MINI REVIEW The dark side of light at night: physiological, epidemiological, and ecological consequences
نویسندگان
چکیده
Successful organisms must adapt to temporal, as well as spatial niches. Endogenous biological clocks allow individuals to anticipate and adapt to the daily light-dark cycles in their environments to optimally time metabolism, physiology, and behavior each day. Rodents in nontropical environments, for example, alter reproductive, metabolic [1], and immunological activities [2] based on changes in day length throughout the seasons. The timing of avian reproduction and molt also often depends upon seasonal changes in day length [3], and many species, including some birds [4,5], rodents [6], bats [7], and marine animals [8], adjust foraging activities according to changes in the lunar cycle. Aside from seasonal adjustments, there is marked circadian variation in physiological functions. In many species, including some birds, rodents, fish, and humans, for example, circulating concentrations of sex steroids [9–11] and glucocorticoids [12] vary with the light/dark cycle throughout the day, causing corresponding changes in reproductive activities [13] and metabolic functions [14]. Responses to natural light cycles result in an adaptive temporal organization in humans and other animals. With the invention and use of electrical lights, beginning about a century ago, this temporal organization has been dramatically altered. Light at night has significant social, ecological, behavioral, and health consequences that are only now becoming apparent. The extensive control that light-driven mediators exert upon multiple body systems, for example, creates numerous targets on which light-induced disruptions can act, resulting in a wide range of physiological changes and potentially serious medical implications. In a broader context, underpinning physiological mechanisms regulate a variety of behaviors, ranging from reproduction to foraging, creating expansive targets for light disruption. Assuming that adaptive processes have optimized the physiological and behavioral regulation of animals according to changing day lengths and circadian cycles, artificial changes in light cycles could have drastic fitness effects. This review summarizes the medical and ecological implications of exposure to artificial light at night, and related disturbances in normal seasonal and circadian physiological and behavioral functions.
منابع مشابه
MINI REVIEW The dark side of light at night: physiological, epidemiological, and ecological consequences
Successful organisms must adapt to temporal, as well as spatial niches. Endogenous biological clocks allow individuals to anticipate and adapt to the daily light-dark cycles in their environments to optimally time metabolism, physiology, and behavior each day. Rodents in nontropical environments, for example, alter reproductive, metabolic [1], and immunological activities [2] based on changes i...
متن کاملThe dark side of light at night: physiological, epidemiological, and ecological consequences.
Organisms must adapt to the temporal characteristics of their surroundings to successfully survive and reproduce. Variation in the daily light cycle, for example, acts through endocrine and neurobiological mechanisms to control several downstream physiological and behavioral processes. Interruptions in normal circadian light cycles and the resulting disruption of normal melatonin rhythms cause ...
متن کاملThe Effect of Creating an Artificial Night On Physiological Changes in Preterm Infants
Introduction Preterm infants are exposed to irregular light for several weeks or months in the Neonatal intensive-care unit (NICU). This lack of maternal entrainment, the exposure to irregular extrauterine lighting and care in the nursery may contribute to the disturbances in body temperature, sleep and physiological changes that are commonly experienced by preterm infants. Materials and Method...
متن کاملSpecies composition in the Carangidae family during dark and light periods using the bottom trawl survey
The study aimed to estimate the effect of ecological factors such as day and night on catch species composition in fishing landings in the perisan Gulf in May 2016. In this study, were catched about 34937.18 kg marine speceis and identified of 64 groups of species and family including 56 groups of bonyfishes, 6 groups of invertabrate, 2 groups of cartilage fishes. Meanwhile, the Bushehr, Hormoz...
متن کاملEcological light pollution
methods to illuminate the night. In pre-industrial times, artificial light was generated by burning various materials, including wood, oil, and even dried fish. While these methods of lighting certainly influenced animal behavior and ecology locally, such effects were limited. The relatively recent invention and rapid proliferation of electric lights, however, have transformed the nighttime env...
متن کامل