Cicadas, those loud, large but harmless insects, will soon emerge this spring after 17 years underground in Georgia.
A large swath of the eastern U.S. -- from Massachusetts down to Mississippi and Georgia -- will start to see cicadas emerge ...
The noisy, alien-looking bugs are expected to return to the Peach State once again this spring, but this year’s brood is not ...
Mississippi experiences annual cicada hatches, with a large periodic hatch expected in 2028. Brood XIV cicadas are expected ...
The 17-year cicadas emerge for about four to six weeks. For the Cincinnati area, this should be the last large emergence for ...
Cicadas will likely first emerge during the third week of April or when areas experience “good rain,” cicada expert Gene ...
There are 13 states that will et loud this spring. Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and West ...
This spring will be filled with the sound of millions of Brood XIV cicadas. Here's what to know about 17-year cicadas and how many are in Brood XIV.
What to know about this year's periodical cicada emergence: Brood XIV, the second-largest periodical cicada brood, last emerged in 2008, Tamra Reall, an entomologist at the University of Missouri ...
Last year, the Great Southern Brood of cicadas emerged after 13 years, crawling up trees, molting and leaving their outer ...
Brood XIV, the second-largest periodical cicada brood, last emerged in 2008, Tamra Reall, an entomologist at the University of Missouri, told ABC News. Since then, the nymphs of those periodical ...