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All you East Coasters...

Jr_Bullit

I'm sooo teenie weenie!!!
Sep 8, 2001
2,028
1
North of Oz
HAVE to take pictures of this! (And I think I'll stay on the West Coast for awhile)

Plague due on the East Coast

Trillions of cicadas to plague US


The last cicada swarm in the United States emerged in 1987
Trillions of cicadas in the eastern US are waking from a 17-year slumber in what scientists expect to be the largest insect emergence on Earth.
The winged insects, which have been living underground and feeding on tree roots, will engage in a frenetic mating cycle before dying en masse in June.

The bugs are harmless, but their mating call is very noisy.

They are expected to swarm over 14 eastern states including Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, New York and Ohio.

There are more than a dozen separate broods of 17-year cicadas, along with several 13-year varieties.

Periodical cicadas are only found in the eastern United States.

'Bad smell'

University of Indiana cicada expert Keith Clay says he expects this year's brood, Brood X, to be the largest.

17-YEAR CICADA LIFECYCLE

1. Female lays eggs and dies soon after. Eggs hatch.
2. Bugs or 'nymphs' drop to the ground
3. Nymphs live underground feeding on tree roots
4. After 17 years, nymphs tunnel to surface, crawl up trees and shed skins to become adults
5. Adults mate during May and June of 17th year
The insects can reach densities of up to 3,000kg/hectare, he told a news conference at the National Science Foundation, Reuters reported.

Along with other scientists, he plans to study the mass coming-out in a bid to discover how the insects developed their unique lifecycle.

The adult males initiate the mating cycle with a long, loud buzzing noise which attracts females. Different species have different mating calls.

One is said to sound like a flying saucer from a 1950s science fiction film, while another is said to make a sizzling noise.

After the adult insects have mated, the females cut slits into tree branches, where they deposit up to 600 eggs. The adults then die.

"They rot very quickly and they smell really bad for a few days, and will disappear on their own," Professor Clay said.

The eggs hatch in a few weeks, and the young cicadas burrow into the ground.

'Foolhardy'

Homeowners have been warned to use netting to protect young trees and shrubs.


Cicadas are often described as stupid for their inability to defend themselves - they are easy prey for birds and dogs.

"We prefer the term 'predator foolhardy'," University of Connecticut biologist Christine Simon told Reuters.

It makes things easier for people who like to eat them - young cicadas are said to taste like canned asparagus.

But curious diners should take advantage of the glut as the next monster swarm is due in 2021.
 
Jan 7, 2004
686
0
D.C. area
Don't worry--we're all over it/them. And they are all over us.

There have been probably two cicada articles in the newspaper every day for a month. Talk about hype!
 

stosh

Darth Bailer
Jul 20, 2001
22,248
408
NY
They said this 17yrs ago and nothing happened.

Just some stupid news story to get dumb people worked up again.
 

Jr_Bullit

I'm sooo teenie weenie!!!
Sep 8, 2001
2,028
1
North of Oz
So...

do y'all eat them like the said in the article? Are there really bugs in this world that taste like canned asparagus?
 
Jan 7, 2004
686
0
D.C. area
P.S. Where I live in northern Virginia, they are hanging around letting their wings harden right now. Some are singing, but it's not deafening yet. Supposedly they can be as loud as 120 db., which, I think, is as loud as a jet taking off. They haven't begun flying around yet by my house. That's when it really gets fun!

I'm curious if they will have some sort of impact on the Nationals at Snowshoe in mid-June... you know, like if a rider is really afraid of insects they're going to be riding in situations like an episode of "Fear Factor."
 
Jan 7, 2004
686
0
D.C. area
Originally posted by stosh
They said this 17yrs ago and nothing happened.

Just some stupid news story to get dumb people worked up again.
:confused: Maybe in NY, but DC/MD/VA got hit bad. I was in middle school. Lemme tell ya, gym class was nuts what with all the boys getting a rise out of the girls by throwing them in their hair.... People were stockpiling them in the less popular students' lockers....
 

DamienC

Turbo Monkey
Jun 6, 2002
1,165
0
DC
Originally posted by Jr_Bullit
So...

do y'all eat them like the said in the article? Are there really bugs in this world that taste like canned asparagus?
Cicadas almost made the menu at the swank Ritz Carlton Georgetown in DC - http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16047-2004Apr15.html.

In the coming weeks, if I happen upon an eatery serving cicadas I'm going to have to sample whatever it is they come up with.

When I went running last night I saw a few on the sidewalk and a couple of birds chomping away on them. I think they're just now starting to emerge though.

I'm going to start telling all the ignorant, bratty neighborhood kids that if they don't start to behave, God is going to unleash a plague of insects on them soon :devil: :D.
 

binary visions

The voice of reason
Jun 13, 2002
22,161
1,261
NC
Originally posted by stosh
They said this 17yrs ago and nothing happened.

