Date: September 10, 2025
Time: 6:30pm
Location: 39 Cove Road, Orleans
Insect populations around the world are declining rapidly. But why? While habitat loss, pesticide use, and climate change all have something to do with it, Dr. Avalon Owens shows in this talk that light pollution is another important — but too often overlooked — bringer of the insect apocalypse. Light pollution interferes with the development, movement, foraging, courtship, and reproduction of diverse insect species, including many that we know and love to see in our gardens. Fortunately, light pollution can be cheaply, easily, and instantly eliminated. Doing so will help ensure that we live in harmony with our insect friends and neighbors for generations to come.
Avalon received her Ph.D. in Biology from Tufts University in spring 2022, where she studied how artificial light affects firefly courtship and reproduction. She also holds a B.A. in Integrative Biology from Harvard University and an M.S. in Entomology from National Taiwan University. Her research group at the Rowland Institute at Harvard studies how organisms and ecosystems cope with anthropogenic light pollution, with a current focus on the ecological costs and evolutionary consequences of moth flight-to-light behavior.
The lecture will take place at the Orleans Yacht Club, 39 Cove Road, Orleans. Doors open at 6pm; lecture starts at 6:30.