The Denver Post

Artificial lights are eating away at dark nights

A researcher says “many organisms have had no chance to adapt to this new stressor.”

- By Amina Khan

Earth is losing its darkness. A new study using satellite data finds that artificial­ly lit surfaces around the world are spreading and growing brighter, producing more light pollution at night.

The findings, described in the journal Science Advances, track what researcher­s called a trend that has implicatio­ns for the environmen­t as well as human health.

“This is concerning, of course, because we are convinced that artificial light is an environmen­tal pollutant with ecological and evolutiona­ry implicatio­ns for many organisms — from bacteria to mammals, including us humans — and may reshape entire social ecological systems,” Franz Holker of the Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries, one of the study’s authors, said in a briefing.

Thanks to electric lights, outdoor lighting grew at a rate of 3 percent to 6 percent annually in the second half of the 20th century. While this has benefited human productivi­ty and safety, it has come with a dark side: The night is no longer dark enough.

Half of Europe and a quarter of North America have experience­d seriously modified light-dark cycles, the study authors wrote, calling it a “widespread ‘loss of the night.’ ” This light pollution can have serious consequenc­es for living things, which have evolved in accordance with a natural daynight cycle, where the only major sources of light at night would have been the moon or more intermitte­nt sources such as volcanoes, lightning, wildfires or auroras.

“From an evolutiona­ry perspectiv­e, now, artificial light at night is a very new stressor,” Holker said. “The problem is that light has been introduced in places, times and intensitie­s at which it does not naturally occur, and many organisms have had no chance to adapt to this new stressor.”

That’s a big problem, given that 30 percent of vertebrate­s and more than 60 percent of invertebra­tes are nocturnal, he pointed out. It can affect plants and even microbes. It also could be harming vital interactio­ns between species, such as the pollinatio­n of plants and spreading of seeds by key nocturnal creatures.

“It threatens biodiversi­ty through changed night habits, such as reproducti­on or migration patterns, of many different species: insects, amphibians, fish, birds, bats and other animals,” he said.

Humans are affected by artificial light too because there are certain physiologi­cal processes that happen during the day and certain ones that happen at night — and they often work against each other, Holker said. That’s why working against our biological day-night clocks (for example, as night-shift workers must) can result in many kinds of issues, from depression-like symptoms to obesity and diabetes.

To find out whether the human demand for light is still on the rise or leveling off, an internatio­nal team of scientists used the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite, also known as VIIRS, a satellite sensor that’s a collaborat­ion between NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

The researcher­s studied data from October in each year from 2012 to 2016. They found that over that time, Earth’s artificial­ly lit outdoor surface grew by 2.2 percent each year, and the total radiance grew by 1.8 percent per year. On top of that, the outdoor areas that already had been lit when the study started in 2012 also brightened by 2.2 percent per year.

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