The 2025 Photuris frontalis season in Southeast Louisiana began with early treetop activity in March. This was followed by a long stretch of watching and waiting. During this time, enthusiasts tried not to get fooled by every suspicious little flash in the woods. By early and mid-March, the treetops were already active. The notes repeatedly describe the woods as “sparkling.” Fireflies gradually appeared lower as the season progressed.
This page summarizes my 2025 field notes from private property in Southeast Louisiana. I document the annual appearance of Photuris frontalis there. I pay special attention to the females, which are far more difficult to find and confirm in the wild. The full downloadable PDF below contains the nightly charting logs, including temperature, moon phase, weather, synchrony estimates, and behavior notes. The 2025 season was not clean or easy. It was a season of false alarms, weather trouble, impostors, near-catches, and a handful of hard-won female confirmations. The observations are part of an ongoing field study of female Photuris frontalis behavior and courtship in Southeast Louisiana.
What the early season looked like
March gave signs of promise before the Snappies fully arrived. The earliest notes describe treetop activity under cool conditions. The conditions remained workable. There was a noticeable increase in sparkling activity after storms and on muggy nights. By March 18 and March 22, the woods were active enough. The fireflies seemed to be getting lower. This change makes a person start hoping too early and chasing ghosts in the underbrush. On March 24, a flasher about four feet off the ground raised the question of a possible Snappy. However, it was still too early for certainty.
That uncertainty carried into early April. On April 2, a possible Snappy was seen too high to confirm. By April 8, the notes were plain. It was too cold, windy, and rainy lately for much of anything. We were advised to “still watch and wait.” On April 9, there were a handful of low flashes deep in a wooded area. It was not enough to call the season open. This was one of those years. The weather kept interrupting momentum. It forced the whole season to inch forward instead of arriving cleanly.
The season got underway slowly
One of the big themes of 2025 was confusion. Several insects looked promising at first and then turned out to be something else. On April 23, the notes mention three males that “fake[d] me out in the bushes.” On April 24, there was a likely female near the oldest elderberry tree in the underbrush. She was seen in the leaf litter. A male flew toward her and flashed back and forth. But the underbrush prevented a capture, and the pair disappeared into the leaves. On April 26, a faint glow near the elderberry appeared not to be a female. It was actually a Photuris larva. The season repeatedly asked for patience and then laughed when patience was offered.
Even so, the notes begin to show a pattern that matters. The female search consistently returned to underbrush edges and leaf litter. It also focused on elderberry, ferns, and low cover near the wooded edge. This occurred rather than in deep open flight zones. That fits the broader pattern seen across the female observations from 2023–2025. Most confirmed females were found low to the ground. They were often in leaf litter, on twigs, or along wooded margins bordering the yard.
The breakthrough: first confirmed female of 2025
The clearest turning point in the 2025 season came on April 28. By then the Snappies were flying out into the yard. I caught my first confirmed female Snappy of the season. She was perched on the edge of the underbrush. She was about six inches off the ground on a pine sapling. She flashed erratically as males passed by. When one male came near, she went dark. That combination of low perch height, edge habitat, faint or erratic flashing, and nearby males aligns closely with broader patterns. This pattern is seen in females across multiple seasons.
This female, later called “Damsel,” became one of the most important and most painful observations of the season. After capture, she flashed at a male in a jar, and the following morning she was still alive and producing a typical P. frontalis flash pattern while looking for an exit. I built a makeshift terrarium that included the pine sapling where she had been found and prepared to observe her with a group of captured males. Instead, the observation ended badly when a fire ant made it into the setup and injured her severely. She did not survive. That loss became part of the 2025 season story as much as the capture itself.
More females followed
The season did not stop with that first confirmed female. The female observation summary shows additional confirmed females on May 3, May 6, and May 11. The May 3 female was observed in or near ferns or pine straw. Males were flying around and mixing into the same area. The May 6 female was flying about three inches off the ground. She was flashing faintly at the edge of the yard. By May 11, overall numbers were poor. Another female was seen flashing among the underbrush. This marked female number four for the year. Together, these observations strengthen the pattern. Confirmed females in 2025 were low, faint, and brief. They were often tied to edge habitat, ferns, pine straw, underbrush, or yard margins.
What changed in 2025
Compared with earlier seasons, the 2025 notes include especially detailed attention to weather, wind, humidity, and night-to-night shifts in visibility. Many entries track muggy conditions, stormy afternoons, wind gusts, humidity, and the way weather seemed to affect activity. The season also included more repeated false alarms than the cleaner story people usually want from a field season. There were impostors and low flyers that were not Snappies. Some faint glows turned out to be larvae. There were multiple cases where males or other species looked female-like just long enough to waste hope. That frustration is part of the data too.
At the same time, 2025 strengthened a key takeaway in this work. Female Photuris frontalis may be more active and visible than they seem. However, their low appearance to the ground, faint flashes, and choice of locations make them easy to miss. Observers might not search these places carefully enough. Across the broader 2023–2025 female summary, all confirmed females were observed flashing. Some were found perched. Some were in leaf litter. Others were in flight. Most captures occurred along the wooded edge bordering the yard.
Key findings from the 2025 season
- Early activity began in March with treetop flashing, followed by fireflies gradually appearing lower in the woods.
- Early April was slowed by cold, wind, and rain, making the season frustratingly uneven.
- A likely female was observed on April 24 in leaf litter near elderberry underbrush, flashing with a nearby male before disappearing into the leaves.
- The first confirmed female of 2025 was caught on April 28, perched about six inches off the ground on a pine sapling at the edge of the underbrush.
- Additional confirmed females were documented on May 3, May 6, and May 11.
Why this season matters
The 2025 season matters because it adds detail, not just dates. It shows how easy it is to misread early-season flashes. Weather can greatly shape visibility. Female Photuris frontalis often appear low, faint, and close to the edges of underbrush or yard habitat. They are less likely found in obvious open display zones. It also shows that meaningful fieldwork is not always tidy. Some nights produce clean captures. Other nights produce nothing but damp shoes, bad guesses, and one bug that absolutely lied to your face.
Download the full 2025 field notes
The full PDF includes nightly logs, synchrony estimates, moon phase and weather notes, capture details, and season-long observations from spring 2025 in Southeast Louisiana.