Artificial light alters natural regimes of night-time sky brightness
Open Access
- 24 April 2013
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Scientific Reports
- Vol. 3 (1), srep01722
- https://doi.org/10.1038/srep01722
Abstract
Artificial light is globally one of the most widely distributed forms of anthropogenic pollution. However, while both the nature and ecological effects of direct artificial lighting are increasingly well documented, those of artificial sky glow have received little attention. We investigated how city lights alter natural regimes of lunar sky brightness using a novel ten month time series of measurements recorded across a gradient of increasing light pollution. In the city, artificial lights increased sky brightness to levels six times above those recorded in rural locations, nine and twenty kilometers away. Artificial lighting masked natural monthly and seasonal regimes of lunar sky brightness in the city, and increased the number and annual regime of full moon equivalent hours available to organisms during the night. The changes have potentially profound ecological consequences.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Better in the dark: two Mediterranean amphibians synchronize reproduction with moonlit nightsWeb Ecology, 2013
- Shedding light on light: benefits of anthropogenic illumination to a nocturnally foraging shorebirdJournal of Animal Ecology, 2012
- REVIEW: Reducing the ecological consequences of night‐time light pollution: options and developmentsJournal of Applied Ecology, 2012
- Activity Patterns during Food Provisioning Are Affected by Artificial Light in Free Living Great Tits (Parus major)PLOS ONE, 2012
- Individual status, foraging effort and need for conspicuousness shape behavioural responses of a predator to moon phasesAnimal Behaviour, 2011
- How dim is dim? Precision of the celestial compass in moonlight and sunlightPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2011
- Cloud Coverage Acts as an Amplifier for Ecological Light Pollution in Urban EcosystemsPLOS ONE, 2011
- Street Lighting Disturbs Commuting BatsCurrent Biology, 2009
- Darkness as an ecological resource: the role of light in partitioning the nocturnal nicheOecologia, 2009
- Long-term study of gamete release in a broadcast-spawning holothurian: predictable lunar and diel periodicitiesMarine Ecology Progress Series, 2007