"ATTACK" OF THE CICADAS HAS BEGUN
They've been asleep under ground for 17 years and now it's time for their return to the world above them. They are the Cicada bug and they'll be returning by the millions if not the billions from Georgia to Connecticut.
Their ear perching song and red eyes will soon be on tree branches to house sides. Here are some facts about our 17 year visitors and why you really have nothing to worry about.
1. There will be hundreds of millions of them
The insects themselves aren't very big — adults tend to be a little larger than a quarter. And while they don't sting or bite, there will be hundreds of millions — perhaps billions — of them. A single Brood II female lays as many as 600 eggs before she dies. According to John Cooley, a research scientist at the University of Connecticut, Brood II cicadas tend to form denser clouds than other varieties: Clusters can range from tens of thousands to 1.5 million per acre.
The insects themselves aren't very big — adults tend to be a little larger than a quarter. And while they don't sting or bite, there will be hundreds of millions — perhaps billions — of them. A single Brood II female lays as many as 600 eggs before she dies. According to John Cooley, a research scientist at the University of Connecticut, Brood II cicadas tend to form denser clouds than other varieties: Clusters can range from tens of thousands to 1.5 million per acre.
2. They won't be around for very long
When soil temperatures reach a balmy 64 degrees in in late May or early June, nymphs will start emerging from underground, "boiling out of the ground" as if "from some horror movie," reports The New York Times. Then, for the first time since 1996, they'll climb up trees, shed their skin, and transform into loud, obnoxious adults looking to procreate. Thankfully, the whole cycle only lasts 6 weeks, and we won't see the cicadas again until 2030.
When soil temperatures reach a balmy 64 degrees in in late May or early June, nymphs will start emerging from underground, "boiling out of the ground" as if "from some horror movie," reports The New York Times. Then, for the first time since 1996, they'll climb up trees, shed their skin, and transform into loud, obnoxious adults looking to procreate. Thankfully, the whole cycle only lasts 6 weeks, and we won't see the cicadas again until 2030.
3. They're actually great for plant lifeWhen
a female squirts her eggs on twigs and shrubs, they form thick clusters
that strip trees of excess branches. "This does little permanent damage
to trees; some small branches may be broken," notes The Times"But the end result is often the same as that from pruning — healthier plants."
4. They don't taste badCicadas
are arthropods, meaning they're related to shrimp and lobsters.
(Something to bear in mind if you have shellfish allergies.) The bugs have something of a long culinary history, especially in the Southwest:
Ashlee Horne of Nashville likes her cicadas sautéed in butter and
garlic. Jenna Jadin of Washington, D.C., bakes them into banana bread,
chocolate-chip cookies, and rhubarb pie. Others like them dipped in
chocolate for a sweet, crunchy snack.
According to one blogger, they taste "crispy and crunchy, with a nutty, almondlike flavor," and are best eaten before the nymphs form their hard exoskeleton. A cicada swarm once even rescued the Onondaga Indians of New York from famine.
However, The Humane Society warns
against letting dogs and other pets gorge on yards full of the bugs, as
their hard exteriors could present a choking hazard. An ingredient
found naturally in their shells (chitin) can also cause constipation and
vomiting when digested in large amounts.
5. Bob Dylan wrote a song about themIt's called "Day of the Locust." The inspiration came in 1970, during an especially loud, sleepless night of buzzing in
Princeton, N.J. It may be the best song ever written about noisy insects