On balmy evenings, amorous fireflies put on a spellbinding show in North American forests says Mike Dilger

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Published: Tuesday, 25 June 2024 at 15:34 PM


Described by poet David McCord as “little lanterns sailing by, like stars across a mimic sky”, the sight of fireflies lighting up the night as they search for mates is a shining example of a wildlife spectacle.

What are fireflies?

Fireflies are also known as ‘lightning bugs’ and ‘glow worms’, but these alternative names are as taxonomically illiterate as ‘fireflies’, since these illuminating insects are in fact beetles from the family Lampyridae.

More than 2,000 species are currently described and many of them are capable of emitting light, with aerial displays recorded from Mexico to Malaysia and Japan to the Phillippines. However, fireflies are perhaps best known and have been most comprehensively studied in the USA.

What causes fireflies to glow?

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The magic trick of bioluminescence is, of course, not confined to beetles, with certain fungi, jellyfish, shrimps and plankton also capable of manufacturing light, at least in some capacity.

The beetles’ bioluminescence is created by a highly efficient chemical reaction that results in the release of light with little or no emission of heat. Referred to as a ‘cold light’, this contrasts with incandescent light bulbs, where 90 per cent of the energy used to create the light is in fact wasted as heat.

The beetles’ light is created when oxygen breaks down the chemical luciferin, with the help of the enzyme luciferase, in a section of their abdomens called ‘the lantern’. The beetles can effectively turn their glow on and off like a light switch, simply by restricting the supply of oxygen.

This ability to control their light so effectively can only be achieved when the beetles metamorphose into adults, the final chapter of a life-cycle that can last up to two years.

In order for the various species of firefly to differentiate between each other, they have evolved different flash patterns. For example, the US species Photinus brimleyi produces a single flash of yellow light at intervals of 10 seconds or longer.

How long do fireflies live? A guide to a firefly’s lifecycle

Upon hatching, the larvae hide out in leaf litter on the forest floor, where they feed voraciously on worms, snails and slugs, before hibernating in winter. Some even spend a second winter in their larval form, before pupating in late spring and emerging as adults a few weeks later.

Lasting no longer than three or four weeks as adults, the beetles’ sole raison d’être is to mate, with the males typically communicating by flashing on the wing near the ground, while the stationary females flash back once they detect that the male belongs to the same species.

Some fireflies in the genus Photuris use and abuse the mating game in an attempt to gain a quick and easy meal. These predatory fireflies are able to mimic the flashes of Photinus females in order to attract and devour any Photinus males drawn in by this devious deception. 

Where’s the best place to see fireflies?

The most celebrated place to watch fireflies is arguably the forests of North America’s Great Smoky Mountains National Park, which straddles the border between Tennessee and North Carolina.