Glowworms Are Unique Insects That are Bioluminescent
by Owen Borville
Glowworms (lampyris noctiluca) are unique beetle insects that are bioluminescent and produce a "cold light" by way of chemical reactions that take place in its body in its abdomen. Bioluminescence is called "cold light" because it produces hardly any heat.
The glowworm is only found in Europe and Asia.
Scientists have not been able to duplicate the bioluminescence of the glowworm in the laboratory.
Glowworms use close to 100 percent of their energy in the light, an extremely efficient use of energy. An incandescent light bulb, however, is 4 percent light and the rest is heat, and 96 percent of the energy is wasted or lost.
Their light is so bright that people use them as flashlights in their baskets. Glowworms can control whether they emit their light as flashes or as a constant glow.
Glowworms mix two substances, luciferin, a protein waste product that it naturally secretes and luciferase, an enzyme which is about 1,000 amino acids, along with ATP (adenosine triphosphate), the molecule from which life forms draw energy to power their muscles and biological reactions. The gloworm mixes these three substances with oxygen that it breathes to produce the light.
Scientists can't figure out the evolution of the glowworm or how its bioluminescent abilities originated.
Glowworms are not wormlike at all but have segmented bodies and six legs at the head end. Males and females are segmented and elongated with long antennae. Males have wings while females don't.
In Sequence
Glowworms have been observed to release their light in sequence as a way to communicate or to attract mates.
One particular group of glowworms will sit on the leaves of a tree in large quantities of thousands of glowworms or more and turn on their lights at the same time at night and the whole tree will light up. These glowworms seem to be able to communicate somehow to know when to turn on the lights. The lights can be seen from miles away.
Some glowworms use their light to attract and catch prey, smaller flying insects.
by Owen Borville
Glowworms (lampyris noctiluca) are unique beetle insects that are bioluminescent and produce a "cold light" by way of chemical reactions that take place in its body in its abdomen. Bioluminescence is called "cold light" because it produces hardly any heat.
The glowworm is only found in Europe and Asia.
Scientists have not been able to duplicate the bioluminescence of the glowworm in the laboratory.
Glowworms use close to 100 percent of their energy in the light, an extremely efficient use of energy. An incandescent light bulb, however, is 4 percent light and the rest is heat, and 96 percent of the energy is wasted or lost.
Their light is so bright that people use them as flashlights in their baskets. Glowworms can control whether they emit their light as flashes or as a constant glow.
Glowworms mix two substances, luciferin, a protein waste product that it naturally secretes and luciferase, an enzyme which is about 1,000 amino acids, along with ATP (adenosine triphosphate), the molecule from which life forms draw energy to power their muscles and biological reactions. The gloworm mixes these three substances with oxygen that it breathes to produce the light.
Scientists can't figure out the evolution of the glowworm or how its bioluminescent abilities originated.
Glowworms are not wormlike at all but have segmented bodies and six legs at the head end. Males and females are segmented and elongated with long antennae. Males have wings while females don't.
In Sequence
Glowworms have been observed to release their light in sequence as a way to communicate or to attract mates.
One particular group of glowworms will sit on the leaves of a tree in large quantities of thousands of glowworms or more and turn on their lights at the same time at night and the whole tree will light up. These glowworms seem to be able to communicate somehow to know when to turn on the lights. The lights can be seen from miles away.
Some glowworms use their light to attract and catch prey, smaller flying insects.