While light bulbs make our nights brighter, they are dimming the social lives, and survival rates, of some of nature’s natural light-makers: fireflies.
may be at risk of extinction. A identified habitat loss and artificial light as the greatest threats to the fireflies’ global populations.
This trend is not unique to fireflies. Studies show across North America. A found the number of bee species in a single forest decreased by nearly 40%.
University of Virginia environmental sciences professor Kyle Haynes has spent years researching the impact of light pollution on different plant and animal species, including fireflies, at Âé¶¹ÆÆ½â°æ Blandy Experimental Farm. Haynes spoke with UVA Today and illuminated specific ways in which light is interfering with the insects’ mating behavior and shares insights on how the bugs use light to communicate.
Q. How do fireflies use light?
A. Each firefly species has a unique flashing pattern that they use to attract members of the same species for mating. They flash using different temporal sequences while dancing through the air in different patterns.
You can actually recognize individual species by their flashing patterns. There are firefly species in which the females eat the male of other firefly species. They do this by mimicking the flashing patterns of the females of a prey species to lure in and capture the males.
Of course, that use of lighting, bioluminescence, is what makes them especially vulnerable to the effects of light pollution.

