Random image

Night Lighting Of Habitats Damages Plant Communities. Until Now.

Lighting systems across much of the world are currently based on WLEDs, and there have been many advances to reduce energy consumption without loss of brightness. This is great news for indoor lighting but problems arise when these WLED systems are used for outdoor lighting.

Natural plant habitats, particularly those found in places that are normally dark at night, such as caves and forests, are being altered by artificial lighting because the increased illumination helps invasive species to thrive. Light at night also prevents flowers from blooming; decreasing crop yields and spoiling natural beauty spots.

Now, Tomohiko Nakajima and his colleagues at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology report a dysprosium-doped phosphor with yellow-white luminescence that is able to reduce photosynthesis, and therefore growth, in the model aquatic plant Chlorella to only 26% of what it would be under conventional WLEDs. The Dy-WLED does this by reducing red near-IR emissions, decreasing luminescence correlation with the photosynthetic action spectrum. Essentially, it has a spectrum that is invisible for plants.

Nakajima explains the team’s motivation for developing this technique: ‘Lighting at the Akiyoshido cave in Yamaguchi has bred new moss that had been never been seen there before. Human lighting destroyed the original ecosystem.’

Artificial light has encouraged foreign moss to invade limestone caves in Yamaguchi © iStock

Our daily habits and lifestyle always has a profound impact on a visit this link viagra sans prescription person’s emotional and mental state. However, if you cannot deal with sleeplessness with natural remedies, then medicines can be taken as pharma-bi.com on line cialis a last resort. Well the agreeable news for us viagra best is that alcohol detoxification can be treated with reasonable medications. female viagra pill Mast Mood oil massage on the male organ and improve the quality of erections for men.
Timur Atabaev, an optics and photonics expert from Seoul National University in South Korea, agrees that the Dy-doped phosphor could be very useful as an artificial source of light. And according to Łukasz Marciniak, an expert in luminescence of rare earth ions at the Polish Academy of Sciences, these results ‘may change the way we think about the projection of light’.


Posted

in

by

Tags: