![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgcVXjlIr2y-1c2RE8OmQxE4WKxEX2-MzXDRz7wPeDvPVXKWujy1iht-PkZdJc5OGpx1b9huykJmotqNlxM0rG9sftQtbM8MD9Kyg1pUbJ76DatBqfSRFk3qApEovj3DiQL_NgB/s320/FlickrFireflies.jpg)
because their populations are in decline. NoImpactMan has a report, linking to a story that says
Of the nearly 200 species of fireflies on this continent, only a few are urbanites.
“There’s two or three species in North America that seem to put up with what people do,” Lloyd says.
I remember as a child in the city putting a little grass in the bottom of a jar kept from year to year for that purpose, running after them in the dusk to catch them, watching them flash until I fell asleep and setting them free the next morning. I remember the joy of sharing that fun with my kids. It's deeply saddening to think my grandkids might not be able to find lightning bugs.
The photo above of fireflies/lightning bugs in a jar is from Flickr.
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