(Press-News.org) On Japan’s desert islands, researchers uncovered a peculiar bathroom ritual among seabirds. Reporting in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on August 18, the team found that streaked shearwaters (Calonectris leucomelas) poop while flying—not while floating on water—and they do so every 4 to 10 minutes. This habit may help the birds stay clean and fertilize the ocean below.
But the team didn’t set out to document the seabirds’ bathroom habits. “I was studying how seabirds run on sea surface to take off,” says Leo Uesaka, the lead author from the University of Tokyo. “While watching the video, I was surprised that they dropped feces very frequently. I thought it was funny at first, but it turned out to be more interesting and important for marine ecology.”
Seabird droppings enrich the soil and fertilize nearby coastal waters thanks to their high nitrogen and phosphorus contents. Researchers have studied how these nutrients shape ecosystems on land, but much less is known about how they impact what happens far from shore, in the open ocean, where seabirds spend most of their lives. With an estimated 424 million shearwaters and their kins, their droppings could fertilize the water below, providing nutrients to plankton and other marine life.
Using eraser-sized, backward-facing cameras strapped to the bellies of 15 streaked shearwaters, Uesaka recorded and analyzed nearly 200 defecation events. He found that the birds almost always relieved themselves while flying and that defecation often followed shortly after takeoff. Occasionally, the birds took off solely for bathroom breaks and returned to the water within a minute. These findings suggest that they intentionally avoid pooping while floating, notes Uesaka.
“Streaked shearwaters have very long and narrow wings, good for gliding, not flapping,” says Uesaka. “They have to flap their wings vigorously to take off, which exhausts them. This means the risk of excreting on the sea surface outweighs the effort to take off. There must be a strong reason behind that.”
The researchers suspect this habit may spare the birds from fouling their feathers with feces, help them avoid attracting predators, or simply help the birds poop more easily compared to a floating position.
While in flight, the birds pooped about every 4 to 10 minutes. The team estimated that the birds excrete 30 grams of poop every hour, which is about 5% of their body mass.
“We don’t know why they keep this excretion rhythm, but there must be a reason,” says Uesaka.
To find out, he plans to use cameras or temperature sensors with longer battery life, combined with GPS, to map where seabirds release their droppings at sea. He hopes that these future studies will offer further insights into the role of seabird feces in marine ecology.
“Feces are important,” Uesaka says. “But people don’t really think about it.”
###
This research was supported by funding from Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research from JSPS, Japan Science and Technology Agency SPRING, and the Cooperative Program of Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute of the University of Tokyo.
Current Biology, Uesaka & Sato, “Periodic excretion patterns of seabirds in flight” https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(25)00818
Current Biology (@CurrentBiology), published by Cell Press, is a bimonthly journal that features papers across all areas of biology. Current Biology strives to foster communication across fields of biology, both by publishing important findings of general interest and through highly accessible front matter for non-specialists. Visit: http://www.cell.com/current-biology. To receive Cell Press media alerts, contact press@cell.com.
END
SAN ANTONIO — August 18, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has developed and tested a micrometeoroid and orbital debris (MMOD) detection and characterization system designed for satellites and spacecraft to monitor impacts from space debris. The system provides critical post-impact data, ensuring awareness of an impact even when damage is not immediately apparent.
Space debris around Earth is a growing problem, a result of commercial satellites exploding, anti-satellite missile tests and accidents that contribute to a growing junk field. Depending ...
To the point
Exploratory behavior: Grackles who were trained to be more flexible were more exploratory after the training than untrained grackles. This indicates that the more an individual investigates a novel object, the more it can learn and adapt its behavior accordingly.
Range expansion: Grackles in an edge population disperse farther than those in a more central population. This suggests that the rapid geographic range expansion of great-tailed grackles is associated with individuals differentially expressing dispersal behaviors.
Key traits: Flexibility, exploration, and dispersal are key ...
Flowers, specialized plant structures consisting of colorful petals and green sepals, play a key role in plant propagation. In addition to their ornamental value, flowers have gained emotional and cultural significance over the years. African violet, scientifically known as Streptocarpus sect. Saintpaulia ionanthus Wendl., is a remarkable ornamental plant with unique color patterns in its flowers owing to the accumulation of anthocyanins—a chemical substance that imparts different colors. Among the diverse varieties of Saintpaulia flowers, the white-striped petal variety has been exclusively bred for their aesthetic appeal and horticultural value.
Until recently, scientists ...
Metal oxide materials with nanoscale pores have been applied and studied in a wide range of fields, including as catalysts, adsorption and separation materials, and energy materials. Among them, single-crystalline nanoporous metal oxides—with interconnected nanopores in a single crystal—are especially lucrative. They have recently attracted attention as unique materials that combine the desirable properties of nanoporous materials, such as high specific surface area and large pore volume, with those of single crystals.
While metal oxide nanoporous structures have been conventionally synthesized by replicating the nanostructure ...
A team of scientists at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research has discovered that inactivation of a stress pathway makes ER+ breast cancer cells ignore stress signals, allowing them to evade treatment.
A study led by researchers at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research has uncovered why some breast cancers become resistant to treatment, potentially opening the door to more effective therapies for patients.
Published today in the Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research, the study reveals how disruption to a cellular stress response system involving the JNK pathway allows estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer cells to evade ...
FORT COLLINS, Colo. — The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a nonprofit national medical ethics group, applauds Colorado State University for its decision to shutter a nutrition study for which the university had approved the killing of 17,766 animals. The study, funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the university, claimed to investigate the effect of legumes on the human gut microbiome. Public records reveal the primary investigator had to date used 1,587 mice.
An initial USDA grant of $498,500 funded the experiments. A subsequent USDA Cooperative Agreement, active through ...
WASHINGTON, Aug. 18, 2025 — Heat waves are becoming more common, severe and long-lasting. These prolonged periods of hot weather are especially dangerous in already hot places like Texas. In 2023, more than 300 people in Texas died from heat, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services, the most since the state began tracking such deaths in 1989. Researchers found it may not only be temperatures that make heat waves unsafe but also the heat-related increase in airborne pollutants.
Bianca Pamela Aridjis-Olivos, a graduate student in aerosol and atmospheric chemistry at Texas A&M University will present her team’s results at the fall meeting of ...
WASHINGTON, Aug. 18, 2025 — More than half of the 7.5 million bales of cotton produced annually in the U.S. will be used in clothing manufacturing. The finishing techniques used to make cotton fabric smooth, water-repellant and resistant to wrinkling can be detrimental to the environment and the wearer. Now, researchers propose a method for using cottonseed oil as a “greener” and safer alternative to formaldehyde and per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), often called forever chemicals, ...
WASHINGTON, Aug. 18, 2025 — Acetaminophen is one of the most common painkillers and is found in hundreds of different medications. While safe at recommended doses, acetaminophen overdose is the leading cause of acute liver injury in the U.S. Now, researchers propose that a new molecule has the potential to treat acetaminophen-induced liver injury (AILI) and other inflammatory conditions. They conducted a small-scale mouse trial and found that the new compound decreased AILI-caused liver inflammation and prevented liver damage.
Jannatun Nayem Namme, a graduate ...
WASHINGTON, Aug. 18, 2025 — From electric cars to artificial intelligence (AI) data centers, the technologies people use every day require a growing need for electricity. In theory, nuclear fusion — a process that fuses atoms together, releasing heat to turn generators — could provide vast energy supplies with minimal emissions. But nuclear fusion is an expensive prospect because one of its main fuels is a rare version of hydrogen called tritium. Now, researchers are developing new systems to use nuclear waste ...