Data: White and amber light at night disrupt sleep physiology in birds

Published: 16 July 2020| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/tzjzkyrrvh.1
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Description

This data set corresponds to the statistical models and four main-text figures of Aulsebrook and Connelly et al. 2020. Artificial light at night can disrupt sleep in humans and other animals. A key mechanism for light to affect sleep is via non-visual photoreceptors that are most sensitive to short-wavelength (blue) light. To minimise effects of artificial light on sleep, many electronic devices shift from white (blue-rich) to amber (blue-reduced) light in the evening. Switching outdoor lighting from white to amber might also benefit wildlife. However, whether these two colors of light affect sleep similarly in different animals remains poorly understood. Here we show, by measuring brain activity, that both white and amber lighting disrupt sleep in birds, but that the magnitude of these effects differs between species. When experimentally exposed to light at night at intensities typical of urban areas, domestic pigeons (Columba livia) and wild-caught Australian magpies (Cracticus tibicen tyrannica) slept less, favoured non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep over REM sleep, slept less intensely, and had more fragmented sleep compared to when lights were switched off. In pigeons, these disruptive effects on sleep were similar for white and amber lighting. For magpies, however, amber light had less impact on sleep. Our results demonstrate that amber lighting can minimize sleep disruption in some birds, but that this benefit may not be universal.

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Ornithology, Animal Sleep, Aves, Sleep, Environmental Pollution, Artificial Lighting, Physiology of Sleep

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