Secret of Firefly's Light Show Is Illuminated

Betsy Mason
Dallas Morning News
July 16, 2001

Now you see 'em. Now you don't.

For centuries, firefly enthusiasts have asked, "How do they do that?" Scientists may finally have found the answer.

The chemistry that lights the firefly lantern was known, but until now, nobody could figure out how the bugs turn their lights on and off so quickly and precisely.

"It was a nice mystery to solve," said Barry Trimmer, a neurobiologist from Tufts University in Massachusetts, who led the team that made the discovery.

What the researchers found was an unexpected new role for a versatile molecule known as nitric oxide.

In humans, nitric oxide acts as a messenger involved in a variety of tasks—from aiding brain signaling to controlling blood flow and penile erection.

Nitric oxide may have a hand in firefly romance as well. As the fireflies entertain humans all summer long with a magical light show, they are actually cruising the sultry nights in search of love.

"Male fireflies fly around flashing their advertisement," said evolutionary ecologist Sara Lewis of Tufts, one of the authors of the study, which was reported last month in the journal Science.

Females on the ground respond with their own flash, beckoning the males to fly closer and flash again. This firefly foreplay can go on for an hour or more. The flash patterns are specific to individual species, ensuring that the right bugs get together.

"The ability to control the timing of the flash is key to their successful courtship," says Lewis. "Without that they'd be lost."

Internal Chemistry

Fireflies, which are actually beetles, light their lanterns using a chemical reaction that occurs in specialized cells in their abdomens. Many other species, such as jellyfish, use a similar chemical soup to create their glow.

The firefly is rare, however, in its ability to turn the glow on and off in a fraction of a second.

The specialized cells contain a mixture that lights up when hit with oxygen. In fireflies, oxygen is carried to the cells through tiny tubes. Where the air tubes enter the cells, densely packed bodies known as mitochondria "eat" the oxygen before it can light the lantern.

The researchers discovered that nitric oxide can momentarily stop the mitochondria's meal, thereby allowing the oxygen to enter the glow cell and turn on the light. Because nitric oxide is a very short-lived gas, the fireflies can use it to flash their lights quickly.

Continued on Next Page >>


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