The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #137646   Message #3171240
Posted By: Desert Dancer
15-Jun-11 - 10:18 PM
Thread Name: BS: Where are the gorram fireflies?
Subject: RE: BS: Where are the gorram fireflies?
In today's NY Times: Fireflies, Following Their Leader, Become a Tourist Beacon

ELKMONT, Tenn. — Lynn Faust remembers the old days of firefly season here.

You would hike into the woods at night, with nobody else around, waiting for one of nature's strangest and most beautiful rituals. Then the fireflies would emerge, thousands and thousands of them, and under the moonlight they would all flash in unison. On. Off. On. Off.

"It's as though they wear little watches," said Ms. Faust, 56, a biologist and naturalist who has studied fireflies for decades. "It's awe-inspiring, it's beautiful, it's rhythmic and it's bright. You're surrounded by the fireflies."

These days, you are also surrounded by the tourists.

The secret is out about this marvelously rare and very brief annual spectacle. About a thousand tourists a night come to Elkmont, a small trailhead in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, during the two weeks each June when the country's largest population of synchronous fireflies puts on what locals call "the light show."
...
Synchronous fireflies have been observed in Southeast Asia and reported, but not as well verified, along various parts of the southern Atlantic Coast, in Georgia, Tennessee and West Virginia. But Elkmont's population is the Western Hemisphere's largest, so dense that you can hardly walk without hitting one.

Jonathan Copeland, a Georgia Southern University biologist, made the official scientific discovery about Elkmont's fireflies, reported in the Journal of Insect Behavior in 1995. Every year since, park officials say, the crowds have grown, creating up to a four-hour wait for buses to the trail on weekends.

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A new one on me. There's a video with the article.

~ Becky in Tucson