Oh, crap!

Manhattan has recorded the most poop-on-the-street complaints per square mile to 311 so far this year — 9.6 — according to a study by real-estate listings site RealtyHop. It is outpacing the Bronx, which notched the most poop complaints per square mile last year. (This year, it’s a mere 6.5.)

Researchers found no correlation between homeownership and (primarily canine) poop in the city. But they did show that there is a connection between housing prices and poop complaints: The higher the median property value, the fewer the poop complaints.

RealtyHop also broke down the complaints by neighborhood, revealing that areas farther away from the city have more poop complaints than more dense, urban ones. (Granted, this might also have to do with residents’ likelihood to call 311 over the issue; urbanites typically aren’t so fussed by a little grime.)

The dirtiest neighborhoods from each borough are Soundview in the Bronx, Ozone Park in Queens, Cypress Hills in Brooklyn, Mariners Harbor in Staten Island and Hamilton Heights in Manhattan.

Meanwhile, the cleanest are Stuy Town in Manhattan, Brooklyn Heights and Cobble Hill in Brooklyn, Co-op City in the Bronx, Springfield Gardens in Queens and Grymes Hill in Staten Island.

The study found that the winter months of February and March are the worst for complaints. But there’s hope: An analysis of the 311 data shows the number of unique poop complaints reported per year has decreased since 2011. That year, there were 3,095; in 2017, there were 2,458.