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Is light pollution changing how plants do – and don't – grow?

Plants depend on cycles of light. Now, they're always on

Kylla Benes

Ecology

Every living thing has rhythm. It doesn’t matter if it’s a single-celled microbe or complex creatures such as ourselves – activities occur according to daily, seasonal, and even lunar cycles.

These cycles are usually synchronized by light. Therefore, a potential hazard to natural rhythms is light pollution, or as scientists call it, artificial light at night (ALAN). Although there have been efforts to reduce ALAN, light pollution has increased both in terms of brightness and land area cover, respectively up 1.8 percent and 2.2 percent per year since 2012. In humans, exposure to artificial light at night is associated with a myriad of health problems such as sleep disorders, depression, and certain types of cancer. Plants can also be affected by light pollution, and we are just beginning to understand how.

Plants depend on light for energy. They gather sunlight in microscopic, chemical solar panels called chloroplasts. The light energy moves through a series of chemical reactions that turn carbon dioxide into usable energy, like glucose, in a process called photosynthesis. With few exceptions, plants are the only type of organisms that can directly use solar energy to make their own food. Because of this, it is easy to think that light pollution should have an overall positive effect on plants. Increased light should mean more photosynthesis, giving plants more chemical energy for growth and other functions.

But more growth isn’t what scientists always find. In a study recently published in Limnology and Oceanography, Maja Grubisic of the Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries and colleagues found that light pollution may actually inhibit growth of aquatic microscopic plant communities called periphyton.

Over a three-week experiment, exposure to the increasingly popular LED lighting reduced periphyton by more than half compared to controls, which received no artificial nighttime lighting. This suggests light pollution reduced overall periphyton growth, a result that was actually opposite of what the researchers expected to find.

The experiment by day

Maja Grubisic, the Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries

Grubisic noted in an interview that by using a lower intensity, her experiment mimicked real-life light pollution levels more commonly experienced by plant life. The low light intensities “may have been too low to boost photosynthetic production, but simultaneously disrupted other processes,” which may explain the unexpected lower growth found in the periphyton communities, she said.

ALAN on the grasslands

Light pollution has been shown to negatively impact much larger plants. In a four-year study of grassland plants, biogeographer Jonathan Bennie and colleagues from the University of Exeter found that, toward the end of the study, low intensities of LED lighting at night reduced the amount of one species, colonial bentgrass.

Grubisic said that light pollution may reduce some plant growth because of a “trade-off of effects" ALAN has on plants depending on its intensity. Higher levels of light pollution may indeed provide enough light to increase photosynthesis and plant growth. Whereas low levels of light may not provide enough energy to be stimulating but could disrupt other processes that depend on light as a signal, leading to negative consequences. Indeed, in the grassland study, whereas colonial bentgrass was negatively affected by low light, sweet vernal grass and Yorkshire fog grass actually increased under higher levels of light pollution.

Light pollution could be "disrupting" because light is also information for plants. If you live in a seasonal climate, you have likely witnessed this first-hand. As fall begins, the shorter days and cooler temperatures provide a signal to some trees that it is time to stop photosynthesizing and start dropping leaves to protect themselves from the impending freezing temperatures of winter. In fact, trees living near street lamps that had retained some of their leaves longer than normal was one of the earliest observations of the effects of light pollution on plants.

The experiment by night

Maja Grubisic, the Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries

In the case the periphyton communities, Grubisic suggested that the unnatural timing of light pollution could have disrupted the microscopic plants’ daily rhythm, depriving them of the much-needed rest and repair that occurs at night. But light in terms of energy can also be disruptive. Several types of microscopic plants found in the periphyton community can live under light intensities much lower than what was provided in the study. However, the amount of resources and energy it takes to maintain photosynthesis at night may cost more than the plant gains. In our interview, Grubisic said it is difficult to know whether one or both of these scenarios played out in her experiment, and that “exact mechanisms behind the effects we found remain to be determined.”

They did find that the results depended on how old the periphyton community was, as well as the season. The reduction of periphyton under light pollution only occurred in newly developing periphyton communities, not ones that were already established for 22 to 26 days (although a follow-up study using more sensitive technology found changes occurred in these older communities too).

A Joshua tree in California

Joshua Tree National Park

Light pollution also altered the makeup of the periphyton communities, but which species were most abundant varied by season. Further, in the spring it took three weeks for noticeable results, but only two weeks in the fall. These are important to consider in an urban an environment where physical disturbances like flooding, and chemical pollution such as agricultural run-off, could interact with light pollution to affect plants in complex ways.

Satellites have detected light pollution on every continent. Recent estimates suggest that 83 percent of the world’s population experiences some level of light pollution. This human-caused phenomenon is not isolated to urban areas, as light radiates out of cities to surrounding areas via sky glow. Despite increasing evidence that light pollution is effecting the world's vegetation, the number of direct field tests of light pollution on plants is low.

Moscow's light from space

NASA

Plants filter air and water, and they are also a source of food, medicine, and raw materials for humans and other animals. When light pollution negatively affects plants, it may impact these resources with far-reaching consequences. Still, there are ways individuals and communities can minimize light pollution impacts, Grubisic said. The use of motion-sensors, placing lights only where necessary for safety, such as busy street intersections, and utilizing designs that direct or focus light on specific locations, for example, can reduce total light pollution and minimize far-reaching glow. Less light pollution can help humans, plants, and creatures of all kinds keep a more natural rhythm.

Comment Peer Commentary

We ask other scientists from our Consortium to respond to articles with commentary from their expert perspective.

