Poop, There It Is

The heat from Gentoo Penguin guano may melt snow and ice cover enough to give the birds early access to nesting sites.

Life is tough for penguins in Antarctica. The tuxedoed waddlers are suffering from , -driven habitat loss, resource competition from invasive species, dwindling food resources due to expanding fisheries, and , possibly from all this stress (little wonder).

But not all penguin populations are hurting. Gentoo communities are actually growing, and they may have their bathroom habits to thank.

Time-lapse images of a Gentoo colony on Cuverville Island reveal that when the birds move into densely snow covered areas, their guano . It鈥檚 likely the albedo effect at work: the guano鈥檚 dark, heat-absorbing color may trap more Antarctic sunlight than the surrounding white landscape, which reflects light.

from on .

This loo-commotion uncovers the rocks buried beneath the frozen layer that Gentoos use for nesting, and the earlier access to breeding sites may be the secret to their success.

It鈥檚 possible the snow and ice is disappearing simply thanks to the large flock wandering around on top of it. The penguins, meanwhile, don鈥檛 seem to be actively undertaking snow removal鈥攖hey鈥檙e just being penguins.

So who solved the potty puzzle? The findings come from a year鈥檚 worth of footage gathered by the citizen science project , a program run by Oxford University and the Australian Antarctic Division.

Penguin Watch has 50 cameras monitoring 100 colonies of Gentoo, Adelie, Chinstrap, King, and Rockhopper penguins. Volunteers sign up to label the resulting images via the online portal (they must first complete an online tutorial on how to distinguish between eggs, juveniles, and adults of each species).

Each click also helps train computer software to recognize penguins. Since the project began last April, 1.85 million pseudo-penguinologists have tagged more than 200,000 images.

Tom Hart, a real penguinologist from Oxford University who helps run the project, says the venture has saved researchers serious time, yielded data when the weather is too extreme for humans to collect it, and allowed researchers to start asking previously data-daunting questions.

鈥淥ur project relies on very old fashioned science鈥攂asic observation and lots of it,鈥 Hart says. 鈥淭his is the gold standard for studies, but meeting these standards is often physically impossible and prohibitively expensive.鈥

Along with the noteworthy poo findings, the non-invasive, penguin-friendly cameras have caught of other rare birds, including the and plenty of curious and photos of previously hidden penguin life.

The project is set to release another 500,000 photos for tagging over the next year, and Hart says he鈥檚 confident they鈥檒l attract the volunteers needed to sort them.

鈥淔or most people being involved is a bit of a wish fulfillment,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut also a bit of an addiction.鈥