Abstract

Recent empirical investigations have characterized the synchronized flashing behaviours of male Photinus carolinus fireflies in their natural habitat in Great Smoky Mountain National Park as well as in controlled environments. We develop a model for the flash dynamics of an individual firefly based on a canonical elliptic burster, a slow-fast dynamical system that produces a repeating pattern of multiple flashes followed by a quiescent period. We show that a small amount of noise renders that oscillation very irregular, but when multiple model fireflies interact through their flashes, the behaviour becomes much more periodic. We show that the aggregate behaviour is qualitatively similar to the experimental findings. We next distribute the fireflies in a two-dimensional spatial domain and vary the interaction range. In addition to synchronization, various spatio-temporal patterns involving propagation of activity emerge spontaneously. Finally, we allow a certain number of fireflies to move and demonstrate how their speed affects the rate and degree of synchronization.

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