Litinsects #57: Fireflies © Radim Schreiber You may know them as fireflies, lightning bugs, or glowworms depending on where you grew up… these glowing bugs are actually neither flies, nor bugs, nor worms but beetles. They are a special group known for their BIOLUMINESCENCE. So how does that work? Bioluminescence is light produced by an organism through a chemical reaction. In some animals light is produced by bacterial symbionts, in others the light is produced by the organisms themselves, as is the case with fireflies. (Side note: this is different than biofluorescence, which is the absorption and re-emission of certain wavelengths but it doesn’t involve a chemical reaction.) Fireflies have a LIGHT ORGAN in their lower abdomen in which a special reaction takes place; it produces light but no heat (thus often called “cold light”). A compound called LUCIFERIN, coming from the Latin word for „light-bearing“ (also the same etymology for the name Lucifer) is contained in t...
Weekly fun facts about the world of insects