One night in May 2017, Jonathan Martin stepped into his backyard in northern Wisconsin. He was carrying a special flashlight that emitted ultraviolet (UV) light. Martin knew that shining these invisible energy waves on the leaves and flowers of certain plants can reveal interesting patterns, which are normally undetectable to the naked eye. But before he could begin his search, he was distracted by the squeak of a flying squirrel, an animal that’s typically brown with a cream-colored underside. Martin turned his flashlight toward the sound—and couldn’t believe what he saw. In the beam of UV light, the squirrel’s belly gave off a neon pink glow!
Martin is a forestry scientist at Northland College in Ashland, Wisconsin. He immediately told some of his colleagues what he had witnessed in his backyard. “Nobody really believed him,” says Allie Kohler, who was a biology student at Northland at the time. Many animals—including birds, fish, frogs, insects, and lizards—can fluoresce, or absorb and then emit light. But this ability had almost never been observed in mammals like flying squirrels.
One night in May 2017, Jonathan Martin stepped into his backyard in northern Wisconsin. He carried a special flashlight that emitted ultraviolet (UV) light. Martin planned to shine these invisible energy waves on leaves and flowers. He knew doing this can reveal interesting patterns on certain plants. The naked eye normally can’t see these patterns. But before he could begin his search, he heard the squeak of a flying squirrel. Martin turned his flashlight toward the sound. He couldn’t believe his eyes. Flying squirrels are usually brown with a cream-colored belly. But in the beam of UV light, the squirrel’s belly glowed neon pink!
Martin is a forestry scientist at Northland College in Ashland, Wisconsin. Right away, he told some of his colleagues what he had seen in his backyard. “Nobody really believed him,” says Allie Kohler. She was a biology student at Northland at the time. Many animals can fluoresce, or absorb and then emit light. They include birds, fish, frogs, insects, and lizards. But scientists had almost never seen this in mammals like flying squirrels.