General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (2024)

General Periodical Cicada Information

Periodical cicadas (Magicicada spp.) are among the most unusual of insects, with long life cycles, infrequent, periodic mass emergences, striking appearance, and noisy behaviors. Periodical cicada emergences are notable not only because they involve large numbers of insects, but because those insects are striking in appearance, loud, and extremely active… but only for a brief period.

General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (1)

Periodical cicadas are found only in eastern North America. There are seven species — four with 13-year life cycles and three with 17-year cycles. The three 17-year species are generally northern in distribution, while the 13-year species are generally southern and midwestern. The periodical cicadas can be divided into three species groups (-decim, -cassini, and -decula) with slight ecological differences. Magicicada are so synchronized developmentally that they are nearly absent as adults in the 12 or 16 years between emergences. When they do emerge after their long juvenile periods, they do so in huge numbers, forming much denser aggregations than those achieved by most other cicadas. Periodical cicada emergences in different regions are not synchronized, and different populations comprise the 15 largely parapatric periodical cicada “Broods,” or year-classes.

Many people know periodical cicadas by the name “17-year locusts” or “13-year locusts”, but they are not true locusts, which are a type of grasshopper. Their uniqueness has given them a special appeal and cultural status. Members of the Onondaga Nation near Syracuse NY maintain the oral tradition of being rescued from famine by periodical cicadas. Early European colonists viewed periodical cicadas with a mixture of religious apprehension and loathing. Modern Americans maintain numerous websites to assist in planning weddings, graduations, and other outdoor activities around Magicicada emergences.

General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (2)

Magicicada adults have black bodies and striking red eyes and orange wing veins, with a black “W” near the tips of the forewings. Most emerge in May and June. Some of the annual cicada species are sometimes mistaken for the periodical cicadas, especially those in the genera Diceroprocta and Okanagana; these other species emerge somewhat later in the year but may overlap with Magicicada. The Okanagana species are the most potentially confusing because some have similar black-and-orange coloration. Other Common North American non-periodical cicadas include the large, greenish “dog-day” cicadas (genus Neotibicen) found throughout the U.S. in the summer. Non-periodical cicadas are often called “annual cicadas” (even though they typically have multiple-year life cycles) because in a given location adults emerge every year. The best way to identify cicada species is by the sounds that they make, because cicada songs are nearly always species-specific.

General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (3)
General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (4)
General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (5)

Cicadas do not possess special defensive mechanisms — they do not sting or bite. The ovipositor is used only for laying eggs and the mouthparts are used only for feeding on twigs; thus, periodical cicadas can hurt you only if they mistake you for a tree branch! When approached, a cicada will simply fly away. If handled, both males and females struggle to fly, and males make a loud defensive buzzing sound that may startle but is otherwise harmless. Cicadas are not poisonous or known to transmit disease.

What to expect during an emergence

Cicada juveniles are called “nymphs” and live underground, sucking root fluids for food. Periodical cicadas spend five juvenile stages in their underground burrows, and during their 13 or 17 years underground they grow from approximately the size of a small ant to nearly the size of an adult.

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General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (7)

Periodical cicada nymphs live underground for 13 or 17 years, keeping track of seasonal cycles (Karban et al. 2000) through some as-yet unknown mechanism. In the spring of their 13th or 17th year, a few weeks before emerging, the nymphs construct exit tunnels to the surface, with exit holes roughly 1/2 inch in diameter. Sometimes cicadas miscount and emerge unexpectedly early or late.

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Sometimes, nymphs construct mud “turrets” surrounding their holes, though the context in which cicadas construct turrets and the functional significance of the turrets remains unknown.

Locally, periodical cicada emergences occur when soil temperatures at a depth of 7-8 inches reach approximately 64°F (Heath 1968). Because emergence is temperature-dependent, periodical cicadas tend to emerge earlier in southern and lower-elevation locations. For example, cicadas in South Carolina often begin to emerge in late April, while those in southern Michigan do not appear until June. The best way to predict the time of emergence for your area is to check records from the prior emergence in that location, by asking longtime residents or by searching local newspaper archives. Emerging nymphs leave their burrows after sunset (usually), locate a suitable spot on nearby vegetation, and complete their final molt to adulthood.

