Ten years ago, we knew almost nothing about how much light pollution the oceans were exposed to, or the ecological harm this caused. We are beginning to answer these questions and uncovering the extent to which we need to make decisions that will help ecosystem recovery. However, light pollution is not receiving the same attention as climate change, ocean acidification, marine plastics or noise pollution. That urgently needs to change in the face of increasing coastal development, and an ever-growing global population, and we hope the GOALANN initiative will go some way to delivering that.
Dr Thomas Davies
Associate Professor of Marine Conservation
It seems that the more marine ecological indicators we look at, the more impacts we find of artificial light pollution. That includes having an effect on functions such as predator prey dynamics, reproductive cycles and disruption to the daily rhythm of life in the ocean. By launching this initiative, we hope to raise awareness of these threats and push the impacts of light pollution up the environmental agenda.
Head of Science for Marine Biogeochemistry and Observations at Plymouth Marine Laboratory
Launching the Global Ocean Artificial Light at Night Network
Read more about our research on the ocean impacts of light pollution
- Initiative increases awareness of the threats posed by light pollution to the global ocean 10 April 2024
- Coastal lights trick coral reefs into spawning earlier than they should 15 May 2023
- Losing the cover of darkness 26 March 2022
- Night lights: new global atlas maps out artificial light at night under the sea 14 December 2021
- Coastal cities leave up to 75% of seafloor exposed to harmful light pollution 30 July 2020