City Lights Are Stretching Allergy Seasons. Here's Why.

City Lights Are Stretching Allergy Seasons. Here's Why.

A decade of Northeast pollen data shows urban allergy seasons run two months longer than rural ones. Cities see pollen arrive 20 days earlier, but the real driver is when it ends—much later. Artificial nighttime light tricks plants' internal clocks, extending their growing cycles. Researchers controlled for temperature and rainfall to confirm light itself was the culprit.

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