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General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (10)
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General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (12)

Shortly after ecdysis (molting) the new adults appear mostly white, but they darken quickly as the exoskeleton hardens. The cues that determine the particular night on which the nymphs emerge and molt are not well understood, but soil temperature probably plays an important role. Sometimes a large proportion of the population emerges in one night. Newly-emerged cicadas spend roughly four to six days as “teneral” adults before they harden completely (possibly longer in cool weather); they do not begin adult behavior until this period of maturation is complete.

After their short teneral period, males begin producing species-specific calling songs and form aggregations (choruses) that are sexually attractive to females. Males in these choruses alternate bouts of singing with short flights until they locate receptive females. Click here to learn more about their behavior.

Contrary to popular belief, adults do feed by sucking plant fluids; adult cicadas will die if not provided with living woody vegetation on which to feed. Adult Magicicada feed from a wide variety of deciduous plants and shrubs, but usually not from grasses.

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Mated females excavate a series of Y-shaped eggnests in living twigs and lay up to twenty eggs in each nest. A female may lay as many as 600 eggs.

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General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (15)
General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (16)

After six to ten weeks, the eggs hatch and the new first-instar nymphs drop from the trees, burrow underground, locate a suitable rootlet for feeding, and begin their long 13- or 17-year development.

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General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (18)

By the time that the nymphs hatch, the adults have died.

Periodical cicadas achieve astounding population densities, as high as 1.5 million per acre. Densities of tens to hundreds of thousands per acre are more common, but even this is far beyond the natural abundance of most other cicada species. Apparently because of their long life cycles and synchronous emergences, periodical cicadas escape natural population control by predators, even though everything from birds to spiders to snakes to dogs eats them opportunistically when they do appear. Magicicada population densities are so high that predators apparently eat their fill without significantly reducing the population (a phenomenon called “predator satiation”), and the predator populations cannot build up in response because the cicadas are available as food above ground only once every 13 or 17 years.

General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (19)

Magicicada do not have any specialized predators, though many different kinds of animals will eat them. Individual periodical cicadas are slower, less flighty, and easier to capture than other cicadas, probably because the safety afforded by their great numbers means that the risks of predation for an individual are low. Explaining the evolution of such an unusual life strategy is one of the most difficult problems for biologists.

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General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (21)

Understanding the evolution of long life cycles and periodicity

It’s easy to focus on the long life cycles (13 or 17 years) of periodical cicadas. However, the life cycles of most cicadas are unknown, although it appears that the majority have multi-year life cycles. Thus, long life cycles per se may not be that unusual. It’s also easy to focus on the fact that both periodical cicada life cycles are prime numbers– but then again, if the majority of cicada life cycles were to fall between one and 20 years, the interval [1…20] contains an atypically high density of prime numbers. Thus, prime numbers per se may not be all that unexpected.

What makes periodical cicadas unusual is the combination of long life cycles, mass emergences, and periodicity, such that the vast majority of individuals in a population emerge on the same schedule and after a set number of years. If we accept that there are likely over 5000 species of cicadas in the world (more are being discovered all the time), then fewer than 10 species are periodical cicadas, and of those 10, seven are the Magicicada species of eastern North America. Whatever the conditions that led to the evolution of this life history pattern, they must have been unusual indeed!

Hypotheses for the evolution of periodicity generally fall into two categories: 1) Periodicity was shaped by glacial cycles (e.g., Yoshimura 1997); 2) Periodicity was shaped by predation pressure (e.g., Lloyd and Dybas 1966b). However each of these classes of explanation seems insufficient- the majority of insect species living in temperate areas are living in places that were affected by glaciation, yet very few are periodical, and all species of insects face predator pressures, yet very few are periodical. Glaciation and/or predation are clearly not sufficient to explain the evolution of periodical cicada life histories, or periodicity would be much more common. Evidently, there was some other as-yet unknown factor involved in the evolution of these unusual insects.

