Marine artificial light at night: An empirical and technical guide
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24150Dato
2021-06-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Tidau, Svenja; Smyth, Tim; Mckee, David; Wiedenmann, Jörg; D’Angelo, Cecilia; Wilcockson, David; Ellison, Amy; Grimmer, Andrew J.; Jenkins, Stuart R.; Widdicombe, Stephen; Queirós, Ana M.; Talbot, Elizabeth; Wright, Adam; Davies, Thomas W.Sammendrag
2. Drawing on expertise from optical oceanographers, modellers, community ecologists, experimental and molecular biologists, we share practical advice and solutions that have proven useful for marine ALAN research. Discussing lessons learnt early on can help in the effective and efficient development of a field.
3. The guide follows a sensory ecology approach to marine light pollution and consolidates physics, ecology and biology. First, we introduce marine lightscapes highlighting how these differ from terrestrial ones and provide an overview of biological adaptations to them. Second, we discuss study design and technology to best quantify ALAN exposure of and impacts on marine and coastal organisms including molecular tools and approaches to scale-up marine ALAN research.
4. We conclude that the growing field of marine ALAN research presents opportunities not only for improving our understanding of this globally widespread stressor, but also for advancing fundamental marine photobiology, chronobiology and night-time ecology. Interdisciplinary research will be essential to gain insights into natural marine lightscapes shaping the ecology and evolution coastal and marine ecosystems.