In a world where most toddlers prefer a doll or toy truck, one little girl wants everything for her collection of cicada shells.
The Wet from Circa Cairns is a stunning physical and aural celebration of the Wet and how it affects all beings living on ...
Cicada season is upon us, and what brings up grateful feelings for warm weather in some may bring up symptoms of entomophobia in others. Luckily for those afraid of insects, Delaware is not ...
CINCINNATI (WXIX) - Cicadas are re-emerging in Cincinnati, but not at the same rate as they were. Dr. Gene Kritsky is the Chief Science Officer of cITe at Mount St. Joseph University, and has ...
I remember watching “Gone With the Wind” for the first time on my parents' back porch, the cicadas and katydids ... wondering how high the film's costume budget must have been — all those ...
They’re back! Cicadas are returning to the Garden State this spring. “Brood 14” is expected to emerge for the first time in 17 years, especially in Atlantic, Camden and Ocean counties.
Cicadas, those loud, large but harmless insects, will soon emerge this spring after 17 years underground in Georgia. This brood, called Brood XIV, will begin their first mating season since 2008 ...
As the winter chill thaws and spring sets in, eastern United States residents are bracing for the sights and sounds of Brood XIV cicadas. These periodical cicadas, which last appeared in 2008 ...
Not only does that mean warmer weather, but also the return of buzzing cicadas in parts of the United States. This year, a brood of cicadas that emerge every 17 years are expected, known as Brood XIV.
Brood XIV of cicadas is set to hatch across parts of 13 states, the second-largest brood of cicadas, according to the University of Connecticut. According to the USDA Forest Service, in Ohio ...
UK entomologist Ric Bessin prepared this map showing the Brood 14 cicada emergence in 1991 — the same year he began working there. A big batch of cicadas is expected to emerge from the ground and ...
Get ready for a loud spring, New Jersey. Millions of buzzing, red-eyed cicadas will be emerging from the ground in at least 13 eastern states and making a racket as they search for mates.