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It could be a loud spring in many eastern states, as scores of cicadas pop up from the ground after hiding for 17 years.
The second-largest periodical cicada brood is expected to emerge this spring in about a dozen states in the eastern United ...
The arrival of warm spring temperatures also means the arrival of cicadas, which are expected to start filling the air with their iconic buzzing sounds as soon as next week in some parts of ...
Brood XIV is one of 15 broods of periodical cicadas that emerge every 13 or 17 years. This year they'll be in states such as ...
The arrival of warm spring temperatures also means the arrival of cicadas, which are expected to start filling the air with ...
The cicadas emerging this year are part of Brood XIV, a cohort of 17-year periodical cicadas scattered throughout parts of ...
The 17-year cicadas are coming for Cincinnati and Southwest Ohio this year. How long will they stick around? Here's what to ...
They are part of Brood XIV, one of the largest periodical cicada sects by geographical span. In Massachusetts, the cicadas ...
This year, cicadas from Brood XIV will emerge in 14 states, including New York and Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee ...
Male cicadas can be as loud as a lawn mower, and there could be a lot more of these bugs than usual this summer on Long ...
If you missed last summer's cicadas, well, you might get another shot. Georgians may see more soon. Here's what to know about this spring's emergence.
Millions of the winged insects from Brood XIV are expected to make noise in Pennsylvania and 13 other states, according to Dr. Gene Kritsky, an entomologist and founder of Cicada Safari, a group that ...