Science & technology | Flying bugs

Hordes of cicadas are emerging simultaneously in America

The ancestors of these two neighbouring broods last met in 1803

An adult periodical cicada, just after shedding its nymphal skin, climbs over other nymphal shells.
Photograph: AP

All across the eastern states of America, it is cicada season. These small winged insects roughly the size of a paperclip emerge at regular intervals in vast hordes known as broods, many millions or billions of individuals strong. They spend a few frantic weeks breeding before the females lay eggs in slits carved into tree branches. When these hatch, around six weeks later, the juveniles head underground to find a root into which they can plunge their feeding tubes. Many years later, the cycle repeats.

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This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Bug out”

From the June 1st 2024 edition

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