Source: https://www.nps.gov/grsm/learn/nature/fireflies.htm
Synchronous fireflies (Photinus carolinus) are one of at
least 19 species of fireflies that live in Great Smoky Mountains
National Park. They are the only species in America whose individuals
can synchronize their flashing light patterns.
Fireflies (also called lightning bugs) are beetles. They take from one to two years to mature from larvae, but will live as adults for only about 21 days. While in the larval stage, the insects feed on snails and smaller insects. Once they transform into their adult form, they do not eat.
Their light patterns are part of their mating display. Each species of firefly has a characteristic flash pattern that helps its male and female individuals recognize each other. Most species produce a greenish-yellow light; one species has a bluish light. The males fly and flash and the usually stationary females respond with a flash. Peak flashing for synchronous fireflies in the park is normally within a two-week period in late May to mid-June.
Fireflies (also called lightning bugs) are beetles. They take from one to two years to mature from larvae, but will live as adults for only about 21 days. While in the larval stage, the insects feed on snails and smaller insects. Once they transform into their adult form, they do not eat.
Their light patterns are part of their mating display. Each species of firefly has a characteristic flash pattern that helps its male and female individuals recognize each other. Most species produce a greenish-yellow light; one species has a bluish light. The males fly and flash and the usually stationary females respond with a flash. Peak flashing for synchronous fireflies in the park is normally within a two-week period in late May to mid-June.
The production of light by living
organisms is called bioluminescence. Fireflies are a good example of an
organism that bioluminesces, but there are others as well, such as
certain species of fungus, fish, shrimp, jellyfish, plankton, glowworms,
gnats, snails, and springtails.
Bioluminescence involves highly
efficient chemical reactions that result in the release of particles of
light with little or no emission of heat. Fireflies combine the chemical
luciferin and oxygen with the enzyme luciferase in their lanterns (part
of their abdomens) to make light. The light produced is referred to as a
"cold" light, with nearly 100% of the energy given off as light. In
contrast, the energy produced by an incandescent light bulb is
approximately 10% light and 90% heat.
No one is sure why the fireflies flash
synchronously. Competition between males may be one reason: they all
want to be the first to flash. Or perhaps if the males all flash
together they have a better chance of being noticed, and the females can
make better comparisons.
The fireflies do not always flash in
unison. They may flash in waves across hillsides, and at other times
will flash randomly. Synchrony occurs in short bursts that end with
abrupt periods of darkness.
Timing of the DisplayThe mating season lasts for approximately two weeks each year. The dates that the fireflies begin to display varies from year to year-scientists haven't figured out why, but it depends at least in part on temperature and soil moisture. It's impossible to predict in advance exactly when the insects will begin flashing each year.
As the season begins, a few insects
start flashing, then more join the display as the days pass. They reach a
"peak" when the greatest number of insects are displaying. After peak,
the numbers gradually decline each day until the mating season is over.
Since 1993, this peak date has occurred at various times from the third
week of May to the third week in June.
During the two week long mating season,
the quality of individual nightly displays can be affected by
environmental factors. On misty, drippy evenings following rainfall, the
insects may not readily display. Cool temperatures, below 50ยบ
Fahrenheit, will also shut down the display for the night. Moon phase
has been observed to affect the timing of nightly displays-on nights
with a bright moon, the insects may begin flashing a bit later than
usual.
sds
Another awesome thing about Tennessee! Very en"lightening"! Love it! Thank you for sharing this!!! : )
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! I would love to see that! We'll get them here at the end of the month or early July...but not as many! (and yes, I do have a jar for 'em!)
ReplyDeleteSaw something similar in a small meadow behind my parent's house. My daughters, who were little girls at the time, were convinced the meadow was full of fairies.
ReplyDeleteThat's such a charming story, Vicki! They do look like fairies! Remember Tinkerbell? :o)
DeleteBoy does that bring back memories of vacationing in Nashville back in the 50's at the relatives and again camping in the Great Smoky Mountains a decade or two later.
ReplyDeleteStaying out late and catching them in jars with holes punched in the lids was always a summertime treat! When we were little, my brother let them all loose in the house! :o)
DeleteWe always called them "lightning bugs."
ReplyDeleteYup! That's we call them too, Gorges!
DeleteI recall reading about this (way back, say in the 70's), around the time when 'science' decided that the locals had not been smoking weed, and there WERE synchronous fireflies. That might be apocryphal, but I am sure that I read it, or heard it from someone whose opinion I trust.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, great find!! Someday I'm going up there and see them in person, that is, after I spend a couple of years on my boat.
Fair Winds,
Cap'n Jan
P.S. Here is a pic or two of 'us' on the boat - mostly my little Chief Pretty Officer Roni and myself moving her from Annapolis, MD to Clear Lake Texas (I need to finish that website with the details SOMEDAY.)
http://www.jansjourney.org
What a wonderful blog Cap'n Jan - reading that was almost like being on deck with you! CPO Roni looks exactly my last dog, Sparky! :o)
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