How do fireflies glow?

A long-exposure shot of specks of light from fireflies in the forest

It’s one of the hallmarks of summer in some parts of the United States: fireflies twinkling at night. The ability of fireflies to produce their own light is called bioluminescence, which occurs in select animals, bacteria and fungi around the world. Most of these creatures live in caves or oceans. But a handful live where humans can see them, including the more than 2,000 species of beetles that make up the firefly family.

So we know what the effect is called. But how do fireflies (family Lampyridae), also called fireflies, create these dazzling displays?

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