Newfoundland study of bird droppings may answer critical conservation questions
A team of Canadian scientists may have cracked one of the toughest problems in conservation by peering into the lives of long-ago seabirds through 1,700 years of droppings.
“It’s actually not so bad,” said Queen’s University biologist Matthew Duda, a co-author of a paper on how bird droppings found in centuries worth of lake sediments have been used to track population changes.
“It doesn’t smell, very much.”
The paper — a population analysis of a storm petrel colony on a remote island off Newfoundland — may seem of interest mostly to specialists. But its success in estimating the size of that population long before anyone was around to count it may have opened a whole new scientific window.