Why do fireflies light up at night?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: To attract mates
To attract mates ✓ — Correct! Fireflies produce light through bioluminescence using luciferin and luciferase enzymes. Males flash specific patterns to attract females of their species. Each species has unique flash patterns - like a secret code! Females respond with their own flashes. It's nature's light-based dating app!
To navigate in darkness — Wrong. Fireflies don't use their light for navigation—they have excellent night vision. The specific flash patterns are species-specific mating signals, not navigation aids.
They absorb sunlight — Wrong. Fireflies produce their own light through a chemical reaction (bioluminescence), not by storing or reflecting sunlight. The reaction happens in special light organs in their abdomen.
More Animal Behavior questions
- When should you worry if a cat suddenly gets very clingy?
- A cat suddenly yowls more on spring nights. Which conclusion is weakest?
- Which claim about cats in spring is safest?
- A cat cuddles you in a sunbeam. Why might it choose that spot?
- Why may an open window make a cat patrol more?
- When a cat rubs your leg, what else may it be doing?