Just some stupid news story to get dumb people worked up again.
Uh? I remember the swarm last time and was in up state NY for it (fingerlakes area)... Hundreds and hundreds of them all over everything.. You could walk out and brush the skins off the trees by the bunches.
 
Jan 7, 2004
686
0
D.C. area
If you live somewhere where there's tons of concrete, or somewhere where there's been a lot of construction in the past 17 years, you probably won't see many since they come up from underground. My neighborhood hasn't really been touched since the 1950's.... This is gonna be fun!
 

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
55,949
21,989
Sleazattle
I'll be saving a few bucks on pet food this month. The dog and cat make a very good killing/eating team. The cat kills things then the dog steals and devours it.:cool:
 

riderx

Monkey
Aug 14, 2001
704
0
Fredrock
Don't believe the hype.

Everyone is in some sort of panic similar to when the weatherman mentions the possibility of a few snow flakes. I lived through the last round, no big deal.
 

Toshi

butthole powerwashing evangelist
Oct 23, 2001
39,674
8,704
one of my friends used to live in cincinnati, and she said that the last wave (more like 11 years ago tho?) was quite the spectacle. i was in nyc around that time, and certainly 17 years ago, and remember nothing of the sort. i can't see cicadas surviving in manhattan, so the article's "ny" must be upstate.
 

HedgeHog

Monkey
Nov 8, 2003
137
0
Atlanta GA
University of Indiana cicada expert Keith Clay says he expects this year's brood, Brood X, to be the largest.
So, what kinda cash does a "cicada expert" pull down nowadays? Does he even work during the 17 years between his busy seasons?

I saw a couple the last time it happened. Not expecting too much.
 

shifty S

Monkey
Jun 6, 2002
397
0
NWDC...Asheville
i just went out and dug holes in my neighbors yard, for every shovel full of dirt there was about 9-10 cicadas....and i stepped on a few on my front walk...
 

llkoolkeg

Ranger LL
Sep 5, 2001
4,335
15
in da shed, mon, in da shed
Originally posted by DamienC
I'm going to start telling all the ignorant, bratty neighborhood kids that if they don't start to behave, God is going to unleash a plague of insects on them soon :devil: :D.
Hahaha! When their ball hits your Subie, do you also make the moon go away(at times that just happen to correspond with eclipses)? :D
 

biggins

Rump Junkie
May 18, 2003
7,173
9
Originally posted by shifty S
i just went out and dug holes in my neighbors yard, for every shovel full of dirt there was about 9-10 cicadas....and i stepped on a few on my front walk...

bwahahaha
 

rozi

Chimp
Mar 7, 2004
4
0
New Hampshire
I remember that '87 summer in Ohio, I was about 9 and my sandbox was a seething mass of wriggling cicadas. I filled jars with 100's of them and gave them to my mom as a present. She was quite...pleased.
Also, take note!!! If you can find the big live, fully awake ones with nice wings, and hold them by their wings and throw them like a baseball, they will often continue to sputter along that trajectory like a cicada missle! It's really fun to bomb people.

:devil:
 

Jr_Bullit

I'm sooo teenie weenie!!!
Sep 8, 2001
2,028
1
North of Oz
Originally posted by shifty S
i probably missed a few that were behind leaves and closer to the ground....and this has barely started...
So what happens when you ride your bike? Do you get to eat dinner on the go?
 
Jan 7, 2004
686
0
D.C. area
Originally posted by shifty S
2...my house on the left of the two
Thanks, Shifty, for posting pics already! Now, you West Coasters, know that those pics are of the shells that the cicadas hatch out of. They hang on the shells or on leaves for a while, and then really start moving and take flight!
 

llkoolkeg

Ranger LL
Sep 5, 2001
4,335
15
in da shed, mon, in da shed
I should FedEx a handful of them to CA; I bet within a week, they'd have already taken over, shown their new Summer line of apparal, be regularly soiling starlets on the casting couch and halfway to getting the requisite number of petition signatures required for inclusion on the next ballot for public office. :devil:
 

shifty S

Monkey
Jun 6, 2002
397
0
NWDC...Asheville
in the second picture the top left arrow is one that had just crawled out of the shell and flew away after the picture. i found a buncha half-cicadas after mowing the lawn :devil:


ran into a neighbor with a video camera filming them so she could show her kids (toddlers) when theyre older
 

zod

Turbo Monkey
Jul 17, 2003
1,376
0
G-County, NC
I haven't seen any back in my woods yet.......but if they're on the ladder bridges then they're fair game! :devil:
 

MudGrrl

AAAAH! Monkeys stole my math!
Mar 4, 2004
3,123
0
Boston....outside of it....
I'm in Fairfax, and haven't seen one of those little buggers yet. I am wondering if I am in a cicada free zone.

I am originally from upstate NY, and don't ever remember a cicada invasion there.
 

BigMike

BrokenbikeMike
Jul 29, 2003
8,931
0
Montgomery county MD
We ainst got none thems in Reeshmond.

Although, I am going up north next week, and our backyard has not ever been developed, and our neigborhood was built 20 years ago