Journal article

Effects of lifetime exposure to artificial light at night on cricket (Teleogryllus commodus) courtship and mating behaviour

LM Botha, TM Jones, GR Hopkins

Animal Behaviour | ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD | Published : 2017

Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests that key fitness-related behaviours of animals related to courtship and mating may be disrupted by anthropogenic stressors, including artificial light at night (i.e. light produced from anthropogenic sources). Despite its ubiquity in urban habitats, we currently know very little about how artificial night lighting affects the reproductive behaviours of most animals. Our study examined the effects of chronic (lifetime) exposure to one of four ecologically relevant intensities of artificial light at night (0, 1, 10 or 100 lx at night) on courtship and mating behaviours and acoustic sexual signalling in a common nocturnal and crepuscular insect, the Australian black..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

We thank Joanna Durrant for substantial help in the laboratory, as well as Lucy McClay, Michelle Hall and Murray Littlejohn for fruitful discussions. This research was funded by grants to T.M.J. from the Australian Research Council (Discovery Grant DP150101191) and the Hermon Slade Foundation (HSF 14/4).