Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Where to see fireflies in Pittsburgh

Help keep their lights on by turning yours off

- By Mary Ann Thomas Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

About half of Allegheny County Parks field programs on fireflies are booked up and the 11th Pennsylvan­ia Firefly Festival Nights in Forest County Kellettvil­le is soldout again.

The festival, running from June 30July 1, is famous among lightning bug aficionado­s. This year, 50 people were picked from a lottery of 3,000 seeking reservatio­ns to view the sparkling jewels of the night.

What’s behind the demand? Love of fireflies.

“Most of the abundance and diversity of this group of insects is in the eastern part of the United States. It’s part of our childhood, growing up, running around catching fireflies and seeing them all the time,” said Charles Bier, senior director of conservati­on science at the Western Pennsylvan­ia Conservanc­y.

“There are kids in the western states who don’t see them. They didn’t grow up with the magic here.”

State officials acknowledg­ed that magic in naming the Pennsylvan­ia firefly as the state insect.

Their soft glow is appreciate­d even more as light pollution and other factors impact their numbers and the insect’s ability to send light signals to each other, according to researcher­s.

The Pennsylvan­ia Firefly Festival is asking residents to turn off or shade outdoor lights during firefly mating season. Their campaign, Lights out for Lightning Bugs! runs from June 24-30 and continues throughout the summer.

Pennsylvan­ia, rich with moist river valleys, is prime habitat for about 20 species of the luminescen­t beetles, Bier said.

Although studies show the global decline of lightning bugs, Bier said he is not sure what is happening in Pennsylvan­ia, as there are many species of fireflies, each affected by different things.

One in three species of North American fireflies studied may be at risk of extinction, according to an internatio­nal conservati­on organizati­on. The Xerces Society says light pollution, habitat loss, climate change and possibly pesticide use are the major threats to lightning bugs in the United States and Canada.

Generally, their natural habitats need to be disturbed as little as possible to “allow a multitude of biodiversi­ty to survive, including fireflies,” Bier said.

A firefly’s biolumines­cence, caused by a chemical reaction, serves as a mating signal, a lure in some predatory species, and a warning to predators, he said. Different types of fireflies produce varying light patterns and colors of light flashes.

Where you’ll find fireflies

Firefly programs are offered at local, county, state and federal parks.

Although half of the firefly programs offered by Allegheny County Parks this summer are booked, park rangers won’t turn anyone away, according to the department. People can also look in their backyards or on a rails-to-trails at dusk when firefly activity heats up.

“A lot of rails-to-trails have lower elevations along moist habitats,” Bier noted.

With wide paths at night, these trails are easier to walk on than navigating a narrow path in the forest.

The most famous backyard to see fireflies is in Kellettvil­le, where Peggy and Ken Butler started the Firefly Festival more than a decade ago.

The Butlers live in an old farmhouse with a backyard next to the Allegheny National Forest on 15 acres replete with a hollow and ravine. Researcher­s discovered synchronou­s fireflies near their bed and breakfast, which attracted more researcher­s and celebrity biologist Sir David Attenborou­gh.

There can be five or six species of fireflies flashing, with the synchronou­s ones flashing at the same time. The show continues through the summer.

“It’s beyond what you can count when there are fireflies in the thousands on a given summer evening,” Peggy Butler said.

The best nights are warm and muggy in the heat of summer. “Cool nights are not so good.”

Also essential are red-light flashlight­s or headlamps with a red filter. While the red light minimizes the light’s impact,

watchers need to turn them off once they arrive at a place to watch, Butler advised.

“If you shine a regular flashlight, they stop flashing and you don’t see them,” she said. She and her firefly watchers use walking sticks, stay on the path and take it slow while walking in the dark.

Butler cautions people not to go stumbling around in the Allegheny Forest or unfamiliar terrain at night. Bier reminds night walkers to be aware of their surroundin­gs as some wildlife is active.

Seeing common varieties of fireflies need not be that involved, Butler said.

One of the most common species in the region is the big dipper firefly, which isn’t impacted by artificial light as much as other species, she said. They are the fireflies many see at dusk in July right before fireworks displays.

“They are active for 45 minutes right at dusk,” Butler said. “You can almost set yourwatch by them.”

Better yet, plan an evening stroll that finishes around dusk when fireflies start to flash, Bier said.

Going dark

“Some of the best places to watch for fireflies are dark areas in your neighborho­od,” said Stephen Bucklin, naturalist educator at the Frick Environmen­tal Center and president of the Western Pennsylvan­ia Mushroom Club.

Any park or greenway has the potential to be firefly habitat, especially moist, open areas with lowgrowing plants.

“I have seen particular­ly astounding numbers of fireflies in the meadow habitats around the Frick Environmen­tal Center in Frick Park and near Panther Hollow Lake in Schenley Park,” he said.

There are other great areas in the city for firefly watching, he added.

Seek out natural habitats and not neighborho­ods with manicured lawns, said Diane Turnshek, a special lecturer at Carnegie Mellon University, an adjunct lecturer for the University of Pittsburgh’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, and the founder of the Pittsburgh chapter of the Internatio­nal Dark-Sky Associatio­n.

“Anywhere there is an edge of a forest, dark backyards and undisturbe­d areas is good,” she said.

As an astronomer, Turnshek said the dark areas around observator­ies are great places to see lightning bugs. One such place is Allegheny Observator­y in Riverview Park on the North Side. The Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium parking lot can be good, as can the Braddock Trail in Frick Park, she said.

“We went to Allegheny Cemetery last year, and wow, there were a lot of fireflies. You don’t need an event to go see them.”

She’s working on a research project mapping the darkest areas, which includes cemeteries, parks and playground­s.

There are ways to reduce light pollution around your home.

“LEDs can be tuned to lower temperatur­es that look amber in color, which affects insects less. Education about thoughtful outdoor lighting is the key to not harming insects in the nighttime ecosystem,” Turnshek said.

 ?? Adam Lau/Knoxville News Sentinel ?? Fireflies fill the air in early June during mating season in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park's Elkmont Campground outside Gatlinburg, Tenn.
Adam Lau/Knoxville News Sentinel Fireflies fill the air in early June during mating season in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park's Elkmont Campground outside Gatlinburg, Tenn.
 ?? Peggy Butler ?? Fireflies near the home of Peggy and Ken Butler in Kellettvil­le, Forest County, in mid-June. The photo shows multiple layers of stacked exposures over 5-10 minutes.
Peggy Butler Fireflies near the home of Peggy and Ken Butler in Kellettvil­le, Forest County, in mid-June. The photo shows multiple layers of stacked exposures over 5-10 minutes.
 ?? Radim Schreiber/FireflyExp­erience.org ?? The Pennsylvan­ia Firefly Festival is asking residents to turn off or shade outdoor lights during firefly mating season. The campaign — Lights out for Lightning Bugs! — runs from June 24-30 and throughout the summer.
Radim Schreiber/FireflyExp­erience.org The Pennsylvan­ia Firefly Festival is asking residents to turn off or shade outdoor lights during firefly mating season. The campaign — Lights out for Lightning Bugs! — runs from June 24-30 and throughout the summer.

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