North Wales Weekly News

Great Orme street lights turned off for glow worms

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ONWY council bosses turned off street lights because they were interferin­g with glow worms’ mating habits.

The sodium illuminati­ons were tempting away the male wriggly invertebra­tes, which meant they were failing to copulate with their females.

But since the lamps have been changed to LED ones, the males are no longer being lured away to the lights, and the population around Llandudno’s Great Orme has boomed.

The realisatio­n that the sodium lamps were interrupti­ng the mating patterns was made by amateur naturalist Jenni Cox, who noticed the problem on Marine Drive.

She said: “I first discovered them in 2011 when I was just walking down Marine Drive.

“I reported my findings to the national glow worm survey and came back out to count them.

“I counted 300 females, although there didn’t seem to be many males finding them.

“Then eventually I noticed up to 50 males were congregati­ng under the street lights and I wondered whether that was stopping them finding the females, so I reported it to the council’s biodiversi­ty officer, Anne Butler.”

Many experts believe numbers of glow worms (lampyris noctiluca) are on the decline due to pesticides, loss of habitat and light pollution.

Yet Jenni’s painstakin­g study, in which she counted males and females on the Orme every night through the mating season, is helping inform the bigger picture about their numbers and habits.

She has counted as many as 700 females in a single night, 800 including males.

Glow worm larvae live for around two years, which is the only time they feed.

They eat insects, slugs and snails, injecting them with poison which decomposes the prey, then suck up the resulting broth, which helps to maintain the eco-system.

The light emitted by the females (biolumines­cence) is caused by a chemical reaction within its tail.

Females lay between 25-100 eggs and die soon after.

Jenni added: “I just hope all this work I have put in does help glow worms on a bigger scale in the future.

“I’m happy that I have helped these here but if it helps on a bigger scale I would be really happy.”

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