5,800 years of droppings: Unique approach yields first long-term seabird trend data
Scientists have sifted through nearly 6,000 years of seabird droppings to get what they say could be the first long-term reading on how their numbers are affected by humans.
“It’s a stinky job, but someone has to do it,” said John Smol of Queen’s University, co-author of a paper published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Smol said the work sheds light on one of the biggest problems in environmental and conservation science: What happened in any particular region before humans showed up?
“We call it shifting baselines,” he said. “What is natural? What is a healthy population?”

