-
17 injured, five critically, in head-on train crash in Denmark
-
Iran economy looks set to withstand US naval blockade
-
EssilorLuxottica sales slide as investors turn wary of AI glasses
-
Lufthansa loses fight over bailout at EU top court
-
Eurozone business activity falls on Mideast war
-
Leipzig and Union's Bundesliga clash shows changing face of football
-
Trump envoy wants Italy to replace Iran at World Cup: report
-
Electric vehicles supercharge EU car sales
-
Starc cleared to play in IPL by Cricket Australia
-
South Korea e-commerce probe opens rift in US ties
-
Clearing Hormuz Strait mines could take six months: report
-
South Korea's Samsung workers rally in thousands as strike looms
-
US firms voice 'concern' over China's new supply chain rules
-
Iran says won't reopen Hormuz if US upholds naval blockade
-
Japanese team with school coach to cap remarkable journey to the top
-
UN leadership hopefuls stress need for peace and restoring confidence
-
France must avoid becoming 'hostage' on critical minerals: trade minister
-
Thunder roll past Suns, Pistons bounce back to level series with Magic
-
US says China used 'intimidation' to block Taiwan leader's Africa trip
-
Suarez off mark but Messi fires blanks as Miami beat Salt Lake
-
Inter ready to pounce for Serie A title glory as Milan host Juve
-
Fresh paint, careful choreography as pope visits African prison
-
Jones calls on Australian fans to get behind Japan at World Cup
-
Sellers in China trade hub seek tariff reprieve from Trump visit
-
Stocks sink and oil rises with Iran, US no closer to peace talks
-
'Dancing in their hands': Japan wig masters set stage alive
-
Climate scrubbed from G7 meeting to appease US, host France says
-
Trump, his 'low IQ' slur, and the right's race obsession
-
Chip giant SK hynix posts record quarterly profit on AI boom
-
'Big loss' for F1 if Verstappen quits, say McLaren rivals
-
Israeli strikes kill 5 in Lebanon, Beirut to seek truce extension
-
Barca edge Celta but lose match-winner Yamal to injury
-
UK, France agree three-year deal to stop migrant crossings
-
Trump looks for way out on war, but Iran may not oblige
-
Tears and smiles at tribute concert for Swiss fire victims
-
Tesla reports higher profits, topping estimates
-
Manchester City go top of Premier League as Burnley relegated
-
Kane and Diaz send Bayern past Leverkusen into German Cup final
-
Concert pays tribute to Swiss fire disaster victims
-
US stocks rise, shrugging off uncertain ceasefire prospects while oil prices jump
-
Pope hits out at jails in closed-off Equatorial Guinea
-
Atletico beaten again in Elche thriller
-
England rugby great Moody offered 'hope' in battle with motor neurone disease
-
PSG roll over Nantes to move closer to Ligue 1 title
-
Ecuador doctors protest crisis as patients bring own meds to surgery
-
Top Peru ministers quit in protest over stalled US fighter jet deal
-
De La Hoya and Ali's grandson slam proposed federal boxing reform
-
Trump alleges Democratic-backed Virginia referendum was 'rigged'
-
Archer, Burger help Rajasthan beat Lucknow in IPL
-
Migrants deported from US stranded, 'scared' in DR Congo
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 Thursday 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, told AFP 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, 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 (five miles) 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 fertilizer.
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 -
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 Boyer emphasized 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 photosynthesizing 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," Boyer said.
R.Kloeti--VB