Here Come The Cicadas (2024)

Periodical Cicadas spend 17 years underground feeding on tree sap. Now, billions of cicada nymphs are once again preparing to emerge from the earth and take to the treetops of 15 states across the East Coast and Midwest. Ed Reschke/Getty Images hide caption

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Ed Reschke/Getty Images

Periodical Cicadas spend 17 years underground feeding on tree sap. Now, billions of cicada nymphs are once again preparing to emerge from the earth and take to the treetops of 15 states across the East Coast and Midwest.

Ed Reschke/Getty Images

The last time periodical cicadas of Brood X emerged, blanketing sidewalks and lawns with their large shiny bodies and creating a deafening chorus, John Kerry was running for president, Barack Obama was an obscure state senator, and Donald Trump was praising Democrats on CNN.

Now, underfoot, billions of cicada nymphs are once again preparing to emerge from the earth and take to the treetops of 15 states across the East Coast and Midwest. The world has changed a lot since the last time these periodical cicadas emerged — and the cicadas themselves may be changing too, driven by climate change.

The periodical cicadas that will emerge this year are Brood X (pronounced 10) — one of the largest groups of periodical cicadas in the world.

Exactly when the creatures will crawl out of the ground and head for the treetops to mate depends on the weather and the ground temperature — the ground needs to be about 64 degrees, and a little rainfall can help trigger the emergence. Cicadas have already begun digging exit tunnels, preparing to climb out when the time is right.

"I'm actually a little anxious about it, like, when are they coming?" asks Ploi Swatdisuk. She was a senior in high school in Northern Virginia, the last time the periodical cicadas emerged, and does not have fond memories.

"It's just so gross," she says, recalling the squashed bodies of the large insects on her way to school. "I'm not really looking forward to it, and I don't know who could be except like maybe a wildlife biologist."

Indeed, people who study bugs are excited. "This is our Super Bowl, absolutely, for entomologists, we've been looking forward to this," says Michael Raupp, professor emeritus at the University of Maryland, also known as "the bug guy." It will be, he says, a "spectacular event."

The insects have been quietly waiting for 2021 to roll around for almost two decades.

"Remember, these are just teenagers and they've been underground for 17 years," Raupp says. "It's been a dismal existence. They want to come up and party."

Periodical cicadas are not to be confused with annual cicadas — the noisy creatures that create the late summer soundtrack in much of the country every year. Periodical cicadas live most of their lives underground, sucking sap from tree roots. Then, they emerge en masse. There are more than a dozen different cicada broods scattered across the eastern half of the U.S., all on different 17 or 13 year schedules.

To understand periodical cicadas' periodicity, and the strangely specific number of years they stay underground, Raupp says you have to consider cicadas' survival strategy. It's something called predator satiation.

"In other words, they're going to emerge synchronously in such massive numbers, they fill the bellies of every predator that wants to eat them," Raupp explains.

Even after predators' bellies are full, there are still many, many cicadas left to reproduce. But for this satiation strategy to work, the brood has to all emerge the same year — in overwhelming numbers. If just a few cicadas come out, on an off year, Raupp says, "They are eaten into oblivion."

As for the 17 years underground, Raupp explains that cicadas favor prime numbers. Emerging in prime number intervals helps different broods on different schedules avoid each other. Interbreeding could mess with those precisely timed schedules, leading to smaller numbers of cicadas emerging more often, making the satiation strategy ineffective.

Lately cicadas' schedules seem to be changing.

John Cooley has been studying cicadas since grad school in the '90s. He's now a professor at the University of Connecticut. Years ago he started a project mapping cicada broods. Whenever a brood starts emerging, Cooley and his colleagues spend weeks driving around with the windows down.

They listen for cicadas, and map what they hear. In recent years they've been hearing something unexpected — cicadas emerging years early, off schedule.

And, he says, it could be because of climate change.

"It is an absolutely intriguing possibility that as global climate change, it's throwing the cicadas off the cycle that they're supposed to be on and causing them to make mistakes," Cooley says.

Cooley says another possibility is that cicada behavior has remained the same, but humans are acting differently. Armed with smartphones and the internet, we may be reporting unusual cicada emergences more often than in the past.

Some early reports are already coming in, but the masses of cicadas aren't expected until mid-May.

For those who aren't excited about that prospect, Cooley has some advice — try to appreciate it for the unusual event it is.

"At this scale, there really isn't anywhere else on the planet where something like this happens," Cooley says.

In the midst of what's been a terrible pandemic year for most humans, the emergence of the periodical cicadas is a moment to pause, and marvel at nature. After all, who knows what life will be like next time Brood X comes out, in 2038.

Here Come The Cicadas (2024)

FAQs

Why are the cicadas so loud right now? ›

One species — Magicicada cassini or tredecassini (depending on 17- or 13-year brood) — is the loudest of them all when the males form a chorus. On the most perfect summer afternoon — hot, but not too hot, and kind of muggy with a hazy sun — they'll synchronize their singing “and that's a whole other level.