Cassie Freund

Ecology

Wake Forest University

I don't know if I totally buy these studies, but it would be helpful to know how many others on the topic have been done and what they found. The idea that low levels of light provides information for plants that might disrupt other processes makes sense, but a couple of points of caution:

1. I don't think periphyton is representative of all plants. In fact, it seems like a very specific type of plant community, and the conclusions drawn there can't be easily translated to other biomes like tropical and temperate forests.

2. Is LED light itself representative? Plants respond differently to different wavelengths of light, so perhaps the wavelength is driving the response seen in both studies. 

3. Has anyone studied plants that grow in the high Arctic and Scandinavian countries? If the effect is a signaling one instead of the light itself being detrimental, then you would expect those plants to show a different response to changing light regimes because they are naturally exposed to nearly 24 hours of light at some points during their life cycles.

4. This is something I wonder about a lot of studies so not picking on these necessarily, and I mean this kindly, but.... what's the point? People will not stop using outdoor lights just for plants (sea turtle hatchlings, maybe) and thus we can't know what the species community trajectory would be without the light. So why does it matter – does light disproportionately affect endangered plants (i.e. is a there  a conservation threat) or does it affect some ecosystem process that we should be concerned about?

Kylla Benes responds:

  1. That is why I included the grassland study and mentioned both the positive and negative effects on land plants: to give the reader the sense it can happen in both types of 'plants,' and that the outcomes are not always the same.           
  2. LED lighting is quickly replacing other types of lighting in all types of applications; sodium lamps, I believe, are historically most popular for large outdoor applications. I very much wanted to talk about light spectra but it added about 900 more words... Maybe delving into this issue would make for a good second article. The grassland study tested both LED and amber lighting, which often elicited the same response as high-intensity LEDs.                              
  3. Not that I know of; I could only find a handful of in situ studies... two aquatic microbial ones (the periphyton one I used and another by a German team in agricultural ditches) and then the grassland study (which had two publications). The author of the latter, Jonathan Bennie, has written a good review on the subject too.                                             
  4. Communities actually are working to mitigate light pollution for various reasons. Florida, for example, has been working to reduce light pollution along coastlines to aid in sea turtle conservation. People may not care about "plants," but whether they realize it or not, they need plants for clean air and water and other "services." While I think direct experiments are needed, photosynthesis and growth are tied to many of these services, so I don't think it is far-fetched to hypothesize these services being affected too. I think this is a general problem we "plant" biologists have - making the larger importance known and generating concern. If light pollution is mitigated more broadly – even if the only driving factor is human health – that should benefit plants and other animals too!

Is there anything else that leads you not to "buy" these studies?

Cassie Freund responds:

Long story short and without reading them in depth, I am just not convinced that they are generalizable to all plants. And in general, outside of the experimental world, where there is light pollution there are people, and people are more destructive to plants than lights are.  So I'm still not convinced that looking at light pollution's effects on plants matters all that much when there are so many big conservation issues threatening plants that we have yet to solve.

Kylla Benes responds:

I see your point. One issue is light pollution radiates, and there is a lot of conservation land that is in or near areas settled by humans. If low-intensity lighting really does negatively impact plants (even land plants, as the grassland study suggests), this could be an added or interactive factor along with other conservation issues.

Gabriela Serrato Marks responds:

It looks like light pollution might be an issue for migrating birds as well. Maybe if there are demonstrated impacts on things more charismatic than plants, people will be more invested in reducing light pollution.

Cassie Freund responds:

Yeah, the 9/11 memorial made the problems with light pollution really clear to a lot of New Yorkers. That's a clever study. Here's a good "pop sci" summary. 

Devang Mehta

Genomics

University of Alberta

I think it’s misleading to call periphyton "plants." Technically they (algae, diatoms, cyanobacteria) are unicellular members of the same kingdom as land plants, but I wonder if the lay reader will grasp the vast difference between the two from reading this article. Also, photosynthesis and the circadian clock are both very, very different from algae to land plants. It’s not reasonable to generalize the conclusions to photosynthesis and the clock in trees and other multicellular plants, especially since the effect of ALAN seems confined only to a particular season, growth stage, and species type in the study.

Kylla Benes responds:

I don't think it is unreasonable to call photosynthetic microbes 'plants' for the general public. Like you mentioned, you wonder if the lay reader would grasp the difference between the two. I worry that pointing out the difference, and having to include a bunch of sentences to explain those differences, would make the piece more confusing. 

I could have easily flipped the focus around to feature the grassland study instead, but as a phycologist, I thought the periphyton study was novel and that algae don't get enough press. While periphyton and terrestrial plants have different pathways of photosynthesis and clocks, they both still have them, and both are dependent on light. My inclusion of the grassland study was to demonstrate that all forms of photosynthetic organisms can be affected by light pollution, and may even have similar gross outcomes. 

But that doesn't generalize the underlying molecular and physiological processes. The periphyton study showed seasonal differences, and the grassland study (which only measured once per year at the end of the growing season) only saw effects after a couple years, probably both a consequence of the life-histories and seasonality of these organisms. Both studies showed species-specific responses. These again demonstrate nuanced outcomes for both periphyton and land plants.

Cassie Freund responds:

I see what you're saying, but I disagree on the periphyton thing. Do microbial biologists consider periphyton plants? This is the first I've heard that term.

Kylla Benes responds:

Among peers, no, I don't think microbial biologists would 'consider' periphyton 'plants.' But amongst my own colleagues (seaweed biologists) some of us make exceptions when talking to the general public if that detail doesn't matter to the storyline. I have found that scientists are either willing to make that generality or not – we're definitely two factions. I should mention that the author of the periphyton study read the article and did not take issue with the use of 'plant.'