WASHINGTON: Streetlights — particularly those that use white light-emitting diodes (LEDs) — not only disrupt insect behaviour but are also a culprit behind their declining numbers, a new study carried out in southern England showed on Wednesday.
Artificial lights at night had been identified as a possible factor behind declining insect populations around the world, but the topic had been under-researched.
To address the question, scientists compared 26 roadside sites consisting of either hedgerows or grass verges that were lit by streetlights, against an equal number of nearly identical sites that were unlit.
They also examined a site with one unlit and two lit sections, all of which were similar in their vegetation.
The team chose moth caterpillars as a proxy for nocturnal insects more broadly, because they remain within a few metres of where they hatched during the larval stage of their lives, before they acquire the ability to fly.
The team either struck the hedges with sticks so that the caterpillars fell out, or swept the grass with nets to pick them up.
The results were eye-opening, with a 47 per cent reduction in insect population at the hedgerow sites and 37pc reduction at the roadside grassy areas.
“We were really quite taken aback by just how stark it was,” lead author Douglas Boyes, of the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, said, adding the team had expected a more modest decline of around 10pc.
Published in Dawn, August 26th, 2021
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