If bugs are attracted to bright lights, why don’t they fly towards the sun during the day?

2.56K views

If bugs are attracted to bright lights, why don’t they fly towards the sun during the day?

In: Biology

3 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

They’re not naturally attracted to lights; they evolved to use the Sun and Moon for navigation. When they fly past an artificial light source, their tiny brains think they’re off-course, and they turn towards the light to compensate.

Anonymous 0 Comments

My best guess would be millions of years of evolution establishing that the sun is not viable source of whatever it is they receive but 🤷‍♂️

Anonymous 0 Comments

As others have said, it’s for navigation. Insects have compound eyes – they’re made up of many sections that can each see individually. They navigate by keeping a source of light like the sun or the moon visible in one of these sections. If you do that with something as far away as the sun or moon, it doesn’t shift position when you move, so the result is flying in a straight line. If you try to keep a light that’s close to you constantly in one eye section, you’ll have to turn. This leads to flying in a spiral pattern and colliding with the light source.