February 27, 2024 Volume 20 Issue 08
 

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Weird science: Why do insects fly toward light at night? Scientists find surprising answer

A moth turns its back to the light during new scientific experiments. [Photo credit: Imperial College London]

 

 

By Angela Nicoletti, Florida International University

At night in the Costa Rican cloud forest, a small team of international scientists switched on a light and waited. Soon, insects big and small descended out of the darkness. Moths with spots like unblinking eyes on each wing. Shiny armored beetles. Flies. Once, even a praying mantis. Each did the same hypnotic, dizzying dance around the bulb as if attached to it with invisible string.

Excitement spread through the group of researchers, even though this phenomenon was not new to them. The difference was they now have cutting-edge technology and high-speed cameras -- capable of capturing the fast, frenzied orbits -- to map the hard-to-track movements of hundreds of insects and tease out secrets surrounding why they act so strange around light at night.

A surprising detail surfaced in the data: In flight, the insects kept their backs facing the artificial light source.

"You watch the videos in slow motion and see it happening again and again," said Yash Sondhi, a recent Florida International University (FIU) biological sciences Ph.D. graduate and current postdoctoral researcher at the Florida Museum of Natural History. "Maybe when people notice it, like around their porchlights or a streetlamp, it looks like they are flying straight at it, but that's not the case."

This never-before-documented behavior, published in the journal Nature Communications, provides a new explanation for moth-to-a-flame behavior, and while it confirms light is disruptive to insects, it also offers new insight into insect conservation concerns.

Insects fly around light in the lab. [Credit: Imperial College London]

 

 

For millions of years, insects have evolved to become masters of flight by relying on the brightest thing they see -- the sky. Today, the lit-up world throws their instincts for a loop. Insects think the imposter "sky" they find is the real one and get trapped in an exhausting cycle trying to stay oriented. It's a futile effort that causes clumsy maneuvers and occasional crashes directly into the light.

A good grasp of gravity is mandatory for all animals, especially flying ones, like insects that perform feats of flight that can surpass those of human pilots. When flying, they experience such rapid acceleration that their gravity sensing becomes unreliable. They need the sky, even at night, to discern which way is up and cruise along, maintaining control in the air. Artificial light, however, messes with this system.

Sondhi started connecting the dots between insect vision, light, and flight when he joined FIU associate professor of biology Jamie Theobald's lab in 2017.

The work really got off the ground, though, when he found a group of specialists in the fields of insect flight and sensory systems who were determined to collect and mull over a deluge of 3D flight data to see what, if anything, was revealed.

That group included Sondhi and Theobald, as well as Sam Fabian and Huai-Ti Lin from the Imperial College London and Pablo Allen from the Council on International Educational Exchange in Monteverde, Costa Rica.

The research project kicked off at Lin's lab where Fabian works and has a motion capture arena like the kind used in movies -- only o insect scale.

Top: Markers to track the 3D flight of insects. Bottom: Fabian in the lab. [Credit: Imperial College London]

 

 

Little markers were affixed in an L-shape along the backs of several moths and dragonflies, so when they flew around light, they were also collecting data on how they rolled and rotated and moved through three-dimensional space.

"On one of the very first experiments, I let a large yellow underwing moth take off from my hand and fly directly over a UV bulb, and it immediately flipped upside down," he said. "But we didn't know then if the behavior we saw and measured in the lab would also be seen in the wild."

National Geographic funding helped the team travel to Costa Rica -- a country rich with diverse insect life -- with their cameras to find out.

In total, they collected more than 477 videos spanning more than 11 insect orders, and then used computer tools to reconstruct the points along 3D flight paths. Together with the motion-capture data, the researchers concluded all the species did, in fact, flip upside down when exposed to light, just like the large yellow underwing in the lab.

"This has been a prehistorical question. In the earliest writings, people were noticing this around fire," Theobald said. "It turns out all our speculations about why it happens have been wrong, so this is definitely the coolest project I've been part of."

While the study confirms light is disruptive to insects, it also suggests light direction matters. The worst is an upward facing or just a bare bulb. Shrouding or shielding may be key to offsetting negative impacts to insects.

The team is also thinking about light color, like if cool versus warm tones have different impacts.

"I'd been told before you can't ask why questions like this one, that there was no point," Sondhi said. "But in being persistent and finding the right people, we came up with an answer none of us really thought of, but that's so important to increasing awareness about how light impacts insect populations and informing changes that can help them out."

Published February 2024

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