Literature

General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages (2024)

FAQs

General Periodical Cicada Information | Periodical Cicada Information Pages? ›

Periodical cicadas are found only in eastern North America. There are seven species — four with 13-year life cycles and three with 17-year cycles. The three 17-year species are generally northern in distribution, while the 13-year species are generally southern and midwestern.

What are some fun facts about periodical cicadas? ›

Periodical cicadas are best known for their extraordinary, highly synchronized life cycles. They spend most of their lives—13 or 17 years, depending on the species—in larval form, burrowed beneath the soil and feeding on fluids from plant roots.

How to identify periodical cicadas? ›

Four species of periodical cicadas have 13-year life cycles and three species have 17-year cycles. Periodical cicadas have black bodies with red eyes and orange wing veins.

What are the details of a cicada? ›

Scientists divide the over 3,000 cicada species into two groups: annual and periodical. Annual cicadas emerge from the ground at different times each summer. They're usually dark with greenish markings. These insects avoid predators by camouflaging themselves in the trees and flying from hungry birds and moles.

What states will have cicadas in 2024? ›

Where will cicadas be in 2024? The 13-year cicadas, called Brood XIX, will emerge in Georgia and the Southeast. The 17-year cicadas, called Brood XIII, will appear in Illinois. This will be the first time since 1803 that two broods emerged at the same time.

How do cicadas know 17 years? ›

As trees go through their seasonal cycles, shedding and growing leaves, the composition of their sap changes. And when cicada nymphs feed on that sap, they likely pick up clues about the passage of time.

How far can a cicada fly? ›

Because of these longer life cycles, cicadas began synchronizing their emergence to find mates. The periodical cicada flies only a short distance, less than half a mile, from where it emerges from the soil.

Do periodical cicadas bite? ›

Cicadas do not bite or sting. Their mouths have no mandibles, or jaws, and they have no physical characteristics like a stinger with which to defend themselves.

What bugs come out every 7 years? ›

Periodical cicadas, sometimes referred to as 17-year cicadas, are large, flying insects that are known for the loud buzzing noise that males make to attract female mates. These insects are often incorrectly referred to as locusts, even though they are unrelated.

Are cicadas good or bad? ›

Cicadas are not dangerous and can provide some environmental benefits including: Cicadas are a valuable food source for birds and other predators. Cicadas can aerate lawns and improve water filtration into the ground. Cicadas add nutrients to the soil as they decompose.

What is the life cycle of the periodical cicada? ›

Periodical cicadas are insects that spend most of their lives underground as nymphs, feeding off the sap of tree roots. They emerge to transform into adults and mate. Some periodical cicadas emerge every 13 years and others emerge every 17 years. The males "sing" by vibrating a membrane on the sides of their bodies.

Where do cicadas go for 7 years? ›

Nearly all cicadas spend years underground as juveniles, before emerging above ground for a short adult stage of several weeks to a few months.

How long does a cicada live? ›

Once male and female cicadas have mated and the latter has laid its eggs, the insects will die after spending only five weeks above ground, National Geographic reports. In other cases, adult periodical cicadas live for just three to four weeks, according to Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.

What 17 states are cicadas in? ›

From late April through June 2024, the largest brood of 13-year cicadas, known as Brood XIX, will co-emerge with a midwestern brood of 17-year cicadas, Brood XIII. This event will affect 17 states, from Maryland west to Iowa and south into Arkansas, Alabama and northern Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia and Maryland.

Why are they called periodical cicadas? ›

The term periodical cicada is commonly used to refer to any of the seven species of the genus Magicicada of eastern North America, the 13- and 17-year cicadas. They are called periodical because nearly all individuals in a local population are developmentally synchronized and emerge in the same year.

How long do periodical cicadas live? ›

After mating, the female makes slits in tree branches and lays eggs there. The eggs hatch six to seven weeks later, the nymphs fall to the ground and go into the soil, and the cycle begins again. The adult periodical cicadas only live three to four weeks.

How loud are periodical cicadas? ›

How loud are periodical cicadas? Individual periodical cicadas are not as loud as some other cicadas; however, their choruses contain so many individuals that they may reach 90+ decibels as perceived while standing under them.

References

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