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Fireflies of the Great Smoky Mountains

For two weeks every June fireflies in the Smokey Mountains perform an astonishing light show
  • Fireflies of the Great Smoky Mountains in Fort Harry, Tennessee

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America's fireflies have been keeping a secret.

In 1680, the Dutch physician Engelbert Kaempfer, on a voyage down the Meinam River in Siam, recorded one of the earliest Western accounts of the coordinated flashing of Asian fireflies: “A whole swarm of these insects, having taken possession of one Tree, and spread themselves over its branches, sometimes hide their Light all at once, and a moment after make it appear again with the utmost regularity and exactness, as if they were in perpetual Systole and Diastole.” The synchronized flashing was a scientific mystery. When Philip Laurent wrote about the phenomenon in the journal Science in 1917, he argued that “For such a thing to occur among insects is certainly contrary to all natural laws,” and suggested that it was is not the fireflies that had flickered in unison, but the observer’s eyelids. Today, scientists have come to understand how such synchronized flashing can emerge through a process known as “coupled oscillation.”

Long thought to be an exclusively Southeast Asian phenomenon, the dazzling behavior was only discovered in an American firefly species (P. Carolinus) in 1992. The American fireflies were first brought to the attention of scientists by a reader of Science News, who thought it odd that an article on Asian firefly synchronicity mentioned nothing about the bugs near her own home. She wrote a letter to a Steven Strogratz, a Cornell mathematician who studies synchronization:

I am sure you are aware of this, but just in case, there is a type of group synchrony lightning bug inside the Great Smoky Mountain National Park near Elkmont, Tennessee. These bugs “start up” in mid June at 10 pm nightly. They exhibit 6 seconds of total darkness; then in perfect synchrony, thousands light up 6 rapid times in a 3 second period before all going dark for 6 more seconds.

We have a cabin in Elkmont... and as far as we know, it is only in this small area that this particular type of group synchronized lightning bug exists. It is beautiful.

In 1995, scientists confirmed the existence of the Great Smoky Mountain synchronized fireflies, and have subsequently discovered other populations in the Congaree Swamp in South Carolina and other high altitude locations in the Appalachian mountains. As this curious phenomenon remained undiscovered for years, it is quite possible that there are other varieties of fireflies blinking in unison throughout the United States, perhaps even in your own backyard.

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Directions / Map

Directions

During the second week in June, trolleys run from the Sugarlands Visitor Center to the Little River Trailhead at Elkmont, leaving every 20-25 minutes. The trolley is the only transportation in and out unless you are a registered camper at Elkmont.

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Comments

By Anonymous June 27 2009

Other places around the Smokies have these fireflies, not just Elkmont which happens to be nearest the heavy tourist gatherings.

By Anonymous June 29 2009

The statement that the trolley is the only way in or out of Elkmont is ridiculous; Elkmont is accessible by road from Gatlinburg, Townsend, etc. Simply take Little River Road along the north border of the Park, then drive up into Elkmont.

This article also fails to mention another unique Elkmont feature: the abandoned cabins of the relatively rich from the mid-20th Century. The NPS has condemned all of these cabins (the last grandfathered-in resident departed a few years ago). They remain in a state of advanced decay, but are quite interesting. Jake's Creek runs immediately behind most of them, which are on the back side of Elkmont Campground (again, road accessible).

By Anonymous July 7 2009

They do close the road during that time of the fireflies.

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