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The animal kingdom

Light as an environmental factor has an impact on all living creatures. That much we know.

Light inf­lu­en­ces both human and animal emo­ti­ons and beha­vi­our – inc­lu­ding those of insects and gene­rally noc­tur­nal cre­atu­res such as bats, owls and mig­ra­tory birds. As well as the shift from day­light to dark­ness, moon­light and star­light also play an impor­tant part.

Bats, for example, hunt only at night using echo­lo­ca­tion. Mig­ra­tory birds navi­gate their pas­sage using the stars in the sky. On the water, insects hatch their larvae at night. They are all depen­dent on dark­ness. Dark­ness pro­tects them from heat and hun­ters, allows them to search for food in safety, pro­vi­des ori­en­ta­tion, and cont­rols biolo­gi­cal cycles – inc­lu­ding rep­ro­duc­tive cycles as we see with the firefly. Female firef­lies emit their gentle light signal to the males. If the sur­ro­un­dings are too bright, the males miss the signal and mating fails. Ligh­ting along wate­r­ways att­racts insects in their droves but this is out of balance with nature, and so they are not ava­ilable as food for fish, birds and bats.

Arti­fi­cial ligh­ting affects the beha­vi­our of our animal king­dom. We are lear­ning more every day about the true impacts of exte­rior ligh­ting, and adap­ting our beha­vi­our accor­dingly. Bats, for example, are pro­tec­ted by a raft of bin­ding inter­na­ti­onal and Euro­pean agre­ements (e.g. the Fauna Flora Habi­tat Direc­tive) which also iden­ti­fies light as a rele­vant factor. Aga­inst this backg­ro­und, sus­ta­inable exte­rior ligh­ting in urban or rural areas – and in par­ti­cu­lar in places desig­na­ted as being of spe­cial eco­lo­gi­cal inte­rest or a habi­tat to endan­ge­red spe­cies – must take into acco­unt the needs of insects and other ani­mals.

Firef­lies are beco­ming inc­re­asingly rare. One reason for this is the inc­re­asing bright­ness caused by arti­fi­cial light.

Light that looks out for insects
A main focus of Selux is the deve­lop­ment of Night Sky tech­no­lo­gies. LED tech­no­logy plus new mate­ri­als and pro­duc­tion pro­ces­ses today give us con­si­de­rably gre­ater oppor­tu­nity to cont­rol the direc­tion, light dist­ri­bu­tion, dura­tion, inten­sity and spect­rum of lumi­na­ires.

Tar­ge­ted light with a clear cut-off
Spe­ci­ally deve­lo­ped optics with a pre­cise dow­n­ward beam enable an even more tar­ge­ted focus. This means that no direct light com­po­nents are radi­ated above the hori­zon­tal plane of a lumi­na­ire. And the star-stud­ded inky black night sky so cru­cial to people, ani­mals and plants is main­ta­ined.

Warm colour tem­pe­ra­tu­res
The com­po­si­tion of light is a deter­mi­ning factor as we jour­ney towards sus­ta­inable ligh­ting. Living orga­nisms react highly sen­si­ti­vely to spect­ral com­po­si­ti­ons of elect­ro­mag­ne­tic radi­ation in the visible range, many of them to blue light in par­ti­cu­lar. The spect­rum used should the­re­fore mini­mise short-wave light (blue/​violet) as much as pos­sible. The recom­men­da­tion is to ins­tall street lights with maxi­mum 3000K. The lower the colour tem­pe­ra­ture, the more warm tones the light will have, and the less impact it will thus have on the animal king­dom. Whe­re­ver ligh­ting and urban deve­lop­ment impinge on the habi­tat of sen­si­tive or endan­ge­red ani­mals, the recom­men­da­tion is to use maxi­mum 2 400K or the ext­re­mely warm »PC Amber« colour tone. We offer cor­res­pon­ding light colo­urs as stan­dard in our new pro­duct ranges.

Redu­ced light inten­sity
Light should be no brigh­ter than it needs to be. Where pos­sible, nor­ma­tive spe­ci­fi­ca­ti­ons should not be exce­eded. Illu­mi­na­ted sur­fa­ces also play a role: some mate­ri­als ref­lect more light back into the night sky than others. Every last detail counts here — we ensure that our lumi­na­ires do not light up their poles as well, for example.

Cont­rol­led ligh­ting
Light that adapts to the cir­cums­tan­ces: it’s there when you need it and not when you don’t. Ligh­ting should be ope­ra­ti­onal accor­ding to use. Motion sen­sors or timer cont­rols ensure light is pro­vi­ded at the right time, and is othe­r­wise dimmed or switc­hed off comp­le­tely.

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