Cicadas Are Coming Back!

General Chat
User avatar
ballparent
S
Posts: 1974
Joined: Tue Jun 07, 2005 1:50 pm

Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by ballparent »

I love to hear a few of these in the summer, a sign of warm weather, but this year I think I'll be hearing more than just a few. :12222
Image
Maps of Brood Distribution and Emergence Years in Ohio
http://biology.clc.uc.edu/steincarter/cicadas.htm
Cicadas return after 17 years

By MIKE JAMES
The Independent

ASHLAND — They come out of the ground by the millions, covering shrubs like winged blankets, emitting a high-pitched buzzing.

What sounds like the plot of a 1950s sci-fi movie is about to really happen in most of Kentucky and parts of surrounding states.

It’s the emergence of the 17-year cicadas, large flying insects resembling jarflies. Their larvae have been living underground since the last emergence in 1991 and will hatch sometime late this month or early in May.

Only a few weeks of their 17-year life cycle is spent above ground, but in that time they manage to annoy humans and damage shrubs and small trees.

Harmless to people and animals, the insects damage woody plants when they lay their eggs, said Lori Bowling, horticulture extension agent for the Boyd County Cooperative Extension Service.

When the soil temperature warms to the mid-60s, they burrow up to the surface and shed their skins.

After that is when the noise starts. The cicada mating call can be deafening.

“I think young and old alike will be hearing ringing in their ears this spring,” Bowling said.

After mating, the females lay their eggs. They typically choose branches about the size of a pencil and scrape away the bark to deposit their eggs.

With that many insects scraping away, the branches are damaged and die, Bowling said.

Then when the eggs hatch, the larvae drop to the ground and burrow in, attaching themselves to roots for the next 17 years.

The larvae also can cause damage, which becomes noticeable in five years or so.

There are no preventative insecticides that will eliminate cicadas, although plain old bug spray will kill on contact, Bowling said. Unfortunately, there are too many of the insects to spray effectively.

In fact, there are too many of them for predators to eliminate as well. Many birds, and even cats and dogs, will eat cicadas, and people can eat them too — if they want to.

Farmers need not worry, said agriculture extension agent Lyndall Harned. Cicadas have very little effect on production crops, he said.

Landscapers, nursery owners and homeowners who have recently planted shrubs can ward off the insects by covering their plants with cheesecloth or small-mesh netting, Bowling said.

Cicadas typically emerge in the same areas cycle after cycle, because they aren’t very good flyers and don’t range more than about 150 feet from where they hatch.

Have a bug buffet :shock:

As long as the cicadas are out there, you might as well cook up a few of them.

For one thing, it helps to diminish, if only infinitesimally, the incessant chirping. For another, they’re high in protein and low in carbs.

A few things to remember:

For peak flavor and texture, grab them when they first come out of the ground.

Remove wings and legs; the appendages aren’t harmful but don’t add to the taste.

Blanch the bugs immediately — boil four or five minutes — to improve texture and kill any soil bacteria.

For some recipes, cicadas should be dry-roasted for 10 to 15 minutes at 225 degrees. (Makes a great snack!)

Recipes are taken from “Cicada-Licious,” by Jenna Jaden, a graduate student at the University of Maryland.

Disclaimer:

Check with your physician before eating cicadas, especially if you have food allergies. Cicadas are arthropods, as are crayfish and shrimp, so those allergic to seafood may experience similar reactions. Also, take care not to consume cicadas that have been sprayed with insecticides.


User avatar
ballparent
S
Posts: 1974
Joined: Tue Jun 07, 2005 1:50 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by ballparent »

Very real and a few are already up in our yard. I couldn't figure out what the birds were eating and sure enough it was them. I think I won't be walking barefoot as much this spring and early summer. :12222


whodeyAtown21
SEOPS
Posts: 6469
Joined: Tue Oct 11, 2005 12:28 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by whodeyAtown21 »

Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww I have absolutely no desire to eat bugs! EWWWWWWWWWW they are like cockroaches!


User avatar
ballparent
S
Posts: 1974
Joined: Tue Jun 07, 2005 1:50 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by ballparent »

We will be experiencing a Brood XIV emergence in Southern Ohio. Check this site out :lol: , they even have T-shirts and mugs.

http://www.cicadamania.com/cicadas/2007/05/22/brood-xiv-stragglers-in-ohio-part-3/


User avatar
orange-n-brown 365
SEOPS HO
Posts: 8646
Joined: Sat Oct 29, 2005 8:38 am

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by orange-n-brown 365 »

thank god mine was in 99 :122245


User avatar
ballparent
S
Posts: 1974
Joined: Tue Jun 07, 2005 1:50 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by ballparent »

I wonder if they would be good fishing bait and how much you could sell them per dozen? 8) It would probably be best if you could hook them without killing them so they would buzz on the surface of the water. :122249


User avatar
orange-n-brown 365
SEOPS HO
Posts: 8646
Joined: Sat Oct 29, 2005 8:38 am

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by orange-n-brown 365 »

ugh! its bad enough putting worms on the hook :122246 :shock:


User avatar
orange-n-brown 365
SEOPS HO
Posts: 8646
Joined: Sat Oct 29, 2005 8:38 am

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by orange-n-brown 365 »

