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Journal ArticleDOI

Reducing the Maladaptive Attractiveness of Solar Panels to Polarotactic Insects

TLDR
Although solar panels can act as ecological traps, fragmenting their solar-active area does lessen their attractiveness to polarotactic insects, and the design of solar panels and collectors and their placement relative to aquatic habitats will likely affect populations of aquatic insects that use polarized light as a behavioral cue.
Abstract
Human-made objects (e.g., buildings with glass surfaces) can reflect horizontally polarized light so strongly that they appear to aquatic insects to be bodies of water. Insects that lay eggs in water are especially attracted to such structures because these insects use horizontal polarization of light off bodies of water to find egg-laying sites. Thus, these sources of polarized light can become ecological traps associated with reproductive failure and mortality in organisms that are attracted to them and by extension with rapid population declines or collapse. Solar panels are a new source of polarized light pollution. Using imaging polarimetry, we mea- sured the reflection-polarization characteristics of different solar panels and in multiple-choice experiments in the field we tested their attractiveness to mayflies, caddis flies, dolichopodids, and tabanids. At the Brewster angle, solar panels polarized reflected light almost completely (degree of polarization d ≈ 100%) and sub- stantially exceeded typical polarization values for water (d ≈ 30-70%). Mayflies (Ephemeroptera), stoneflies (Trichoptera), dolichopodid dipterans, and tabanid flies (Tabanidae) were the most attracted to solar panels and exhibited oviposition behavior above solar panels more often than above surfaces with lower degrees of polarization (including water), but in general they avoided solar cells with nonpolarizing white borders and white grates. The highly and horizontally polarizing surfaces that had nonpolarizing, white cell borders were 10- to 26-fold less attractive to insects than the same panels without white partitions. Although solar panels can act as ecological traps, fragmenting their solar-active area does lessen their attractiveness to polarotactic insects. The design of solar panels and collectors and their placement relative to aquatic habitats will likely affect populations of aquatic insects that use polarized light as a behavioral cue.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological novelty and the emergence of evolutionary traps.

TL;DR: A conceptual framework for explaining the susceptibility of animals to traps is summarized that integrates the cost-benefit approach of standard behavioral ecology with an evolutionary approach (reaction norms) to understanding cue-response systems (signal detection).
Journal ArticleDOI

Renewable energy and biodiversity: Implications for transitioning to a Green Economy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors synthesize the existing knowledge at the interface of renewable energy and biodiversity accross the five drivers of ecosystem change and biodiversity loss of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) framework (i.e., habitat loss/change, pollution, overexploitation, climate change and introduction of invasive species).
Journal ArticleDOI

How Green is 'Green' Energy?

TL;DR: The ecological impacts of three major types of renewable energy - hydro, solar, and wind energy - are reviewed and some strategies for mitigating their negative effects are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

In the light of new greenhouse technologies: 2. Direct effects of artificial lighting on arthropods and integrated pest management in greenhouse crops

TL;DR: This review compiles the current knowledge on how greenhouse pest and beneficial arthropods are directly affected by light, with the focus on whiteflies, to design a road map for research on IPM in crops lighted with high-pressure sodium lamps, light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and photoselective films.
Journal ArticleDOI

Avian interactions with renewable energy infrastructure: An update

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review studies that have examined direct and indirect effects on birds at utility-scale onshore wind- and solar-energy facilities, including their associated transmission lines.
References
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BookDOI

Evolution in Changing Environments: Some Theoretical Explorations. (MPB-2)

TL;DR: Professor Levins, one of the leading explorers in the field of integrated population biology, considers the mutual interpenetration and joint evolution of organism and environment, occurring on several levels at once.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological and evolutionary traps.

TL;DR: Conservation and management protocols must be designed in light of, rather than in spite of, the behavioral mechanisms and evolutionary history of populations and species to avoid ‘trapping' them.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-efficiency organic solar concentrators for photovoltaics.

TL;DR: The exploitation of near-field energy transfer, solid-state solvation, and phosphorescence enables 10-fold increases in the power obtained from photovoltaic cells, without the need for solar tracking.
Journal ArticleDOI

A framework for understanding ecological traps and an evaluation of existing evidence.

TL;DR: A conceptual model is developed to explain how an ecological trap might work, the specific criteria that are necessary for demonstrating the existence of an ecologicaltrap, and tools for researchers to use in detecting ecological traps.
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