Foraging at night under artificial light: consequences on reproductive senescence and lifetime reproductive success for a diurnal insect

Author:

Elisa GomesORCID,Jean-François Lemaître,Valentina Rodriguez-Rada,François Débias,Emmanuel DesouhantORCID,Isabelle Amat

Abstract

AbstractThe increasing use of artificial light at night (ALAN) is currently a major anthropogenic disturbance, with largely unappreciated eco-evolutionary consequences for nocturnal but also diurnal organisms. It has been hypothesized that light pollution could create new opportunities for the latter to forage and reproduce at night, which is called the ‘night-light’ niche, with fitness consequences still scarcely explored.We exposed diurnal parasitoid wasps (Venturia canescens) to one of three light-at-night conditions: control (0 lux), low intensity (0.7 lux) or high intensity (20 lux) throughout their lives. We then monitored changes in both behavioural and life-history traits, namely daytime and nighttime feeding and egg-laying activity, reproductive senescence, lifespan and lifetime reproductive success.Light pollution influenced the nighttime activity of wasps. The proportion of wasps feeding and laying eggs at night increased, and we also detected a tendency for a higher nighttime reproductive success under a high intensity of light pollution. Surprisingly, high intensity of light pollution also increased the wasps’ lifespan. Such changes did not affect the lifetime reproductive success of the wasps, but influenced the distribution of ovipositions between day and night.Reproductive senescence occurs inV. canescens, evidenced by the linear decline in daily reproductive success with age regardless of the light condition. ALAN conditions, in interaction with mother age, affected developmental time in offspring, highlighting an effect on reproductive senescence.We demonstrated that light pollution induced the use of the ‘night-light’ niche in a diurnal insect, with a shift in the distribution of egg-laying events between day and night. While we did not observe strong consequences on individual fitness, such changes in the dynamics of parasitism behaviour may nevertheless have major consequences for population dynamics, especially in natural conditions.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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