Evaluating the interactive effects of artificial light at night and background color on tadpole crypsis, background adaptation efficacy, and growth
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Date
2023-09-15Author
Horn, Kelsey
Shidemantle, Grascen
Velasquez, Isabela
Ronan, Emily
Blackwood, Jurnee
Reinke, Beth
Hua, Jessica
Publisher
Elsevier
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Artificial light at night (ALAN) is a global pollutant of rising concern. While alterations to natural day-night cycles caused by ALAN can affect a variety of traits, the broader fitness and ecological implications of these ALAN-induced shifts remain unclear. This study evaluated the interactive effects of ALAN and background color on traits that have important implications for predator-prey interactions and fitness: crypsis, background adaptation efficacy, and growth. Using three amphibian species as our models, we discovered that: (1) Exposure to ALAN reduced the ability for some species to match their backgrounds (background adaptation efficacy), (2) Crypsis and background adaptation efficacy were enhanced when tadpoles were exposed to dark backgrounds only, emphasizing the importance of environmental context when evaluating the effects of ALAN, (3) ALAN and background color have a combined effect on a common metric of fitness (growth), and (4) Effects of ALAN were not generalizable across amphibian species, supporting calls for more studies that utilize a diversity of species. Notably, to our knowledge, we found the first evidence that ALAN can diminish background adaptation efficacy in an amphibian species (American toad tadpoles). Collectively, our study joins others in highlighting the complex effects of ALAN on wildlife and underscores the challenges of generalizing ALAN's effect across species, emphasizing the need for a greater diversity of species and approaches used in ALAN research.
Subject
artifical light at night
light pollution
tadpole
amphibian
crypsis
ALAN
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/84902Type
Dataset
Citation
Horn, K., Shidemantle, G., Velasquez, I., Ronan, E., Blackwood, J., Reinke, B.A., Hua, J., 2023. Evaluating the interactive effects of artificial light at night and background color on tadpole crypsis, background adaptation efficacy, and growth. Environmental Pollution 333, 122056. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122056