An Ecological Perspective on Sleep Disruption

Am Nat. 2017 Sep;190(3):E55-E66. doi: 10.1086/692604. Epub 2017 Jun 26.

Abstract

Despite its evolutionary importance and apparent ubiquity among animals, the ecological significance of sleep is largely unresolved. The ecology of sleep has been particularly neglected in invertebrates. In insects, recent neurobehavioral research convincingly demonstrates that resting behavior shares several common characteristics with sleep in vertebrates. Laboratory studies have produced compelling evidence that sleep disruption can cause changes in insect daily activity patterns (via "sleep rebound") and have consequences for behavioral performance during active periods. However, factors that could cause insect sleep disruption in nature have not been considered nor have the ecological consequences. Drawing on evidence from laboratory studies, we argue that sleep disruption may be an overlooked component of insect ecology and could be caused by a variety of anthropogenic and nonanthropogenic factors in nature. We identify several candidate sleep-disrupting factors and provide new insights on the potential consequences of sleep disruption on individual fitness, species interactions, and ecosystem services. We propose an experimental framework to bridge the current gap in knowledge between laboratory and field studies. We conclude that sleep disruption is a potential mechanism underpinning variation in behavioral, population, and community-level processes associated with several aspects of global change.

Keywords: anthropogenic disturbance; circadian activity; ecosystem services; fitness; sleep rebound; time budget.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biological Evolution
  • Ecology*
  • Ecosystem
  • Genetic Fitness*
  • Insecta*
  • Invertebrates
  • Sleep*