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Fresh research challenges 'moths to a flame' assumption, says Alberta entomologist

If you thought like a moth to a flame was science, theres some fresh research that just might sting.

Ground light at night confuses bugs, they're programmed that light comes from above

This 2022 file photo, left, provided by Samuel Timothy Fabian shows an Atlas Moth (Attacus lorquinii) used to test the interaction of flying insects with artificial light is photographed at Imperial College London. Many scientists have long assumed that moths and other flying insects were simply drawn to bright lights. But a new study suggests, rather than being attracted to light, researchers believe that artificial lights at night may actually scramble flying insects innate navigational systems.
This 2022 file photo, left, shows an atlas moth used to test the interaction of flying insects with artificial light at Imperial College London. A new study suggests that, rather than being attracted to light, flying insects navigational systems are being scrambled by the lights. (Samuel Timothy Fabian via The Associated Press, CBC)

If you thought 'like a moth to a flame' was science, there's some fresh research that just might sting.

"I think it's actually quite wonderful to have what was long thought as a given or truismall of a sudden turned on its head," Ken Fry told the Calgary Eyeopener in a Wednesday interview.

"It's a really elegant study."

The Alberta entomologist was talking about a new paper,Why Flying Insects Gather at Artificial Light, published in London's Nature Communications journal just this week.

Fry, an instructor at Olds College of Agriculture & Technology,is familiar with the research but wasn't involved in the study.

He said it used to be a given that insects were drawn to artificial light at night. We thought they were attracted to it.

But there's way more to it, and the new research introduces some radical ideas.

"Insects have evolved over hundreds of millions of years with the constant of the night sky being brighter than the dark ground," explained the instructor based in Olds, Alta.

Ken Fry is an entomology instructor at Olds College of Agriculture & Technology, in Olds, Alta., about 80 kilometres north of Calgary.
Ken Fry is an entomology instructor at Olds College of Agriculture & Technology in Olds, about 80 kilometres north of Calgary. (Submitted by Ken Fry)

"This dorsal light response always keep your back to the lightand you know that your back is to the sky and your feet are towardthe ground."

This new understanding has all sorts of implications.

"We always thought they were being attracted to the light, when, in fact, this paper argues, they are not necessarily being attracted. They saw no direct flight towardan artificial light. Instead, as they are flying through the skies, they are affected by a light. If they fly nearby it, it causes them to turn or spiral," Fry said.

That's, in part, because flying to an insect is as automatic as alot of our human bodily functions.

"In fact, with their flight muscles, one thought starts the wings beating and then, just like our heart beats all by itself or our breathing. We don't have to consciously inhale and exhale. We can control our rate of breathing, speed it up or slow it down, but we breathe involuntarily, with our autonomic nervous system," he said.

Aninsect's internal navigation system is disrupted when instincts are confused over artificiallight appearing below them, when they expect to see it above them. That keeps them in a holding pattern near the confusing light.

"They are expending energy unnecessarily," Fry said.

"They can't get away. Their instinct says they have to keep their backs to the light, so they would not get on with the business because they are stuck circling this light.It also makes them accumulate in higher numbers where a predator could pick them off."

Melanie Whalen is director of animal care and wildlife services at Calgary Wildlife and co-founder of the Calgary Urban Species Response Team, a group that rescues and tracks birds that accidentally strike one of the many soaring office towers in the downtown core.
Melanie Whalen is director of animal care and wildlife services at Calgary Wildlife and co-founder of the Calgary Urban Species Response Team. (Submitted by Melanie Whalen/Chris Arp)

And those predators can also focus on birds and bats, a Calgary wildlife researcher told CBC News in a Wednesday phone interview.

"Lighting can affect birds and bats, especially the migratory species," Melanie Whalensaid.

"Migrating birds use moonlight, so artificial lighting can affect them. It disorients them and pulls them off track. They spend more energy than needed and they get confused and exhausted."

Whalen is the director ofanimal care and wildlife services at Calgary Wildlife. She is also co-founder of the Calgary UrbanSpeciesResponse Team, a group that rescues and tracks birds that accidentally strike one ofthe many downtown office towers.

"Bats want to avoid light but because they go for insects near the light, they are now open to predators," she said, adding artificial light kills billions of birds and bats globally every year.

Skies are full of bugs, apparently

Meanwhile, the Olds College entomologist says we can collectively mitigate the problem if we have the will.

"Do we shroud our lights and have the light just go straight down so there is very little chance of them being entrained, or distracted, or affected by our light?" Fry wondered.

"We might need to rethink, what do the numbers mean when we are trapping them? We assumed we were attracting them to the lightwhen it's probably more likely we are just catching what is intercepting that light. They were already in close proximity so we are getting a much smaller volume of space sampled."

That could mean we are massively underestimating insect populations.

"The skies are full of bugs, apparently," he added.

With files from the Calgary Eyeopener