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NUITFRANCE - Bibliothèque - Fiche bibliographique
Bibliothèque
Cette rubrique recense :
- de la documentation sur les différents thèmes de la nuit (vie nocturne, pollution lumineuse, pollution sonore, ...).
- les données informatiques relatives à l'éclairage public digitalisées et mises à dispositions en open data par certaines communes,
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Quelques tags associés : [ DOCUMENTATION, PUBLICATIONS, LITTÉRATURE, CONNAISSANCES, LITTÉRATURE GRISE, ARTICLES DE PRESSE, ARTICLES SCIENTIFIQUES, TEXTES JURIDIQUES, PLANS ET PROGRAMMES, JURISPRUDENCE, DÉCRETS, THÈSES ]
► Fiche bibliographique
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Document " Tuning the white light spectrum of light emitting diode lamps to reduce attraction of nocturnal arthropods "
Type de document : |
Articles de revue scientifique |
Thème du document : |
Nuit préservée - Lumière artificielle - Mesures génériques de réduction |
Groupe biologique : |
Invertébrés terrestres |
Auteur(s) : |
LONGCORE T. ALDERN H.L. EGGERS J.F. FLORES S. FRANCO L. HIRSHFIELD-YAMANISHI E. PETRINEC L.N. YAN W.A. BARROSO A.M.
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Date de publication : |
Mars 2015 |
Langue : |
English/Anglais |
Nom du périodique : |
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society |
Précisions : |
Volume 370. Numéro 1667, Mai 2015. Theme issue ‘The biological impacts of artificial light at night: from molecules to communities’ compiled and edited by Kevin J. Gaston, Marcel E. Visser and Franz Hölker |
Lien contenu/source : |
http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/roy... |
DOI : |
10.1098/rstb.2014.0125 |
Mots-clefs : |
Arthropods Indoor lighting Light emitting diodes Phototaxis Vector-borne disease
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Citation courte : |
Longcore et al. (2015) |
Citation complète (format NuitFrance) : |
LONGCORE T., ALDERN H.L., EGGERS J.F., FLORES S., FRANCO L., HIRSHFIELD-YAMANISHI E., PETRINEC L.N., YAN W.A. & BARROSO A.M. (2015). Tuning the white light spectrum of light emitting diode lamps to reduce attraction of nocturnal arthropods. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Volume 370. Numéro 1667, Mai 2015. Theme issue ‘The biological impacts of artificial light at night: from molecules to communities’ compiled and edited by Kevin J. Gaston, Marcel E. Visser and Franz Hölker. |
Résumé du document : |
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Artificial lighting allows humans to be active at night, but has many unintended consequences, including interference with ecological processes, disruption of circadian rhythms and increased exposure to insect vectors of diseases. Although ultraviolet and blue light are usually most attractive to arthropods, degree of attraction varies among orders. With a focus on future indoor lighting applications, we manipulated the spectrum of white lamps to investigate the influence of spectral composition on number of arthropods attracted. We compared numbers of arthropods captured at three customizable light-emitting diode (LED) lamps (3510, 2704 and 2728 K), two commercial LED lamps (2700 K), two commercial compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs; 2700 K) and a control. We configured the three custom LEDs to minimize invertebrate attraction based on published attraction curves for honeybees and moths. Lamps were placed with pan traps at an urban and two rural study sites in Los Angeles, California. For all invertebrate orders combined, our custom LED configurations were less attractive than the commercial LED lamps or CFLs of similar colour temperatures. Thus, adjusting spectral composition of white light to minimize attracting nocturnal arthropods is feasible; not all lights with the same colour temperature are equally attractive to arthropods.
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Saisie sur NuitFrance par : |
Rosor |
Saisie sur NuitFrance en : |
Mars 2015 |
Identifiant NuitFrance : |
NF-BIBLI-1177 |
Permalien de la fiche NuitFrance : |
http://www.nuitfrance.fr/?page=donneesdoc&partie=fiche-bibliographique&id_doc=1177 |
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