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Study Reveals How Insects Contribute To Atmospheric Electricity

Washington: Researchers have found that insects can produce as much electrical charge in the atmosphere as a thunderstorm cloud by observing the electrical fields around swarming honeybees. This kind of energy aids in influencing weather patterns, helps insects discover food and propels spiders into the air to travel long distances.

The findings of the research published in the journal iScience, demonstrates that living things can have an impact on atmospheric electricity.

"We always looked at how physics influenced biology, but at some point, we realized that biology might also be influencing physics," says first author Ellard Hunting, a biologist at the University of Bristol. "We're interested in how different organisms use the static electric fields that are virtually everywhere in the environment."

As with most living creatures, bees carry an innate electric charge. Having found that honeybee hive swarms change the atmospheric electricity by 100 to 1,000 volts per meter, increasing the electric field force normally experienced at ground level, the team developed a model that can predict the influence of other species of insects.

"How insect swarms influence atmospheric electricity depends on their density and size," says co-author Liam O'Reilly, a biologist at the University of Bristol. "We also calculated the influence of locusts on atmospheric electricity, as locusts swarm on biblical scales, sizing 460 square miles with 80 million locusts in less than a square mile; their influence is likely much greater than honeybees."

"We only recently discovered that biology and static electric fields are intimately linked and that there are many unsuspected links that can exist over different spatial scales, ranging from microbes in the soil and plant-pollinator interactions to insect swarms and perhaps the global electric circuit," says Ellard.

"Interdisciplinarity is valuable here--electric charge can seem like it lives solely in physics, but it is important to know how aware the whole natural world is of electricity in the atmosphere," says co-author Giles Harrison, an atmospheric physicist from the University of Reading. —ANI

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