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  • Newberry Observer

    Newberry residents calling police about cicadas

    By Kasie Strickland kstrickland@championcarolinas.com,

    2024-04-30
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0kwQ1L_0svOTLr600
    Chirp … chirp … File photo

    NEWBERRY COUNTY — Emerging cicadas are so loud in one South Carolina county that residents are calling the sheriff’s office asking why they can hear a “noise in the air that sounds like a siren, or a whine, or a roar.”

    The Newberry County Sheriff’s Office posted a message on Facebook on Tuesday letting people know that the whining sound is just the male cicadas singing to attract mates after more than a decade of being dormant.

    Some people have even flagged down deputies to ask what the noise is all about, Newberry County Sheriff Lee Foster said.

    A little background …

    Annual vs. Periodical Cicadas

    Most cicada species come out every year, but in the United States, there are two periodical broods of cicadas that stay underground for either 13 years or 17 years. The last time they came above ground at the same time was in 1803, “when Thomas Jefferson was president, and Napoleon was thinking about invading England,” Hannah Fry, a British mathematician and science presenter, noted on her Instagram page.

    “If for 2024 you had the simultaneous explosion of green teenage bugs all across North America on your bingo card, you are in for a treat,” Fry joked.

    What are cicadas?

    Cicadas are a family of insects called magicicadas, according to The Associated Press. They differ from other insects in that both the nymphs and adults have a beak they use to drink plant fluids. Adults have two sets of wings.

    Cicadas are not locusts. They are not grasshoppers. Those are different species. But when Europeans first arrived in America, some started calling them locusts and even grasshoppers.

    There are more than 190 known varieties of cicadas in North America and 3,390 of them around the world. Except for one species in India and one in Fiji, only the U.S. has the periodic cicadas that stay underground for most of their lives.

    Cicadas don’t harm people or pets, though dogs have been known to binge and eat too many.

    Scientists say you shouldn’t kill cicadas.

    The only things cicadas can harm are young trees if they climb up them and try to plant eggs on weak young limbs. Experts say netting young trees protects them. Do not use pesticides.

    What happens when cicadas emerge in North America?

    When the periodical cicadas emerge from underground every 13 or 17 years, they do so simultaneously, “completely synchronized with one another,” Fry explained.

    Once the males mate above ground, they die. After females lay their eggs – usually in small slits they carve into tree branches – they die.

    “So every single 13-year-old cicada emerges from the ground simultaneously, flies around, has a massive party, sheds their exoskeletons, makes a massive mess, then dies,” Fry said. “They do this because it helps to evade predators. There’s so many of them simultaneously that there’s no way a predator could eat all of them … a massive proportion of them survive to the next generation.”

    A female can lay 400 to 600 eggs in a lifetime.

    Where will cicadas emerge in 2024?

    The two broods that will emerge simultaneously this year are Brood XIX (the 13-year cicadas) and Brood XIII (the 17-year cicadas).

    Brood XIX, according to Cicada Mania, is expected to emerge in the spring of 2024 in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. The last time Brood XIX came above ground was in 2011.

    Brood XIII is expected to emerge in the spring of 2024 in Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, and possibly Michigan. Cicada Mania says the last time this brood emerged was in 2007, though the AP reports they emerged in 2021.

    When will cicadas emerge in 2024?

    Both broods typically start to emerge in mid-May when the soil gets warm enough, and stay through late June, Cicada Mania says. With the warmer temperatures, scientists said the mid-April was not surprising.

    “A nice, warm rain will often trigger an emergence,” the website says.

    When they come out in mass numbers, they can be hard to avoid. They can seem to ruin weddings and large events just because there are so many of them.

    Why are cicadas so loud?

    Cicadas are known for their loud voices. According to the AP, it’s all about sex.

    They sing by flexing small drum-like organs in their abdomens, and what you hear in the trees is called a chorus of males trying to attract females. Think of them as the insect version of a boy band. Each species has their own song. When the females are interested, they twitch their wings.

    Get thousands of them together and they can reach 105 decibels, which is louder than a lawnmower.

    You can track and report cicada sightings on www.cicadasafari.org.

    “Although to some, the noise is annoying, they pose no danger to humans or pets,” Foster wrote in his statement to Newberry county residents. “Unfortunately, it is the sounds of nature.”

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