Abstract
Abstract— The shapes, the peak wavelengths and the close matching of bioluminescence colors to visual spectral sensitivities in North American firefly species are consistent with the predictions of a spectral optimization model for selection in evolution (Seliger et al., 1982). A screening pigment found by microspectrophotometry in the rhabomeres of Photinus pyralis has the absorbancc characteristics predicted by the model. The biologically effective adaptation, a dimensionless ratio proportional to the relative advantage of a species to detect bioluminescence during twilight. has been calculated from experimentally determined distributions of ambient spectral radiances, visual spectral sensitivities and bioluminescence emissions and is shown to correlate both with color of bioluminescence and with the timing of initiation of flashing activity. The colors of firefly bioluminescence are therefore species‐specific adaptations to optimize the detection of bioluminescence in the different photic environments in which the species have evolved.
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