Showing posts with label firefly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label firefly. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 February 2020

Fireflies face extinction risk - and tourists are partly to blame

By Georgina Rannard BBC News

7 February 2020 

Firefly tourism is on the rise globally but scientists are warning it may contribute to risk of the insect's extinction.

"I spotted a hundred flickering lights, illuminating a palm like a Christmas tree."

"Our guide waved his flashlight at the fireflies. They slowly engulfed us - we were surrounded by a shiny galaxy of glowing beetle stomachs."

"I reached out a hand and captured one in my fist."

Reading this travel blogger's enchanting experience in 2019 makes it clear why firefly tours are popular, but done badly, it risks killing the insects.

Habitat loss and light pollution from urbanisation and industrialisation are the leading threats to firefly populations, according to research published this week.

But firefly tourism, which attracts thousands of visitors in countries including Mexico, the US, the Philippines and Thailand, is a growing concern for conservationists.

Friday, 21 August 2015

The alluring firefly: nature's lightning bug may hold key to medical breakthroughs

The role of light in the mating rituals of adult fireflies was little understood until recently, but now scientists want to use bioluminescence for a host of potential medical procedures – including tagging tumors to monitor them

Jane McInnis in Tlaxcala, Mexico

Wednesday 19 August 2015 14.00 BST

In a green clearing within the forest of Tlaxcala, Mexico, a campground waited for the sun to set.

Swarms of moms and dads stood next to abuelas nonchalantly chewing tamales from a nearby stand. Wriggling niƱos flipped flashlights on and off, while overflowing trashcans marked meeting points.

They waited for the woods to turn black to see the dance of the fireflies. Every summer in this region, males perform a primordial rave of flashing lights to attract females.

Aztecs referred to the bioluminescent beetles as tiny lights of truth in a world of ignorance, according to the late entomologist Charles L Hogue. Perhaps the Aztecs were also predicting the lasting enigma of the popular insect.

Only recently are medical possibilities of bioluminescence being researched by scientists, from illuminating tumors in cancer patients to spotlighting bacteria levels in packaged meat.

Monday, 29 June 2015

Student discovers new species of firefly

June 27, 2015

Chuck Bednar for redOrbit.com – @BednarChuck

 (Image credit: UCR Today)
While collecting insects in Los Angeles County as part of an entomology class project, a 24-year-old undergraduate student at the University of California-Riverside discovered a never before seen species of firefly.

Joshua Oliva, a native of Guatemala, found the insect while capturing, mounting and identifying 300 insects as part of the class project, according to The Orange County Register. The firefly was recovered from an area of Topanga Canyon in the Santa Monica Mountains.

The discovery was later confirmed by Doug Yanega, head of the campus entomology museum, and experts from the University of Florida. “I’ve been told by other people a number of times, ‘Hey, you discovered a new species,’” Yanega told the newspaper. “This was the first time I’ve given the news to someone else who’s discovered one. It was very gratifying.”

“He wasn’t 100 percent certain it was a firefly, and brought it to me for confirmation,” the curator added in a statement. “I know the local fauna well enough that within minutes I was able to tell him he had found something entirely new to science. I don’t think I’ve seen a happier student in my life.”


Saturday, 10 July 2010

Male Fireflies Flicker in Sync to Catch a Female's Eye

Male Fireflies Flicker in Sync to Catch a Female's Eye

Posted: 08 Jul 2010 02:18 PM PDT

Teamwork: That's what it takes to get lucky (if you're a certain kind of firefly).

Suppose you're a single male firefly, fluttering about on a muggy night. You flash your bioluminescent signal to try to catch a lady's attention, but how is she going to pick out your blip from all the other points of light ablaze when various species of firefly zoom around? About 1 percent of firefly species have figured out how to beat the noise: They team up and flash their lights in an unmissable, synchronous signal. And in a study in this week's Science, researchers unlocked the inner workings of this sexual back-and-forth.

Biologists had long known about the synchronous flashing, but had not tested the idea that each species has its own rhythm-its own signal to complete the optical call-and-response between male and female.

To do this, Andrew Moiseff of the University of Connecticut in Storrs and Jonathan Copeland at the State University of New York at Stony Brook turned to LEDs. They put female synchronous fireflies (Photinus
carolinus)
in a Petri dish surrounded by green LEDs, and flashed the lights in the same pattern used by male fireflies. The females responded with their signature pattern 82 per cent of the time - but only if the LEDs were synchronised. When the lights did not flash in unison, female response dropped to 10 per cent or less [New Scientist].

The code of flashing lights is not the end of the story, of course. It takes a group of males to flicker in unison, but not all of them will get to mate when the female responds with her "come on over here, fellas" signal.

"Six to a dozen males may be attracted," said Moiseff. "We don't know if she's distinguishing among males when she responds." When a female firefly - which is really a kind of beetle - ventures to give the signal, she is calling quite a crowd. In the field it's not at all uncommon to find a solitary female surrounded by a dozen hopeful males,
Moiseff said. So there is yet another level of selection that is going on which researchers have yet to discover, he said [Discovery News].

While that second half of sexual selection remains a mystery, the finding presents some enticing hints about the brains of these insects. The males must know how to keep in rhythm with each other, and the females must know how to interpret this flirty Morse code. The study tells the researchers the following about the firefly brain:
it is able to count, measure time differences and pause while awaiting a response. "Our real interest is understanding brain circuitry," Moiseff says. "The method they're using to do this is through pattern recognition, something that is important to all animals.. We want to understand how the brain can process these visual signals" [Scientific American].
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