
pmid: 27072407
pmc: PMC4881357
The globally increasing light pollution is a well-recognized threat to ecosystems, with negative effects on human, animal and plant wellbeing. The most well-known and widely documented consequence of light pollution is the generally fatal attraction of nocturnal insects to artificial light sources. However, the evolutionary consequences are unknown. Here we report that moth populations from urban areas with high, globally relevant levels of light pollution over several decades show a significantly reduced flight-to-light behaviour compared with populations of the same species from pristine dark-sky habitats. Using a common garden setting, we reared moths from 10 different populations from early-instar larvae and experimentally compared their flight-to-light behaviour under standardized conditions. Moths from urban populations had a significant reduction in the flight-to-light behaviour compared with pristine populations. The reduced attraction to light sources of ‘city moths' may directly increase these individuals' survival and reproduction. We anticipate that it comes with a reduced mobility, which negatively affects foraging as well as colonization ability. As nocturnal insects are of eminent significance as pollinators and the primary food source of many vertebrates, an evolutionary change of the flight-to-light behaviour thereby potentially cascades across species interaction networks.
Male, Light, 1101 Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous), Yponomeuta, 1100 General Agricultural and Biological Sciences, adaptation, Moths, 10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, Animals, Cities, Lighting, Behavior, Animal, natural selection, environmental change, Lepidoptera, Flight, Animal, 570 Life sciences; biology, 590 Animals (Zoology), Female, France, Switzerland
Male, Light, 1101 Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous), Yponomeuta, 1100 General Agricultural and Biological Sciences, adaptation, Moths, 10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, Animals, Cities, Lighting, Behavior, Animal, natural selection, environmental change, Lepidoptera, Flight, Animal, 570 Life sciences; biology, 590 Animals (Zoology), Female, France, Switzerland
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