, making high-quality forecasting more accessible and scalable—especially in regions that lack expensive infrastructure.
Trained on a million hours of earth data
Aurora is built on a 1.3 billion ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Climate change: Penguin guano may help reduce effects of climate change in Antarctica