FIDO (Forget It Drive On) wrote:.............you are afraid of a little worm juice after all the poopy diapers you have changed in your lifetime.......... :aaaaa24 :aaaaa24 :aaaaa26 :aaaaa94 :aaaaa94


yep what you mean changed honey I've been pooped on :aaaaa24 :aaaaa52


User avatar
orange-n-brown 365
SEOPS HO
Posts: 8646
Joined: Sat Oct 29, 2005 8:38 am

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by orange-n-brown 365 »

FIDO (Forget It Drive On) wrote::aaaaa33 :aaaaa33 :aaaaa33 Sorry to hear that!!! :mrgreen:


OH WELL that's my job! :shock:


OZZIEOHIO
SEOPS HO
Posts: 8384
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2005 4:21 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by OZZIEOHIO »

Image


Good bait indeed!!!!!


moose
Varsity
Posts: 622
Joined: Fri Jan 19, 2007 11:40 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by moose »

Earl: "Why do they all scream like that, Moose?"

Moose: "I think they only come around once every 17 years."

Earl: "Oh." :shock:


whodeyAtown21
SEOPS
Posts: 6469
Joined: Tue Oct 11, 2005 12:28 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by whodeyAtown21 »

FIDO (Forget It Drive On) wrote:I thought you were in the Marines???? :shock: :lol:


hahahahaha...yeah, well, I'm actually in Marine Corps PLC (which is comparable to ROTC in SOME ways), I go to my first increment of training this summer. I just can't staaaaaand bugs. I know I'll have to get over it.


whodeyAtown21
SEOPS
Posts: 6469
Joined: Tue Oct 11, 2005 12:28 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by whodeyAtown21 »

maybe i'll make friends with the bigger bugs hahah

hopefully quantico isn't as bad as parris island for bugs...


User avatar
kantuckyII
SEOPS HOF
Posts: 12198
Joined: Mon Mar 19, 2007 11:43 am

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by kantuckyII »

and people can eat them too — if they want to.


Well, there you go guys! a certain pessimistic on here might be hoarding them away in his freezer :lol:


User avatar
noreply66
SEOPS Hippo
Posts: 287085
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2005 8:39 pm
Location: Logan, Ohio

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by noreply66 »

its music to my ears


Orkan
Waterboy
Posts: 23
Joined: Wed Jan 23, 2008 12:03 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by Orkan »

whodeyAtown21


Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww I have absolutely no desire to eat bugs! EWWWWWWWWWW they are like cockroaches!
Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww I have absolutely no desire to eat bugs! EWWWWWWWWWW they are like cockroaches!

Posted: Wed Apr 09, 2008 8:40 pm
____________________________________________

Top secret alternative Marine battle cry spawned by the Clinton administration.


User avatar
Philly
All Conference
Posts: 762
Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 11:55 am

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by Philly »

ballparent, I can remember my father and brother, reaching up and pulling them off a tree and using them to fish with. I would guess that if a bass would eat a grasshopper, they would love to eat a Cicadas. My sister and I use to sing with the cicadas! We would sing "Katy did, katy did, katy did!"


OZZIEOHIO
SEOPS HO
Posts: 8384
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2005 4:21 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by OZZIEOHIO »

For the ones who do want to fish with the real thing, I have a few different fake ones like this one.



Image


User avatar
ballparent
S
Posts: 1974
Joined: Tue Jun 07, 2005 1:50 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by ballparent »

I heard one, yep, just one, yesterday evening. :12222 Tracked the sound down to a bush at the other side of the yard but whenever I got really close the little bugger shut up. So, they're almost here and as I've been planting I've found several of their little squishy nymph bodies. :shock: Make sure to protect young, newly planted trees. These they can damage enough to actually kill. They'll lay their eggs on pencil thin size limbs about six inches from the tip. From that point the limb will drop and die. No big deal for well established trees but for young ones, they're toast. You can cover young trees with cheesecloth to protect them.

Brood XIV cicadas waking up
May 08, 2008 @ 04:45 PM
By The Associated Press
Herald-Dispatch.com
The wakeup of millions of ugly, loud but essentially harmless periodical cicadas from a brood that was first observed in Ohio in 1804 has started a few days earlier than expected.

They usually emerge every 17 years when the ground temperature reaches about 65 degrees, according to Gene Kritsky, an entomologist at the College of Mount St. Joseph.

A few have been sighted in Cincinnati suburbs, and by next week there will be millions of them. Experts say they do not carry diseases and do not sting or bite people. They’re just a loud nuisance.

Although they regularly emerge in 17-year cycles, there are different broods and sometimes their territories overlap. The last group to hit Cincinnati was Brood X in 2004.

This group, Brood XIV, inhabits 12 states, mostly in the Ohio Valley but also as far east as Massachusetts, where they were first recorded in 1770.

There are also annual cicadas, which add to the confusion, and the possibility that some broods change their cycles and join other broods.

“Sometimes one brood transitions into another,” said Kritsky, who has been tracking cicadas for 34 years.

He’s devised a Web site (http://www.msj.edu/cicada) for reporting sightings and to help him and the public track their movement.


Bassmaster
S
Posts: 1578
Joined: Thu Oct 26, 2006 2:13 pm

Re: Cicadas Are Coming Back!

Post by Bassmaster »

I think we should figure out a way to fuel our vehicles with locusts :!: ;-)


Post Reply

Return to “The Off season”