Daily Times (Primos, PA)

The cicadas are coming! But only the annual species

- Pam Baxter is an avid organic vegetable gardener who lives in Kimberton. Direct e-mail to pamelacbax­ter@gmail. com, or send mail to P.O. Box 80, Kimberton, PA 19442.

are my favorite creatures.

They’re creepy, crawly, can bite, sting, spread disease, and some can sneak up on you and start feasting on your blood without your even knowing it. Yet there is something undeniably fascinatin­g about these tiny animals. Some are even quite beautiful.

Beyond that, some insects are just plain bizarre. Take cicadas, for instance, which spend more time undergroun­d than above.

Females lay their eggs inside the branches of trees. When the cicada nymphs hatch, they drop to the ground. There, they burrow deep into the soil — sometimes as much as 8 feet. They stay safe undergroun­d as they go through different growth stages, feeding off the sugar stored in tree roots.

With periodical cicadas, some species stay below for 13 years and some for 17 years.

Finally, the adult cicadas dig their way out of the earth and climb up onto the trunk of a tree or the side of a building. Then they shed their exoskeleto­n before flying off to mate and lay eggs.

The exoskeleto­n stays behind, stuck onto the tree or building. The weird thing is that the old, dry skin looks just like a real cicada, as if the creature were still inside it.

This process fascinates me, so I was excited to learn that the 17-year and the 13-year cicadas are both due to emerge this year.

I’ve heard choirs of cicadas singing their raspy mating calls in the woods along French Creek; how much livelier would it be with this convergenc­e!

Don’t get me wrong; I know that cicadas can cause damage, particular­ly to young trees, but still. I read that while the 13- and 17- year broods overlap every five years, the concurrenc­e of broods XIII and XIX hasn’t happened since 1803.

Why all the hype? Informatio­n at the PennState

Extension website says, “While some overlap of broods occurs, especially along margins where two broods meet, different broods are largely geographic­ally isolated and connect like puzzle pieces across eastern North America.”

There’s a color-coded map on the website that illustrate­s the geographic area of each brood at https://tinyurl. com/2xmeh9mf.

According to an article on the University of Connecticu­t website, “13-year Brood XIX and 17-year Brood XIII do not overlap to any significan­t extent. They may co-occur in small patches of woods. Also, the two broods will not even come close to each other in southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia.” (https://cicadas.uconn.edu) There’s only a small area of Illinois where the 13- and 17year broods overlap.

I was confused, though: With such a long life cycle, why do we hear cicadas every year in southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia? It turns out that while Pennsylvan­ia is home to three species of 17-year cicadas that may emerge at the same time, the state is also home to annual cicadas that emerge each year.

One humorous bit of informatio­n I discovered in my searching: the sound of bagpipes has been observed at least once to be effective against cicadas.

This was at an outdoor wedding. What was not mentioned was whether the sound of the bagpipes repelled the cicadas or simply drowned out the cicadas’ raspy noise. (cicadamani­a.com)

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