USA TODAY US Edition

Cicada ‘broods’ will emerge in Eastern states

- Jessica Flores USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Doyle Rice, USA TODAY; Sue La Fountaine

It’s that time of year again: cicadas are expected to emerge in the East Coast after living undergroun­d for 17 years.

This year’s periodical cicadas, which will appear this month in North Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia, are called Brood IX (9).

Cicadas emerge when the ground reaches 64 degrees, according to the website Cicada-Mania.

John Cooley, an entomologi­st at the University of Connecticu­t, told USA TODAY that cicadas pop up in the evening “to be able to do the things that they have to do, but it’s also going to be dark enough that they’re not going to get wiped out by birds.”

Cicadas, which are grouped into “broods,” come out of the ground every 17 years to mate. Some appear every 13 years. Cooley says researcher­s don’t know why the insects have a reoccurrin­g appearance.

“The general consensus is that the long, prime-numbered life-cycle makes it difficult for an above-ground animal predator to evolve to specifical­ly predate them,” according to Cicada Mania.

More than one type of brood may emerge in some areas at the same time because of staggered developmen­t, according to the United States Department of Agricultur­e.

There are periodical and annual cicadas. The periodical cicadas shed their outer covering once they pop out of the ground and have black bodies with red eyes and yellowish-orange wings. Annual cicadas are larger-and have brown or green bodies with black or brown eyes and black or green wings.

Cicadas are not dangerous. The male cicadas flexes its muscles to make a loud sound to attract females. And many usually live two to four weeks after living undergroun­d for 17 years.

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