The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Birds, bees and even plants might act weird during the solar eclipse

March 26, 2024 at 5:00 a.m. EDT
Seagulls fly above a beach during a partial solar eclipse. (Yasser Al-Zayyat/AFP/Getty Images)
8 min

A total eclipse isn’t just a spectacle in the sky. When the moon consumes the sun on April 8, day will plunge into twilight, the temperature will drop — and nature will take notice.

Reports abound of unusual animal and plant behavior during eclipses. A swarm of ants carrying food froze until the sun reemerged during an 1851 eclipse in Sweden. A pantry in Massachusetts was “greatly infested” with cockroaches just after totality in 1932. Sap flowed more slowly in a 75-year-old beech tree in Belgium in 1999. Orb-weaving spiders started tearing down their webs and North American side-blotched lizards closed their eyes during an eclipse in Mexico in 1991.