What do Texans call cicadas? ›

Texans are likely familiar with annual or “dog-day” cicadas, the green-and-black insects that emerge each summer across large swaths of the state, leaving their exoskeletons on tree trunks and other surfaces, Keck said.

Where are the cicadas in Chicago? ›

A cicada tracking map that marks spottings across the U.S. shows some of the highest sightings have been reported in suburbs west of Chicago, particularly near the Downers Grove area.

What are the bugs coming out of the ground in 2024? ›

Tens of billions of noisy cicadas are set to pop out of the ground in the coming weeks in a rare synchronized event that last occurred 221 years ago. The winged insects are expected to appear across the Midwest and Southeast starting early May, in a double emergence of two different broods of periodical cicadas.

How long will the cicada noise last? ›

Most individual cicadas live only a few weeks, but since they emerge over a period of two weeks or so the whole event lasts longer. The serious noise will get going about a week and half after you first notice them and will last about two weeks more. After that things get a lot quieter.

What time of day do cicadas make the most noise? ›

It depends on the species, but cicadas “sing” as a way to communicate, reproduce, and maybe even defend themselves, according to the University of Florida's Book of Insect Records. Cicadas mostly make noise in the evening around dusk, but will also buzz at you if you pick one up.

Why do cicadas squirt? ›

To cobble together enough nutrients, each cicada must consume up to 300 times its body weight in xylem fluid each day—“which means they have to pee a lot,” Challita says. For cicadas, the researchers suggest that forming a jet of liquid is more energy-efficient than flinging away their copious waste by the droplet.

How many years does it take for a cicada to come out? ›

Periodical cicadas are amazing creatures that spend over 99% of their lives underground as immature insects; they come up for a few weeks once every either 13 or 17 years to molt into adults, mate, lay eggs and then die.

Are cicadas good or bad? ›

Cicadas are not dangerous and can provide some environmental benefits including: Cicadas are a valuable food source for birds and other predators. Cicadas can aerate lawns and improve water filtration into the ground. Cicadas add nutrients to the soil as they decompose.

What state has the most cicadas? ›

What states will have the most cicadas in 2024? Basically, states that start with "I" will be impacted most. Entomologist Molly Keck of Texas A&M University says that parts of Iowa and Illinois will be hit the hardest, as that's where there's the most overlap between the 13- and 17-year cicada broods.

How long do cicadas live? ›

How long do cicadas live? Cicadas spend the vast majority of their lives underground and emerge at the end of the 13—or 17-year cycle. When they emerge, their job is to reproduce.

What states have cicadas every 17 years? ›

The 17-year periodical cicadas are distributed from the Eastern states, across the Ohio Valley, to the Great Plains states and north to the edges of the Upper Midwest, while the 13-year cicadas occur in the Southern and Mississippi Valley states, with some slight overlap of the two groups.

What bug lives underground for 17 years? ›

The cicada nymphs hatch from their eggs in trees. After a few days, they fall to the earth and burrow underground, where they spend their time tunneling through dirt and eating the sap from tree roots. They live that way for 17 years in their nymph form.

What bugs only come out every 7 years? ›

Periodical cicadas, sometimes referred to as 17-year cicadas, are large, flying insects that are known for the loud buzzing noise that males make to attract female mates. These insects are often incorrectly referred to as locusts, even though they are unrelated.

Are cicadas edible? ›

Cicadas can be eaten at three different life stages: nymph, teneral and adult. All three stages sport the distinctive red eyes that set periodical cicadas apart from the so-called annual cicadas that don't synchronize their emergence. Cicadas come aboveground as brownish nymphs with stubby wings.

Why do I hear cicadas all the time? ›

Tinnitus (pronounced tin-NI-tus or TINN-ei-tus) is the perception of sounds in the ears or in the head that are not present in the environment. For example, tinnitus can sound like ringing, buzzing, whoosing, humming, chirping, cicadas, or like a concha shell. It can even sound like your heart beat.

How to quiet cicadas? ›

Rain tends to lessen cicadas' singing, and water does not harm them, though a pressure washer could do damage, according to Gene Kritsky, an entomologist who has studied periodical cicadas for the past 50 years.

How loud will the cicadas be in 2024? ›

Portions of Indiana and Illinois are positioned to have members of both broods emerge. This is the first time in 221 years that both broods will emerge at the same time (FOX, 2024). Noise levels have been measured at 105 dB when clusters reach 1,000 (FOX, 2024).

Why are cicadas louder in the heat? ›

With friction creating heat in the cicada's body, they have the ability to create a body temperature that exceeds that of the air temperature. When the air is hotter outside it helps the male cicadas to increase their sound and make themselves more audible to female cicadas.

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